From Multichannel.com, an article relating to the loss of the distant network license, written by Ted Hearn:
So why would Dish Network pay $100 million to the affiliate boards? In order to keep the license not for the distant networks, but for the others services that are attached to the license:CBS HD IMPACT
Separately, EchoStar has a deal that allows it to offer the high definition feed of a CBS affiliate to any household within a market that includes a CBS-owned affiliate. But the injunction would doom that in about 20 major markets.
The loss of the distant CBS in HD is important, but now the inability of ever using the distant license for ABC, NBC and Fox in HD is just as important. Dish Network will not get the rural customers network HD any longer. Also...“Among their bouquet of core HDTV services, the CBS [deal] is probably the most viewed, it’s the most important,” according to Jimmy Schaeffler, senior financial and consulting analyst with The Carmel Group, who has been involved in legal matters for and against EchoStar in the last decade. “If you lose that, then you’ve lost a core sales tool for a part of your service which you consider the most important going forward and that is the HD channel.”
This public service message was brought to you by the always incorrect Greg Bimson.The injunction would prevent EchoStar from providing what are called “significantly viewed” stations. These are popular TV stations seen by viewers who live outside the official boundary of a market, but within range of the stations’ signals, according to Seth Davidson, a cable and copyright attorney at Fleischman and Walsh in Washington, D.C.