Posted on 10/25/2015 5:14:44 PM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin
Whatever you call it, it's killing the cable tv business.
Its no secret that young people like to consume entertainment they dont necessarily pay for.
But when business and tech types talk about this reality, they tend to use neutral or even flattering language: Millennials, they say, like to swap files and share subscription passwords. After all, super-earnest, bike-commuting, coffee-sipping twenty-somethings dont look like dangerous criminals. And lets face it, no business wants to alienate the work-forces largest generational cohort, with billions, if not trillions, worth of spending ahead of it.
But now some Wall Street analysts have decided to come right out and use another S wordstealin discussing the problems facing some traditional media enterprises.
The millennials are a generation that grew up (and will likely grow old) sharing (read stealing) passwords for access to content if it continues to be ignored, wrote analysts Mike McCormack, Scott Goldman, and Tudor Mustata in a note to clients Tuesday. We believe it is the most significant cause of the declining pay TV subscriber base.
(Excerpt) Read more at time.com ...
I keep seeing the same movies being replayed over and over on cable. It is if there were only a top 40 and not the thousands of other films to see. I have Sling tv which is an app I added to my ROKU. It has most of the cable channels I watch but at a much lower cost.
It has the Smithsonian channel which has the shows that the Discovery and History channel do not carry anymore. You know, informational and entertaining. I pay $30 for Sling and cable internet is $44.
That’s right... Sports fans do need to buy cable TV, don’t they? ESPN, etc.
That’s what would stop me from cord cutting. I want my NFL Sunday Ticket, which locks me into DirecTV (a great company, by the way). So I load up with all the movie premium channels and don’t think twice. It’s like Daddy says, Money don’t spend itself.
If you’re happy with the service, that’s great.
I’m flat broke, so I have to count pennies. Good thing I’m not a sports fan.
It’s sharing if I decide to give my money away - it’s stealing if someone else decides to take my money away....
Yesterday was a great day for a lot of otherwise unused gags. Who would have thought it?
I perused the comments. Notably missing were the ‘sportsters’ and ‘series addicts’ from what I viewed.
I quit cable & satellite for streaming, don’t miss the commercials, have more time in my life and am satisfied that I am not supporting MSNBC & the-like.
While I ‘may’ consider a return if I could get ‘a la carte’ channels, the other aspect that pissed me off was the failure of 1st-run movies to EVER make it to the premium channels.
Many factors have created the mess that is now cable & satellite; many more should ‘cut the cord’ for a few months and see what happens. It takes about 2-3 months for the ‘addiction’ to TV to truly abate.
Worst case is you receive a $200 credit/discount offer to return when the season begins again...
It’s that bad, Huh? I don’t have cable or satellite, but I get the majority of the shows you listed on ‘free’ Government TV by me. METV and ANTV, mostly, a free Weather Channel (Weather Nation) and PBS for the cooking shows I’m addicted to. :)
I would do that, too!
See my Post 68. I’m cured. Mostly. LOL!
Read Next: How to Watch All the TV You Want Without Paying for Cable
The irony is palpable (if not purposeful).
The scheme in the article is predicated on living in a broadcast TV coverage area and then buying Web based services like Sling and Netflicks. It isn't about downloading torrents through a proxy server on usenet.
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