The quality programming would not be lost by a la carte. It would just be consentrated on fewer channels that want your business. Not spread out over a bunch of channels so they have something to justify carriage and a charge to every consumer.
You missed the most outrageous: wrestling on the SyFy channel.
... what niche channels? All I see are channels that started off with unique programming but have switched to mainly reality TV shows. IE what the hell do Ice Road Truckers or Swamp People have to do with history? Or Bravo which started off covering performing arts etc, now shows reality TV about makeovers and crap. And the Country Music Television stations lineup tonight is a rerun of Are You Smarter than a Fifth Grader, a Dukes of a Hazard episode, and Police Academy. I guess the theme song for Dukes of a Hazard is a country song so its relevant to country music
... what niche channels? All I see are channels that started off with unique programming but have switched to mainly reality TV shows. IE what the hell do Ice Road Truckers or Swamp People have to do with history? Or Bravo which started off covering performing arts etc, now shows reality TV about makeovers and crap. And the Country Music Television stations lineup tonight is a rerun of Are You Smarter than a Fifth Grader, a Dukes of a Hazard episode, and Police Academy. I guess the theme song for Dukes of a Hazard is a country song so its relevant to country music
Why is it one way or the other?
Why can't channels have a "package" price that includes it with a number of other channels, and a separate, higher, "a la carte" price? For example, TBS might go for $0.20 per sub per month with a certain pack, but $2 a month per sub if a person wants out outside of a pack.
The only thing really missing is the channels like CNN or the Weather Channel. ( And maybe sports, I don't know. I don't watch that.
If you can't get enough news, or the weather report on the internet... somethings wrong with you.
Theres not much in the way of (legal) sports streaming out there. Pretty much just ESPN3, which I can't even access on QWEST anyway.
Sports, and mostly just football and college bball, is pretty much the only reason I keep a pay TV service; I feel kind of held hostage by it. Everything else I'd be perfectly happy with streaming services, network television which I pull in over the air, and waiting for Blu-ray's and DVD from netflix (which I prefer to do for cable TV shows anyway).
So really with FSN about to be dropped I'm paying DISH to watch NFL Network, NFL RZ, and ESPN 1 and 2, and very rarely CBS-college sports.
I don't know if there ever will be ala-carte or not, but online will eventually pressure content providers to rethink their pricing.
I am almost at the point of going all VOD. I think in a couple more years, it will probably be a very reasonable way to go.
Before you comment, consider how it works now.
I record a number of series on my DVR. Over the course of a season, I record and watch all of the shows for that season.
There are a number of "online" sources like Netflix / Apple / Amazon VOD so competetion will continue to drive better pricing.
Amazon VOD offers shows for about $1.99 per show. ($1.89 if you subscribe to the whole season)
Since I pay Dish $108 a month, that's $1296 a year in TV costs. That works out to about 685 shows a year or about 57 shows a month. That gives you 15 shows a week or 2 a day.
And that assumes that you are watching everything over VOD. If you setup OTA, that would add more content to your choices and you would only have to VOD shows from premium channels like TLC.
The only thing really missing is the channels like CNN or the Weather Channel. ( And maybe sports, I don't know. I don't watch that. )
Like I said, may not work perfectly now. But I think it is something that will soon change how content providers deal with people like Dish.
Okay, but then why doesn't Dish Network take a stand and state they will no longer package channels to subscribers?
Conversely, the only way to get that type of carriage is if there is a law passed that removes the ability for anyone to package. The programmer would have to negotiate carriage for each channel individually, and then the cable or satellite distributor could no longer sell any packages, only single channels. And paraphrasing John Entwistle, I'm sure that would fly like a lead zeppelin.
$108 (ouch)/month = 1296/year=~ $25/week ... assuming you can get HD episodes for $2 (they are more $$ on many services)... that's 12.5 shows (40 minutes without commercials) of TV/week you'd get... 71 minutes of TV per day... and that's just for 1 person.. take a family of 4.. no way that pricing model holds up... 18 minutes of TV/person/day (at $108/month) (assuming no one watches each other's shows)...
we'd all be a lot healthier.. that's for sure
Apple with the new iTV, which many networks say is far too cheap (99 cents/episode), is still too expensive by a factor of at least 2.
True, but my family does have over lap and the ~2 shows a day is only for non-ota shows. Probably half of what a lot of people watch could come from OTA.
Agreed... altho we would need better OTA -> DVR options... I think the a la carte world will focus on streaming (I think we may bypass channel ALC and go directly to per-show ALC)... they will want you to have no storage.. so you can't watch more than once without paying
I have been doing this for over 10 years now, and what I find funny is that the people who get REALLY upset when channels are removed because of a pricing dispute are also the same people who get REALLY upset when their bill goes up.
For a company like DISH or DIRECTV, its a damned if you do and damned if you don't type of thing.