Woochifer
07-20-2012, 02:12 PM
Another week, another TV carriage dispute. Viacom and Directv reached an agreement today, and their carriage dispute that started last Monday has ended. Most articles I'm reading indicate that Viacom basically caved in after previously demanding a reported 30% increase in carriage fees and that Directv add the Epix pay channel to their lineup.
As a Directv subscriber, the dispute with Viacom cut off 17 channels, including MTV, Comedy Central, and Nickelodeon. I found that I hardly missed any of them. My daughter watches Nick Jr, but we have so many of her favorite shows stored on the DVR that it hardly mattered.
Given that most carriage disputes are resolved without any program interruptions (and nearly all of the rest are put to bed very shortly), the 11-day service interruption between Viacom and Directv revealed some interesting themes.
1) Viewers have options and will exercise them.
Directv accounts for 20% of Viacom's subscriber base, and the mostly-sagging ratings for their networks took about a 20% hit. For Nick viewers, they seamlessly migrated over to competing channels, as ratings for Disney, Hub, and Sprout had large spikes.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/19/business/media/dispute-with-directv-aids-viacoms-rivals-in-childrens-programming.html
2) Holding cable/satellite viewers hostage isn't enough. Screwing with streaming viewers is the new thermonuclear weapon.
In a rather brazen middle-fingered move, Viacom decided to try pressuring Directv by not only blacking out the channels on Directv's system, but by also removing all free web-streaming access to those channels. Compared to others, Viacom has been aggressive with allowing free access to video clips and full episodes on the web. But, once they blacked out Directv, Viacom also cut off all free web access (subscribers to Hulu Plus still had access). With that move, they managed to piss off more than just Directv's subscribers, but cord cutters as well. Anyone sitting on the fence wound up siding with Directv. Viacom eventually had to back down and resume free streaming for The Daily Show and Colbert Report.
Viacom pulls “The Daily Show” offline as a result of contract dispute | Ars Technica (http://arstechnica.com/business/2012/07/viacom-pulls-the-daily-show-offline-as-a-result-of-contract-dispute/)
But, in future carriage disputes, I can see the online video streaming increasingly used as a potential weapon against the carriers by program providers. Viacom backed off this time, but a more determined player with considerably more leverage (e.g., Comcast/Universal, News Corporation/Fox, or ABC/Disney) could try a similar strategy of blacking out their free web streams if they want to ratchet up the pressure on a carrier.
3) Live and local content is king
An interesting take from the LA Times is that Viacom wound up screwing itself in this dispute when they separated from CBS back in 2009. Huge short-term gain, but potentially a long-term loss as they lost considerable leverage in the process.
The combined carriage fee that Directv pays Viacom is about $2 per subscriber for 17 channels. ABC/Disney gets ~$4.50 per subscriber for the ESPN channels alone. The difference is that ESPN content is live, and therefore more valuable. And another trend that we have seen over the last couple of years is the major broadcast networks using their local affiliate programming as a weapon during carriage negotiations.
Bottomline is that more subscribers will cancel their service if they lose access to live and local content. Losing access to most scripted and reality shows will merely prod most viewers to change to a different channel. Viacom was vulnerable because they no longer had CBS in their programming docket, and much of their most high value programming was already available on the web for free.
Viacom and DirecTV reach deal - latimes.com (http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/envelope/cotown/la-et-ct-viacom-directv-deal-20120720,0,1311648.story)
As a Directv subscriber, the dispute with Viacom cut off 17 channels, including MTV, Comedy Central, and Nickelodeon. I found that I hardly missed any of them. My daughter watches Nick Jr, but we have so many of her favorite shows stored on the DVR that it hardly mattered.
Given that most carriage disputes are resolved without any program interruptions (and nearly all of the rest are put to bed very shortly), the 11-day service interruption between Viacom and Directv revealed some interesting themes.
1) Viewers have options and will exercise them.
Directv accounts for 20% of Viacom's subscriber base, and the mostly-sagging ratings for their networks took about a 20% hit. For Nick viewers, they seamlessly migrated over to competing channels, as ratings for Disney, Hub, and Sprout had large spikes.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/19/business/media/dispute-with-directv-aids-viacoms-rivals-in-childrens-programming.html
2) Holding cable/satellite viewers hostage isn't enough. Screwing with streaming viewers is the new thermonuclear weapon.
In a rather brazen middle-fingered move, Viacom decided to try pressuring Directv by not only blacking out the channels on Directv's system, but by also removing all free web-streaming access to those channels. Compared to others, Viacom has been aggressive with allowing free access to video clips and full episodes on the web. But, once they blacked out Directv, Viacom also cut off all free web access (subscribers to Hulu Plus still had access). With that move, they managed to piss off more than just Directv's subscribers, but cord cutters as well. Anyone sitting on the fence wound up siding with Directv. Viacom eventually had to back down and resume free streaming for The Daily Show and Colbert Report.
Viacom pulls “The Daily Show” offline as a result of contract dispute | Ars Technica (http://arstechnica.com/business/2012/07/viacom-pulls-the-daily-show-offline-as-a-result-of-contract-dispute/)
But, in future carriage disputes, I can see the online video streaming increasingly used as a potential weapon against the carriers by program providers. Viacom backed off this time, but a more determined player with considerably more leverage (e.g., Comcast/Universal, News Corporation/Fox, or ABC/Disney) could try a similar strategy of blacking out their free web streams if they want to ratchet up the pressure on a carrier.
3) Live and local content is king
An interesting take from the LA Times is that Viacom wound up screwing itself in this dispute when they separated from CBS back in 2009. Huge short-term gain, but potentially a long-term loss as they lost considerable leverage in the process.
The combined carriage fee that Directv pays Viacom is about $2 per subscriber for 17 channels. ABC/Disney gets ~$4.50 per subscriber for the ESPN channels alone. The difference is that ESPN content is live, and therefore more valuable. And another trend that we have seen over the last couple of years is the major broadcast networks using their local affiliate programming as a weapon during carriage negotiations.
Bottomline is that more subscribers will cancel their service if they lose access to live and local content. Losing access to most scripted and reality shows will merely prod most viewers to change to a different channel. Viacom was vulnerable because they no longer had CBS in their programming docket, and much of their most high value programming was already available on the web for free.
Viacom and DirecTV reach deal - latimes.com (http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/envelope/cotown/la-et-ct-viacom-directv-deal-20120720,0,1311648.story)