Charlie Ergen:
Source: Dish CEO: Netflix Has an ‘Insurmountable’ Lead in Streaming: Online Video News «
I don't agree. In addition to all the folks like me for whom regional sports are the bread and butter of cable/satellite, you've got a lot of people who want to see the occasional game when the mood strikes or when it's a topic of conversation around the water cooler, a lot of people in a family unit or roommate situation who may not be interested in sports themselves but have someone living with them who is, a lot of people who will want the game available for friends or house guests, and so on and so forth. Regional sports I think were the major driver of cable adoption in the first place in this country and there would be a lot of people who without live sports in place would drop pay television entirely.
In fact, in the age of Netflix, sports only becomes more important -- people have cheaper more convenient options with more selection than cable/satellite when it comes to movies, but with live sports, if you want a legal reliable way to see your team play, you've got to have a cable or satellite package. If indeed cable and satellite television are on their way to becoming less prevalent or even disappearing one day, it seems to me that sports is going to be the main thing staving that off for a few extra years. If you're a television provider who, as Ergen has hinted at, seems to feel like television providers are on their way out eventually, and yet are invested in that area and feel there is still money to be made, sports is where that money is, because it's the last thing that'll keep people tied to you.
Also, I hope this isn't the strategy he embarks upon with Dish, because in addition to the financial losses he'd incur with it (Which are really his own thing and not my concern as a customer), it's really not fair to people like me who subscribed to the service with the expectation of seeing our favorite teams play. At the very least, if this is the direction he's headed in with all these rsn contract disputes, and it's an intentional strategy, he should offer his subscribers who are sports fans an opportunity to shake hands and depart as their rsns disappear -- without an early termination or penalty fee. If people sign up for something to view their local teams, they shouldn't be stuck footing the bill and not getting to see those teams.
"there is a strategy potentially out there for one video provider not to carry regional sports, and I think there might be some short-term pain, but they (would) probably do pretty well long-term.”
Source: Dish CEO: Netflix Has an ‘Insurmountable’ Lead in Streaming: Online Video News «
I don't agree. In addition to all the folks like me for whom regional sports are the bread and butter of cable/satellite, you've got a lot of people who want to see the occasional game when the mood strikes or when it's a topic of conversation around the water cooler, a lot of people in a family unit or roommate situation who may not be interested in sports themselves but have someone living with them who is, a lot of people who will want the game available for friends or house guests, and so on and so forth. Regional sports I think were the major driver of cable adoption in the first place in this country and there would be a lot of people who without live sports in place would drop pay television entirely.
In fact, in the age of Netflix, sports only becomes more important -- people have cheaper more convenient options with more selection than cable/satellite when it comes to movies, but with live sports, if you want a legal reliable way to see your team play, you've got to have a cable or satellite package. If indeed cable and satellite television are on their way to becoming less prevalent or even disappearing one day, it seems to me that sports is going to be the main thing staving that off for a few extra years. If you're a television provider who, as Ergen has hinted at, seems to feel like television providers are on their way out eventually, and yet are invested in that area and feel there is still money to be made, sports is where that money is, because it's the last thing that'll keep people tied to you.
Also, I hope this isn't the strategy he embarks upon with Dish, because in addition to the financial losses he'd incur with it (Which are really his own thing and not my concern as a customer), it's really not fair to people like me who subscribed to the service with the expectation of seeing our favorite teams play. At the very least, if this is the direction he's headed in with all these rsn contract disputes, and it's an intentional strategy, he should offer his subscribers who are sports fans an opportunity to shake hands and depart as their rsns disappear -- without an early termination or penalty fee. If people sign up for something to view their local teams, they shouldn't be stuck footing the bill and not getting to see those teams.