I agree with the below article. been saying it all along.
ron
Keep Crying Over DIRECTV/MLB
SkyREPORT: After many months of negotiations, which also allowed an open period for other providers to match this deal, those competitors who failed to step to the plate (pun intended) and finalize their own agreements are all tears. It's funny (coincidence - NOT) how the politicians representing the home states of Comcast and EchoStar in particular, are equally watery-eyed and crying "foul ball" (OK, I'll stop). It's an open market to get these deals done.
If one sport or another is so important to any viewer, they can switch to another service to get that one easily enough. There are so many promos out there for switching between satellite and cable that your head can spin. Satellite is generally cheaper than cable in most places anyway, and cable is behind in HDTV looking on to 2008, so they've done folks a favor to make the choice clear.
Kudos to DIRECTV for having the guts and persistence to be the true sports leader in HDTV and broadcasts in general with agreements for the NFL, MLB, and others. The competition should stop its whining and deal with reality - they failed to do their job and be competitive in the broadcast re- transmission marketplace.
Shame on them - for that they deserve to cry.
- Pete Radike
2nd article from skyreport on same subject
Is cable getting a taste of its own medicine?
by Michael Hopkins
Earlier this week, lawmakers debated with those in the multiplatform business what is expected to become DIRECTV's exclusive lock on Major League Baseball's Extra Innings out-of-market package. Those in the cable business (and EchoStar) cried foul about the arrangement during testimony before the Senate Commerce Committee. DIRECTV and Major League Baseball defended the deal.
Chase Carey said about the exclusive agreement, "Simply put, this is competition at work."
At the hearing, cable complained that the DIRECTV/MLB deal is bad for consumers. Truth is the wired incumbent has engaged in similar, consumer-unfriendly practices when it comes to blocking access to highly valuable sports programming. All one has to do is look at the City of Brotherly Love for cable's bad example.
Comcast owns the local regional sports network in Philadelphia, known as Comcast SportsNet. The channel delivers local coverage of Phillies baseball as well as Flyers hockey and 76ers basketball.
And the network is not available to small dish competitors ... at any price.
The cable giant delivers the Philly RSN via terrestrial means. That creates the so-called terrestrial loophole. Because Comcast SportsNet Philadelphia isn't delivered to the headend via satellite, it can be kept out of the hands of DIRECTV and EchoStar's DISH Network.
Thus, Comcast has created a near-exclusive sports programming property of its own. (It should be noted that Comcast is offering the network to a telco competitor ... Verizon FiOS TV). Worse yet, satellite TV customers in Philadelphia become disenfranchised consumers, lacking access to their home teams.
At the end of the day, it's hard to understand cable's argument about the lack of access to MLB Extra Innings when the business is engaged in similar activities.
ron
Keep Crying Over DIRECTV/MLB
SkyREPORT: After many months of negotiations, which also allowed an open period for other providers to match this deal, those competitors who failed to step to the plate (pun intended) and finalize their own agreements are all tears. It's funny (coincidence - NOT) how the politicians representing the home states of Comcast and EchoStar in particular, are equally watery-eyed and crying "foul ball" (OK, I'll stop). It's an open market to get these deals done.
If one sport or another is so important to any viewer, they can switch to another service to get that one easily enough. There are so many promos out there for switching between satellite and cable that your head can spin. Satellite is generally cheaper than cable in most places anyway, and cable is behind in HDTV looking on to 2008, so they've done folks a favor to make the choice clear.
Kudos to DIRECTV for having the guts and persistence to be the true sports leader in HDTV and broadcasts in general with agreements for the NFL, MLB, and others. The competition should stop its whining and deal with reality - they failed to do their job and be competitive in the broadcast re- transmission marketplace.
Shame on them - for that they deserve to cry.
- Pete Radike
2nd article from skyreport on same subject
Is cable getting a taste of its own medicine?
by Michael Hopkins
Earlier this week, lawmakers debated with those in the multiplatform business what is expected to become DIRECTV's exclusive lock on Major League Baseball's Extra Innings out-of-market package. Those in the cable business (and EchoStar) cried foul about the arrangement during testimony before the Senate Commerce Committee. DIRECTV and Major League Baseball defended the deal.
Chase Carey said about the exclusive agreement, "Simply put, this is competition at work."
At the hearing, cable complained that the DIRECTV/MLB deal is bad for consumers. Truth is the wired incumbent has engaged in similar, consumer-unfriendly practices when it comes to blocking access to highly valuable sports programming. All one has to do is look at the City of Brotherly Love for cable's bad example.
Comcast owns the local regional sports network in Philadelphia, known as Comcast SportsNet. The channel delivers local coverage of Phillies baseball as well as Flyers hockey and 76ers basketball.
And the network is not available to small dish competitors ... at any price.
The cable giant delivers the Philly RSN via terrestrial means. That creates the so-called terrestrial loophole. Because Comcast SportsNet Philadelphia isn't delivered to the headend via satellite, it can be kept out of the hands of DIRECTV and EchoStar's DISH Network.
Thus, Comcast has created a near-exclusive sports programming property of its own. (It should be noted that Comcast is offering the network to a telco competitor ... Verizon FiOS TV). Worse yet, satellite TV customers in Philadelphia become disenfranchised consumers, lacking access to their home teams.
At the end of the day, it's hard to understand cable's argument about the lack of access to MLB Extra Innings when the business is engaged in similar activities.