Friday, March 09, 2007 |
The Baseball Channel Or Your Extra Innings: MLB Plays Hardball With Cable
The Baseball Channel, which MLB plans to launch in 2009 with DirecTV as a minority partner, has been the key to the months-long talks. MLB wants cable to agree to carry the channel on a basic tier, not a premium tier.On the other hand, I get a dozen or two Spanish-language channels on basic cable that I never watch yet have to pay for... this is the reality of modern cable TV. It's not like every channel flies its own satellites, and all the individual endusers have their own transponders.Industry sources indicated that would never happen.
"Everyone sees this as the sham that it is," the high-ranking source said.
Time Warner, the nation's largest cable provider, has 50 million subscribers. A carriage agreement equal to DirecTV's would require it to distribute the Baseball Channel on a basic tier and, the source said, subscribers could end up paying whether they watched or not.
"You'd be asking 50 million people to pay, say, $2.50 a month so that 200,000 could get Extra Innings," the source said. "That's not going to happen."
Labels: tv
I guess it could happen which would be great but I doubt it. MLB did a nice spin job to make it seem like it is cable's fault when this is all over. I know it's not and MLB has lost a fan here. Thanks Bud
Also, I know of at least one other hard core baseball fan who blogs, has had season tickets to Cubs games for decades and visits Spring Training annually. He, like us, had MLBEI last year. He, like us, won't this year unless our cable providers offer it.
And my favorite team is out of market. (I'm looking at XM radio, though.)
Wait wait, let's do the math here. If this source isn't fudging the numbers here, he's saying that MLB is expecting to charge Time Warner $125 million a month for carrying The Baseball Channel, or $1.5 billion per year. The problem I see with this is that somehow I don't expect Time Warner is passing on the cost without increasing it's own profits.
In its own feud with Time Warner, NFL has claimed that the $10/month TW charges its customers who purchase the premium tier which includes the NFL Network brings in "500% more" revenue than is paid to the Network. It also claims that the amount it wished to charge for NFLN to be on the basic tier would amount to 70 cents per month for each Comcast subscriber, (or a far more modest $420M per year). Given that the NFL Network's audience is probably larger than the Baseball Channel's (at least initially), I'm highly skeptical of this source's numbers.
This quote is from a "Cable company executive." The Wall Street Journal article on the subject quoted an "industry expert" saying that the real cost would be around 20cents per subscriber.
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