Charting ESPN’s rise, including how it build leverage over the cable TV providers, and its ongoing decline, caused by the Internet.
stratechery.com
www.sportsbusinessjournal.com
Sounds like Charter is not in any hurry to resolve this yet. They are realizing that their profit margins are so thin in Cable TV that they are willing to help customers move to FUBO or YouTube TV for their sports fix and focus more on their broadband business.
I just read the Stratechery article, and was coming in to post that. A lot of heady business logic, but the folks on this board should be able to enjoy following it.
I think the last bit is the bit that I keep coming back to in the conference realignment thread. Sports leagues were able to keep bilking ESPN with higher and higher pricetags on their media rights, because ESPN could continue to turn around and bilk the cable companies. It was a horn of plenty filled with cash for ESPN
and the sports rights holders. But now that horn of plenty seems to have dried up. What many (including the Pac-12 school presidents) didn't/don't see is that the sports broadcast rights rates don't keep going up just because they keep going up. There's a supply and demand differential at work here, and at a certain tipping point either demand doesn't keep up with the supply and prices stabilize, or outside forces quit acting on the whole arrangement (i.e., the cable companies stop paying ESPN).
Now, everyone still has TV (or something like it) - for now. People will continue to leave cable and move to YoutubeTV, Fubo, Hulu, etc. But the big Q is will people move on from packaged services to a la carte deals, where they can have access to entire catalogs of content, a la Disney+?
No one knows. But the cable spigot has dried up, and that's bad news for ESPN as well as FOX, NBC, etc.
So where does that leave us? In the current interim, uncertain period, I can't imagine any conference or independent team getting substantial increases on what they're currently getting. Heck, I would expect to see decreases, at this rate. The Pac-12 content wasn't NOT valuable. It just wasn't as valuable as what was paid to the Big10 and SEC.
Neither, I think, are the Big10 and the SEC.