dmcowen674
No Lifer
Another related article showing Americans are going without not just switching providers as the rich Republican paid Corporate shills in here are trying to suggest:
8-3-2012
http://smallbusiness.yahoo.com/advi...s-matures-weak-economy-214433522--sector.html
Americans drop pay-TV
Stubbornly high U.S. unemployment, a weak housing market combined with a mature business prone to regular programming blackouts has seen more than 400,000 American homes drop their cable or satellite TV service since the start of the year.
The maturity of the nearly fifty-year-old cable TV market has raised the stakes leading to more bitter and prolonged battles between distributors and their program producing partners. These disputes now typically end up with customers losing some of their favorite programming for days on end and adds to customer weariness with pay-TV.
White, a former senior PepsiCo executive, had a similar comment during DirecTV's call with analysts.
"All of us in this industry, both on the media side and on the distributor side, need to spend a little more time in the customers homes, understanding what's happening with their income and this economy."
The U.S. unemployment rate has stayed above 8 percent for several quarters as the sluggish economy forces Americans to reconsider previously thought essentials.
Distributors including White and Britt have pointed to regular above-inflation rate programming cost increases as a danger to the pay TV ecosystem.
The steady parade of customer losses has led to speculation that customers are 'cutting the cord' and dropping the expense of paying for TV altogether.
8-3-2012
http://www.dslreports.com/shownews/Cable-Industry-Lost-400000-Users-So-Far-in-2012-120632
Cable Industry Lost 400,000 Users So Far in 2012
Cord Cutting Denial Strong as Industry Refuses to Compete on Price
Reuters notes that more than 400,000 pay TV subscribers have dropped their television subscriptions since the beginning of this year.
Following on the heels of Comcast losing 176,000 cable users and Time Warner Cable losing 169,000, DirecTV this week announced their first ever net subscriber decline.
8-3-2012
http://smallbusiness.yahoo.com/advi...s-matures-weak-economy-214433522--sector.html
Americans drop pay-TV
Stubbornly high U.S. unemployment, a weak housing market combined with a mature business prone to regular programming blackouts has seen more than 400,000 American homes drop their cable or satellite TV service since the start of the year.
The maturity of the nearly fifty-year-old cable TV market has raised the stakes leading to more bitter and prolonged battles between distributors and their program producing partners. These disputes now typically end up with customers losing some of their favorite programming for days on end and adds to customer weariness with pay-TV.
White, a former senior PepsiCo executive, had a similar comment during DirecTV's call with analysts.
"All of us in this industry, both on the media side and on the distributor side, need to spend a little more time in the customers homes, understanding what's happening with their income and this economy."
The U.S. unemployment rate has stayed above 8 percent for several quarters as the sluggish economy forces Americans to reconsider previously thought essentials.
Distributors including White and Britt have pointed to regular above-inflation rate programming cost increases as a danger to the pay TV ecosystem.
The steady parade of customer losses has led to speculation that customers are 'cutting the cord' and dropping the expense of paying for TV altogether.
8-3-2012
http://www.dslreports.com/shownews/Cable-Industry-Lost-400000-Users-So-Far-in-2012-120632
Cable Industry Lost 400,000 Users So Far in 2012
Cord Cutting Denial Strong as Industry Refuses to Compete on Price
Reuters notes that more than 400,000 pay TV subscribers have dropped their television subscriptions since the beginning of this year.
Following on the heels of Comcast losing 176,000 cable users and Time Warner Cable losing 169,000, DirecTV this week announced their first ever net subscriber decline.
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