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posted by martyb on Tuesday May 02 2017, @02:47PM   Printer-friendly
from the cheaper-circuses dept.

ESPN, which laid off 100 people this week, has a multitude of problems, but the basic one is this: It pays too much for content and costs too much for consumers.

That didn't used to matter because, thanks to the way the cable industry "bundled" channels, cable customers were forced to pay for it even if they never watched it. Now, however, as the cable bundle slowly disintegrates, it matters a lot.

[...] But it's a pipe dream to think that ESPN will ever make the kind of profits ($6.4 billion in 2014) that it once did, for two reasons. First, as is the case with so many other industries, the internet has both shined a light on the flaws of the cable model and exploited them. What was the main flaw of the cable model? It was that consumers had to pay for channels they never watched.

And now they don't.

It turns out that there were lots of people, including sports fans, who resented having to pay for the most expensive channel in the bundle. The popularity of streaming led to "cord cutting," but it also caused cable companies to begin offering less expensive "skinny bundles," some of which don't include ESPN.


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  • (Score: 2) by Grishnakh on Tuesday May 02 2017, @10:18PM

    by Grishnakh (2831) on Tuesday May 02 2017, @10:18PM (#503213)

    Until they switched from music videos to reality shows. Nice way to kill a network.

    How so? They're still around, aren't they? Looks like their strategy worked.

    I don't get it either (I have zero interest in reality shows, and back in the 80s and early 90s some of the music programming was fun to watch), but apparently I'm not the target audience, and there's plenty of people who really do like MTV's programming or else they wouldn't continue to exist.

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