Disney has also apparently demanded that as part of any deal, Directv give up any future claims against Disney for anti-competitive activity. I suspect that Directv's lawyers will advise against that concession.
Sinclair did not refuse to allow streaming services to carry their channels, they demand a ridiculous amount of money per subscriber and the streaming services, plus Dish Network, refused and dropped the channels. Sinclair way overpaid for the regional sports channels and tried to make it up on the subscriber's dime.Honestly this isn’t even that bad. Sinclair basically killed the mlb by refusing to allow streaming services carry them. That was 5 years ago and it still hasn’t changed.
That is because of the Fubo lawsuit that has stopped the launch of Venu Sports. DirecTV filed a statement of support for the lawsuit months ago but has not officially join the suit. Disney is trying to prevent them from ever joining it if they wanted too.Disney has also apparently demanded that as part of any deal, Directv give up any future claims against Disney for anti-competitive activity. I suspect that Directv's lawyers will advise against that concession.
Too long, switched to YouTube TV today. SMH
It’s always been very good and very dependable.Just pulled the trigger on YTTV. Pretty safe. Free 21 day trial and then a discount for the first few months.
yep back then they let you have both channelsWe never had problems like this back in the 60's!
Man, where you from?yep back then they let you have both channels
The blackouts will continue until morale improves…Well I’m stuck with it on the boat. Not convincing the company to swap in the interest of crew morale.
ESPN/HULU on the phone to the rescue
ESPN will pick up these subscribers one way or another. It is DTV that needs this to happen. America loves its football.Being on traditional cable, I don't have a dog in this fight.
But I do find it interesting. DTV is losing subscribers left and right. Separate and apart from DTV, ESPN is losing viewers, compounded by the fact that they overpaid for content.
ESPN needs additional revenue to remain profitable. DTV needs to cut costs to remain profitable. Both need viewers. Both have corporate parents with deep pockets -- ATT for DTV, Disney for ESPN -- but both corporate parents have their own sets of problems only tangentially related to this catfight.
Who wins the game of chicken? I don't know.
If you're not a regular consumer facing loss of channels, all the different circumstances make it fascinating to watch. But don't get complacent -- however you get your TV, this sort of showdown will happen to your provider sooner or later.
... But don't get complacent -- however you get your TV, this sort of showdown will happen to your provider sooner or later.
Sunday Ticket is on YTTV now. DTV is such an archaic system anyway, I don’t know why anyone would still use it or traditional cable for that matter. (Yes, I know YTTV had their own dispute with ESPN fairly recently. I’m not saying they’re immune to this, but they are by far the best option.)ESPN will pick up these subscribers one way or another. It is DTV that needs this to happen. America loves its football.
Direct has moved to streaming now, so it's basically the same platform as all the other streaming services. In a perfect world, they'd like to sell you the internet connection and then get you to use them for TV content. However, it's the contract they want to lock you into that is the problem.Sunday Ticket is on YTTV now. DTV is such an archaic system anyway, I don’t know why anyone would still use it or traditional cable for that matter. (Yes, I know YTTV had their own dispute with ESPN fairly recently. I’m not saying they’re immune to this, but they are by far the best option.)
Dunno who wins, but we as the consumer are the lo$er$...Being on traditional cable, I don't have a dog in this fight.
But I do find it interesting. DTV is losing subscribers left and right. Separate and apart from DTV, ESPN is losing viewers, compounded by the fact that they overpaid for content.
ESPN needs additional revenue to remain profitable. DTV needs to cut costs to remain profitable. Both need viewers. Both have corporate parents with deep pockets -- ATT for DTV, Disney for ESPN -- but both corporate parents have their own sets of problems only tangentially related to this catfight.
Who wins the game of chicken? I don't know.
If you're not a regular consumer facing loss of channels, all the different circumstances make it fascinating to watch. But don't get complacent -- however you get your TV, this sort of showdown will happen to your provider sooner or later.
Direct’s streaming sucks thoughDirect has moved to streaming now, so it's basically the same platform as all the other streaming services. In a perfect world, they'd like to sell you the internet connection and then get you to use them for TV content. However, it's the contract they want to lock you into that is the problem.
Being older, if the price is right, I'd probably prefer land line cable if a decent option/price was available (because they usually don't do contracts).
I'll probably use streaming for the near future. Our new neighborhood already has fiber installed.
Only way I'd go back to Direct is if it was the last/only option.