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Regional Sports Networks Going Bankrupt

Discussion in 'Journalism topics only' started by Readallover, Feb 15, 2023.

  1. 2muchcoffeeman

    2muchcoffeeman Well-Known Member

    Charter Spectrum, I would think.
     
  2. Twirling Time

    Twirling Time Well-Known Member

    I cut DirecTV seven years ago after 10+ years of $5 rate hikes every year. That was after I wheedled better rates twice by threatening to cut. I finally gave up and cut the cord.
     
    MileHigh, Liut and maumann like this.
  3. maumann

    maumann Well-Known Member

    Yeah, once the pine trees grew up higher than I could move the dish, I said so long to DirecTV. Too expensive and I lost the signal every time the wind blew.
     
    Liut likes this.
  4. DanOregon

    DanOregon Well-Known Member

    Interesting bit on NPR's Marketplace about teams moving games back to local network affiliates - more potential audience/ad revenue than local cable.
     
    Readallover and Liut like this.
  5. MileHigh

    MileHigh Moderator Staff Member

    I cut it two years ago after being with them for 20. Don't miss it -- or the huge monthly bill.
     
    maumann and Liut like this.
  6. Readallover

    Readallover Active Member

  7. LanceyHoward

    LanceyHoward Well-Known Member

  8. Della9250

    Della9250 Well-Known Member

    The stubbornness of these people is criminal -- you aren't on DISH network because you want stupid prices.

    There are at least six million DISH subscribers based on late 2023 numbers. Charge a dollar carriage fee per subscriber. At minimum, they have thrown away 250 million. And there are people who would return / subscribe if it was available. And that's just DISH. Comcast is more than twice that number.
     
  9. 2muchcoffeeman

    2muchcoffeeman Well-Known Member

    Bad example. Dish dropped the Bally RSNs in 2019 (they were still the Fox Sports regionals at the time) and dropped the rest as carriage agreements expired..
     
  10. Della9250

    Della9250 Well-Known Member

    Maybe I don't understand but they dropped them because they wanted outrageous fees. And Bally's hasn't budged at all. And they are losing 10s of millions in the process.
     
  11. Typist Clerk

    Typist Clerk Well-Known Member

    The last regional sports network on Dish was NESN (Red Sox, Bruins), dropped late in 2021. At the time, Dish TV president Brian Neylon said “The current Regional Sports Network (RSN) model is fundamentally broken," citing high fees and few viewers. Of course, most channels have few viewers, but charge much less. Neylon kept national sports networks, which also have high fees, but subscribers continue to flee. In the last quarter of 2023, parent EchoStar lost $2 billion. Do that enough quarters, and you won't be around for the next quarter.
     
    2muchcoffeeman and maumann like this.
  12. LanceyHoward

    LanceyHoward Well-Known Member

    Every major league baseball team has a cable contract worth at least 40 million dollars a year and some make a lot more. Just as an estimate let's say that the total revenues of the 29 MLB teams from their local cable contracts in the United States is a combined two billion dollars annually. This works out to each team making about $400,000 a game on broadcast rights, in very rough numbers..

    In the United States (I don't have Canadian data) the combined total number of average viewers for MLB baseball in 2021 was 1.8 million per game (this may be paywalled).

    MLB Seeing Local TV Households Decline Dramatically Compared With Last Full Season

    This works out to about 60,000 viewers per team per game, in very rough numbers. That means MLB teams are receiving more than six dollars per game for each viewer they deliver.
    MLB in local markets almost always crushes the NBA and the NHL in local ratings,

    My estimates are incredibly rough. But I think it is clear that professional sports teams in the NHL, NBA and NHL are being paid a lot of money to deliver relatively small audiences to cable providers. When cable television had a 90% household penetration and the ability to increase prices by twice the rate of inflation annually I am not sure the big cable providers cared. But in 2024 cable providers are looking at declining subscriber bases and are going to be a lot more selective.
     
    Last edited: Jun 5, 2024
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