I used to watch the Rockies all summer long on my local independent station. Then, they moved to a different independent channel, then a RSN. Now, I have to pay extra to see the games. Now, I don't watch the games. I gave up on nearly all sports years ago because the price to be a fan is too high for me. I watch my Broncos games on network TV and that's it. If the NFL were to move off network TV, I'd stop watching them too.
So, what did you do? Drop any form of pay television?
The mega-millionaire owners are happy to use the cable/satellite providers as a funnel to suck money out of the pockets of non-millionaire fans. They do it by extorting the providers into paying for the channels under threats from a small number of die-hard fans. And, the best part is they get no flack, because all the anger is directed at the providers.
It's funny how so much of the discussion is how fans are being denied the right to watch their team's games by the cable/satellite providers. There was also a comment about Charlie "lining his pockets". What about the greedy team owners who demand a special channel at a higher price to line "their" pockets? The one denying you your games are the owners. They don't care about you, they only want your money. You're not a fan, you're a revenue source.
See, I don't agree with the implication it seems like you're making that somehow the sports owners making big profits is bad while Dish making big profits is a-okay. What's the difference? Point is, as an end consumer, I have Dish to see sports, and if they can't continue provide that for me at a price I can afford, I'll find another provider who can, and if no one can do it, I won't pay any of them a dime for television. There is no way on God's green earth I'm going to fork over $60 or whatever for a package that doesn't have at least the majority of the games my favorite teams play. I'd just watch the DVDs Netflix sends me, and maybe add streaming from them or Hulu or something, and save a ton of money. The only truly significant value pay television gives me for all that extra dough that I couldn't duplicate for a lot less is sports and news. TV shows and movies are fine, but I usually am watching them on DVD through Netflix or free streaming from Hulu on my PC anyhow.
The leagues have handed the cable and satelite industry the keys to keeping everyone from cutting the cord- and it's the almost exclusive availability of live games of the local sports teams. You can't get that streaming for most teams and most leagues (Remember, I am talking about the local regional teams) and DVD wouldn't work because no one wants to watch a game from 6 months ago (Or very few people do). A show or a movie from 6 months ago, though, is another story, because it was never live to begin with- it's just as live then and it would have been 6 months before.
The Internet means anyone who drops local sports is signaling the end of their company in the long run, because the days of people having to go to cable and satellite to watch TV shows and movies is long over, it's just a question of when everyone realizes it. Sports is the glue that'll keep these companies around in the long run if the leagues continue to keep live local games off the Internet for the most part. Of course, if cable and satelite companies push them by dropping channels or not giving them good enough contracts, the leagues will start selling people's favorite teams' games direct to them online through a Roku or whatever, and that'll be that.