Fee fight leaves Dish Network viewers wanting
SUBSCRIBERS LOSE ACCESS TO VIACOM-OWNED KPIX, MTV
By Sam Diaz
Mercury News
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/8149649.htm
A dispute that left hundreds of thousands of Dish Network subscribers in the Bay Area unable to watch KPIX Channel 5, MTV, Nickelodeon and other stations could lead to a different type of March Madness if the matter isn't settled before the annual NCAA basketball tournament starts next week.
Early Tuesday morning, the satellite TV provider stopped carrying stations owned by media giant Viacom.
EchoStar, owner of Dish Network, is refusing Viacom's request for higher fees, and the result is that more than 9 million subscribers nationwide now have no access to ``SpongeBob SquarePants'' and ``The Real World.'' A portion of them also might not be able to watch CBS programming such as ``Survivor'' or -- if the dispute lasts -- the NCAA tournament, which starts March 18.
The battle has plenty to do with money, but some insiders say it's also the manifestation of an ongoing struggle between content providers -- Viacom, in this case -- and content distributors such as cable and satellite companies.
Viacom asked for the higher fees when its contract with EchoStar expired Dec. 31. A federal judge issued a restraining order to keep CBS and other channels on the Dish Network system for the Super Bowl and allow more time to negotiate.
In a statement released Tuesday, Viacom said Echo- Star is unwilling to pay an extra 6 cents per month per subscriber for its programming. Littleton, Colo.-based Echo- Star, also in a statement, said Viacom is ``demanding rate increases nearly four times the rate of inflation for various cable channels, amounting to hundreds of millions of dollars in fees.''
Neither company would comment on specifics of the dispute. It was unclear Tuesday how long the dispute might last, but one analyst told Bloomberg News he thought it might be several weeks.
When the restraining order expired early Tuesday morning, most of Dish Network's subscribers lost MTV, Nickelodeon and several other channels. The feed for CBS -- which broadcasts the NCAA tournament -- was lost only in markets where Viacom owns the local station, including San Francisco.
Read the rest at http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/8149649.htm
SUBSCRIBERS LOSE ACCESS TO VIACOM-OWNED KPIX, MTV
By Sam Diaz
Mercury News
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/8149649.htm
A dispute that left hundreds of thousands of Dish Network subscribers in the Bay Area unable to watch KPIX Channel 5, MTV, Nickelodeon and other stations could lead to a different type of March Madness if the matter isn't settled before the annual NCAA basketball tournament starts next week.
Early Tuesday morning, the satellite TV provider stopped carrying stations owned by media giant Viacom.
EchoStar, owner of Dish Network, is refusing Viacom's request for higher fees, and the result is that more than 9 million subscribers nationwide now have no access to ``SpongeBob SquarePants'' and ``The Real World.'' A portion of them also might not be able to watch CBS programming such as ``Survivor'' or -- if the dispute lasts -- the NCAA tournament, which starts March 18.
The battle has plenty to do with money, but some insiders say it's also the manifestation of an ongoing struggle between content providers -- Viacom, in this case -- and content distributors such as cable and satellite companies.
Viacom asked for the higher fees when its contract with EchoStar expired Dec. 31. A federal judge issued a restraining order to keep CBS and other channels on the Dish Network system for the Super Bowl and allow more time to negotiate.
In a statement released Tuesday, Viacom said Echo- Star is unwilling to pay an extra 6 cents per month per subscriber for its programming. Littleton, Colo.-based Echo- Star, also in a statement, said Viacom is ``demanding rate increases nearly four times the rate of inflation for various cable channels, amounting to hundreds of millions of dollars in fees.''
Neither company would comment on specifics of the dispute. It was unclear Tuesday how long the dispute might last, but one analyst told Bloomberg News he thought it might be several weeks.
When the restraining order expired early Tuesday morning, most of Dish Network's subscribers lost MTV, Nickelodeon and several other channels. The feed for CBS -- which broadcasts the NCAA tournament -- was lost only in markets where Viacom owns the local station, including San Francisco.
Read the rest at http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/8149649.htm