Thought you BTN folks would like to see this blog item from awfulannouncing.com. A bit of background on the DSH/BTN issue. It's from a few days ago but it's interesting:
  										 								 			[h=1]Dish Network And Big Ten Network Are On A Break, But Haven't Broken Up[/h]  						 		 				Written by Ben Koo on Saturday, 15 September 2012 09:13. 	 			 			
 			 		 			 		 		  		   
 	
		
		
	
	
  	Yesterday I posted my thoughts on what was
 going on the scenes with DirectTV and Pac 12 Network on  reading between the lines on how the companies were posturing. It was  interesting to hear from some folks familiar with those talks who  commented I was pretty much on the money. 
  	A large part of what's going on with the DTV stalemate with Pac 12  Networks surrounds the fact that Dish boldly stepped up as DTV was  deferring. This is the equivalent to Udonis Haslem deciding to take it  to the hole and scoring with 15 seconds on the shot clock in a close  game while LeBron was posting up on a smaller defender thinking he was  about to get the ball.
  	With the addition of the Pac 12 Network, Dish suddenly became a very  viable option for college football and basketball fans who lust for  every game. But in a pretty damn shocking development hours before week 3  kicks off, we learn Dish will be without BTN, at least for now.
  	If you recall in the days leading up to the start of the season, Dish was bluffing
 they wouldn't do an extension with the network.  They were pretty mum on their side of the negotiations as BTN seemed to  outmaneuver Dish by saying they were asking for a monthly carriage fee  that others had agreed upon. Removing a channel you already carry is  much messier than just deciding not to carry the channel from the  outset, so I was pretty confident that Dish was just bluffing.
  	Hours before kickoff the two sides agreed to a short term agreement to  not disrupt service. Last week, the process repeated again as the  channel actually did get pulled in the early hours of the morning but  another short term extension was agreed upon so nobody would miss a  game. Most thought that this was the last we would hear about this other  than the formal announcement of a long term extension. 
  	Instead we were greeted with this statement below from BTN, again a mere hours before kickoff.
    	
"As of September 14th, BTN's distribution agreement with Dish  expired despite our best efforts to finalize an agreement. We are  disappointed that Dish does not see the value in the network in the same  way that so many of their customers do, including Big Ten students,  alumni, fans and viewers across the country who continue to pay Dish for  a channel they no longer receive."
  	Seriously? 
  	This is basically like your over dramatic couple who breaks up all the  time but nobody really takes it seriously. They're destined to be stuck  with each other.
    	My best guess as to what happened goes like this: 
  	Dish wanted special pricing because they're so big. The BTN said no and  as week 1 closed in, Dish knew that the channel had too much traction  to pull from customers especially on the heels of getting pummeled for  dropping AMC. They basically said "Fine, we'll come up a bit in  negotiations and promise to figure it out in the next week." 
  	But then they put on their tough guy negotiating hat again likely  trying to save a 4-6 cents a month per subscriber and BTN called the  bluff not willing to drop the price that they've gotten elsewhere. Very  often, the larger cable and satellite companies have a "most favored  nation" clause meaning that if someone signs a better deal, that pricing  automatically kicks in for them as well.
  	Even if Dish was trying to save a couple of pennies a month per  household and BTN could be considered a bit too firm in their stance,  you have to realize that BTN bending here for 10% discount or whatever  would mean existing contracts could roll back to lower rates and  obviously you can't do that.
  	So last week the channel went dark for hours. You have to think BTN  pulled it rather than Dish dropping it, basically calling their bluff.  Whatever happened seemed to work as before most people woke up, the  channel was back on. Although nobody really noticed the channel got  pulled we get some tweets and I saw some posts that the channel was dark  for awhile.
  	Another one week extension followed as Dish likely moved up a little bit in their stance and promised to get it done again.
  	With nothing finalized heading into today, BTN decided to go for the  kill and pull the channel again. I don't think Dish really has any  motivation to pull the channel as it pisses off their customers and also  it was BTN who notified people of the development and not Dish. BTN  likely feels Dish is being a bit too stubborn and the short term  extensions are more of a stalling tactic. At this point, why not let  Dish actually deal with the fallout of angry fans for one week (with a  pretty mild slate of games) as conference play looms with bigger  matchups on the channel. Instant leverage. 
  	Dish hasn't released a statement but when they do, this is basically what it will read like:
  	
"Blah blah blah, we are all about value in entertainment and were  working to get an extension done when BTN randomly freaked out and  decided to pull the channel. We want to get a deal done but those crazy  dudes are just INSANE! They pulled the channel! Who does that?"
  	Well a channel that gave you two good faith negotiating extensions does  and yes, you can try to spin it, but not that many people will buy it.  You just added the Pac 12 Network which has a smaller fan base and  lesser traction. You can't even play the "We're not sure people want  this channel," because you already added it and 72 million households  have the channel AND all of your latest PR fodder is trumpeting how  awesome you are for adding the Pac 12 Network.
  	So what's next? 
  	BTN waits for the phone to ring while Dish gets an earful from their  customers and goes into damage control/spin mode which they're pretty  used to at this point.
  	At some point this month, I'm confident they'll figure it out. The fact  Dish gave some ground to get extensions means they're right there and  95% of this deal is basically locked in. The range they are disputing at  this point has to be extremely small to the point where people would be  angry at both sides knowing they missed a game because of a nickel or  less a month.
  	This is less of an actual negotiation thing and more of BTN showing  some backbone after giving Dish the benefit of the doubt twice. It's  like the weaker person in a relatioship announcing it's over after  they've been forgiving and understanding up until that point but have  finally had enough.
  	Like a roller coaster couple going to all of their friends to blame  each other for the breakup, you'll likely hear a lot about this in the  days and weeks to come. Inevitably though, it's just really really hard  to see Dish not getting an extension done soon. They're adding customers  right now by having the Pac 12 Network while DTV doesn't but that gain  will go right out the window if this drags out. Gaining subscribers is a  big thing and for the first time in a long while, Dish can have some  programming that can get people in the door. 
  	It's possible that similar to last week, by the time you read this, the  channel could be back on although I would think BTN won't bring back  the channel until the contract is signed, sealed, and delivered this  time around.