DeltaV wrote:I would be ok with paying $10-$15/month for the 4 months of basketball season, instead of it being bundled into cable for $7-8/month 12 months of the year.
ivet wrote:ESPN should do a 30 for 30 called Requiem of ESPN and have Big East people go on there and talk about the good old days of ESPN.
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:ivet wrote:ESPN should do a 30 for 30 called Requiem of ESPN and have Big East people go on there and talk about the good old days of ESPN.
Bravo!
ESPN’s number of subscribers and revenue are in decline. Recently, the company has been criticized for being too political.
ESPN was widely considered invincible and their loss of viewers has been a surprise, but the television industry has rapidly modernized in recent years. In 2011, ESPN had over 100 million subscribers, but currently they‘re down to less than 88 million, according to Nielsen.
Networks earn revenue from both advertising and subscriber fees. ESPN generates more from subscriber fees than any other network because they own exclusive licenses for many sporting events. According to Variety, ESPN receives $7.86 per subscriber each month with the next highest being TNT at $1.58.
In 2015, ESPN had an estimated 94.4 million subscribers each paying $6.61 monthly totaling $7.74 billion in yearly revenue. ESPN factored those numbers when agreeing to multi-year licenses with the NFL ($15.2 billion), MLB ($5.6 billion), and the NBA ($12.6 billion).
With declines in traditional cable television subscribers due to various streaming platforms, experts project the loss of subscribers for ESPN to continue. Saddled by the cost of exorbitant licensing fees, ESPN may need to carry out additional budget cuts and increase subscriber fees to remain strong.
Walt Disney has threatened to pull its programming from the fourth-largest U.S. cable distributor, Altice USA, if the two parties cannot reach a deal before the end of the month, the cable company said on Sunday.
New York-based Altice, which is owned by a European conglomerate and is better known as Optimum, said Disney had asked it for "hundreds of millions of dollars" in new fees to be able to continue carrying ESPN and ABC, even as ratings suffer.
The two parties have been working on a new contract to replace the one that expires at the end of the month, and Walt Disney has warned customers that its channels will go dark on October 1st if a new deal is not worked out, according to media reports.
Fri, Oct, 6 - Memphis at Connecticut - ESPN
Sat, Oct, 7 – #1 Alabama at Texas A&M - ESPN
Fri, Oct, 13 – #2 Clemson at Syracuse - ESPN
According to the New York Times, the Altice contract is the first Disney distribution agreement to come up for renewal since the start of ESPN’s troubles. And Altice has claimed that Disney was seeking to force even those who do not receive ESPN to pay for it, suggesting that high fees were the cause of rising cable bills.
Unless the two parties come to an agreement on a new contract by the end of the week, Altice subscribers will lose access to ESPN along with all the other Disney-controlled networks, including ABC and Disney Channel. But a loss for Altice would also be a loss for Disney, as other cable distributors may try to turn down price increases in upcoming renewal talks as well.
Edrick wrote:http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/why-espn-could-abandon-nfl-football-guest-column-1052792
MullinMayhem wrote:ESPN is going to keep failing as long as they remain a very biased political channel. People do not tune in for MSNBC or FOX, they tune in for sports. Long gone are the days where Chris Berman would be giving some funny commentary over highlights or Stuart Scott would be yelling "Booya!". As long as they keep people like Jemele Hill employed who should get a job as an activist instead, they will continue to falter. We all know why she's still employed though, let's be real. It's still shocking to me how clueless MTV and ESPN are...as Michael Jordan once said "Republicans buy sneakers too". Smart man...not sure why you would want to alienate literally 50% of America especially in business where it will affect your bottom line. ESPN was at its best when you had no clue about the political stance of their hosts.
As an added note, did anyone see that ESPN partnered with a Barstool Sports show? They lasted one episode and then ESPN cancelled it after PC pressure (some ist or ism). It's very obvious why Barstool is trending up and ESPN is trending down. Barstool is much more down to earth, original, authentic, and funny. ESPN is that old out of touch dad trying to be cool to impress his son's friends but his friends roll their eyes. Barstool does not care about PC culture...ESPN is downright frightened by it. Barstool is not political and ESPN is basically an extension of MSNBC and CNN. But they still don't get it.
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