
If I understand the Charter-Disney carriage deal
the two companies struck last week, Spectrum cable subscribers going forward will no longer have access to at least eight Disney-owned channels they had before.
As a New York
Spectrum customer, that has me thinking that the monthly cost of my subscription should be reduced (to a level I cannot compute) if what I am buying has now shrunk by eight cable networks.
Never mind that I never watched them (except one of them, and only very, very seldom). The issue is that I could have watched them, but now I will not have that
option, even though I rarely, if ever, took up the option in the first place.
According to reports, the networks that Disney agreed to pull out of its
carriage agreement with Charter Communications, owner of Spectrum, are Baby TV, Disney Junior, Disney XD, Freeform (featuring original scripted series such as “Good Trouble,” pictured
above), FXM, FXX, Nat Geo Wild and Nat Geo Mundo.
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The remaining Disney properties are ABC (WABC/Ch. 7 here in New York), FX, ESPN (multiple channels),
Disney Channel and Nat Geo.
The standoff between the two companies started on Thursday, August 24, when all the Disney-owned channels on Spectrum --
including ABC and ESPN -- disappeared from Spectrum cable systems and left their positions vacant.
The agreement ending the standoff was reached last Monday
(September 11). As of yesterday, the dropped channel spaces were still empty, except for an on-screen message informing subscribers that the channels were gone.
For the record, of the eight dropped channels listed above, the only one I used to check into every once in a while was Nat Geo Wild, an offshoot of Nat Geo where I hoped to find nice
wildlife documentaries.
Maybe the network had them or maybe it didn’t. I just never found any, so this behavior ceased long ago.
As for the other dropped networks, news stories about the carriage settlement largely concurred that these are all under-performing channels for Disney.
The stories suggested that Disney is eyeing such under-performing networks for phasing out eventually as it evolves into a different kind of TV content company emphasizing
streaming (both ad-supported and not) over legacy networks such as broadcast and basic cable.
Separately, recent stories have Disney discussing internally
the possibility of selling some of these legacy assets including ABC and the TV stations the company owns.
One suitor, Byron Allen’s Entertainment
Studios company, confirmed it made a $10 billion offer for those assets plus some of Disney’s cable networks last week.
Station owner Nexstar Media
Group has also been rumored to be interested in some of the assets too, but there has been no such confirmation from Nexstar.
Whatever is really going on
here, the TV business looks like it is on the cusp of a new era of massive change -- Disney allegedly talking about shedding legacy assets and now, the other majors thinking about their own future
carriage agreements and the value going forward of their own broadcast and basic cable channels.
Some stories speculate on a whole slew of long-time basic
cable brands such as NBCU’s Syfy and E!, for example, as possibly having outlived their usefulness.
As part of the Charter-Disney deal, Charter will
now be offering Disney+ and ESPN+ to its subscribers, which to me, plays like a trade of the dropped, past-their-prime cable channels for new streaming ones. This exchange is a sign of the
times.
As for Spectrum lowering my monthly subscription fee to reflect the lost channels I never watched anyway, I’m not holding my breath.