I didn't call it a monopoly.lou_do said:Why would you call that a monopoly?
I can only get the Super Bowl through CBS. What if I want it from FOX?lou_do said:You can get CBS through many sources, OTA, cable, satellite. ST is only available through 1 source, D*. Big difference there.
You mean like say, if you were in Philadelphia, and could not get Comcast Sports Net over satellite? And say, when Comcast merges with another cable operator, conditions for "open access" are placed on the deal by the government, except for Comcast Sports Net Philadelphia? As just happened?Tampa8 said:Better explanation - NESN has exclusive rights to carry Red Sox games. But again, I can get NESN from Cable, Dish or Direct. Very different (And an overthrow of the Government would ensue) if Only Direct had NESN for instance in an exclusive deal.
Not really. There are exclusives everywhere. Even if no one wants to pay attention to them. CBS is the exclusive home of the NFL's championship for the 2007 season, Super Bowl XLI. The NFL has given CBS an exclusive. The NFL wants the Super Bowl on free TV, because they want as wide an audience as possible.scotsmanron said:TERRIBLE analogy Greg.
Sunday Ticket is on DirecTV because the NFL does not want as wide an audience as possible. The NFL also gets more money by making it an exclusive.
Imagine if the Super Bowl was on FOX, CBS and NBC this year. The networks nor the NFL would make as much money without making it an exclusive.
Now we roll back to Major League Baseball. MLB will get a 66 percent increase in their rights fees and will gain carriage of the MLB channel by 2009. The true baseball fan, the one that wants more than just the games they can get from their local stations, RSN's and cable networks, will need to switch to DirecTV in order to get the most baseball for their buck.
And if anyone believes Congress will take a look at this, I go right back to the fact that nothing has been done about Comcast Sports Net Philadelphia nor NFL Sunday Ticket.