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dannyswitzer
11-21-2010, 02:28 AM
This is a link to a news article i was linked to from the howard stern web sight. Interesting read. Its in the pheonix busniess journal.

C/P

Phoenix Business Journal

Date: Thursday, November 18, 2010, 12:44am MST





Consumers continued turning off their cable television subscriptions in the fall, stretching the pay-TV industry’s unprecedented U.S. decline to six months.
Cable, telco and satellite TV services collectively lost nearly 119,000 subscribers during the third quarter, according to an analysis by SNL Kagan, a Monterey, Calif., trade group.
The industry had lost 216,000 subscribers during the second quarter — the first year-to-year decline since SNL Kagan started keeping those records 30 years ago, according to the Kansas City Business Journal
Slower consumer spending, high unemployment and a weak housing industry are thought to be primary reasons, but Ian Olgeirson, a Denver-based SNL Kagan analyst, theorizes that streaming of TV programs over the Internet may be behind some of the decline.
“It is becoming increasingly difficult to dismiss the impact of over-the-top substitution on video subscriber performance, particularly after seeing declines during the period of the year that tends to produce the largest subscriber gains due to seasonal shifts back to television viewing and subscription packages,” Olgeirson said in a Wednesday release.
Fall is when TV and telco hookups historically have surged because of the end of family summer vacations and the return of college students to campuses throughout the country.
Instead of the usual third-quarter growth, U.S. cable TV companies lost 741,000 paying customers, according to SNL Kagan’s 2010 analysis.
Those losses were partially offset by telecom companies’ broadband TV services adding 476,000 customers and satellite TV services adding 145,000 subscribers in the third quarter.
The shift toward telecom and satellite TV providers left cable companies’ pay-TV market share at 60.3 percent nationwide, down from 62.9 percent a year earlier, SNL Kagan estimated.

Kernel Klank
11-21-2010, 10:01 PM
No surprises here. The kids today watch everything on their laptop and the older generations are all struggling to keep their jobs and homes. Add in digital OTA and it only makes sense to jettison pay tv when the money is tight. Pay TV and landline phones both fall under optional expenses now.

satchick
11-23-2010, 06:34 PM
They really need to rethink their business model... Things are moving towards streaming and on demand content. I know they already have VOD services, but to get VOD you have to order a minimum package. I'd like to see them offer an on-demand service, by itself. How about a system similar to Netflix, but over the cable system... Consumers want more choice now, and to stay in business they sort of have to listen to their customers.

wes block
11-23-2010, 07:01 PM
No surprises here. The kids today watch everything on their laptop and the older generations are all struggling to keep their jobs and homes. Add in digital OTA and it only makes sense to jettison pay tv when the money is tight. Pay TV and landline phones both fall under optional expenses now.

I agree. I cancelled mine. Even basic cable (which is like 20 channels, most of which are garbage) is like almost $40, forget any extras, digital channels or movies. I saw on the news a month ago something like 1 in every 33 houses in florida is in foreclosure. People are walking away from their homes cause they cant afford it and cant sell it to cover anything, yet costs are rising. Eventually something has to give. I use to have a landline and cell and cable. Now I have fta, magic jack (paid $70 for 5 years), and when my contract for my cell comes up, that will be seriously evaluated too.

chuck
11-25-2010, 04:10 AM
cable tv, i feel is very expensive for what you get. and it seems the good channels are all split into different packages......great marketing plan for the provider..., crappy for the consumer.

if it wern't for apartment blocks, and buildings that do not allow sat dishes...cable tv would be in a real cash crunch!

jechill
12-15-2010, 06:30 PM
in the old days there were people called barons.
like as in the old railroad barons who had the money to invest in railroads and start a monopoly racking in huge profits.
they eventually were forced to work together when war came.
today we have entertainment barons who are fighting to keep their interests.
like rogers telecomunications, tv and internet
like before the barons are grabbing as much money as they can till their well runs dry.
people are getting wise to them and their overcharging and their huge profits.
i watch all of my tv over the internet for free or through testing.
the more people who stop buying the better this will force the cost down
it would be smart if the govt broke up this monopoly because its already gotten way out of hand