Posted on 12/30/2009 3:37:51 AM PST by mmanager
NEW YORK | For more than 60 years, TV stations have broadcast news, sports and entertainment for free and made their money by showing commercials. That might not work much longer.
The business model is unraveling at ABC, CBS, NBC and Fox and the local stations that carry the networks' programming. Cable TV and the Web have fractured the audience for free TV and siphoned its ad dollars. The recession has squeezed advertising further, forcing broadcasters to accelerate their push for new revenue to pay for programming.
That shift will play out in living rooms across the country. The changes could mean higher cable- or satellite-TV bills, as the networks and local stations squeeze more fees from pay-TV providers such as Comcast and DirecTV for the right to show broadcast-TV channels in their lineups.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtontimes.com ...
Thank you. I am particularly looking for the Sugar Bowl televised by Fox January 1, 2010. Can’t tell if these two links are going to offer it.
Check channelsurfing.net on Jan. 1 and scroll down to see if there’s a link. If you’re using Firefox with adblock, turn the adblock off.
It costs almost nothing to broadcast TV signals.
So if “free TV” goes, it will be because the makers of content can’t bring themselves to price their product at a level which the advertising will cover.
No more million-dollar paychecks for 2nd-rate TV actors.
For all its faults, local broadcast TV still does things that cable can’t and won’t — like breaking out of regular programming to provide coverage of major storms bearing down on the area, tracking violent weather, and the like. When major storms are threatening, we always turn to one of the local stations, and they do that job well.
Ditto for local TV broadcast news. While some of it is puff pieces, some of it’s also valuable, including local crime reports, traffic problems, local politics, local sports, and as already mentioned, the local weather reports, etc. Usually in a metro area there’s at least one local broadcast channel that outperforms the other stations, and you can get a lot of information on what’s going on locally and regionally in a way that just doesn’t conveniently exist in any other way.
I do not watch the national news on CBS, NBC, ABC, etc. (though I do sometimes watch Fox News), but local news still has some value and isn’t always overly burdened with the liberal mindset of the national news. To have local broadcast go out of business would be a major loss. To have the national networks become extinct, except for Fox, wouldn’t be a major loss. There’d need to be some way to keep local stations and ensure their survival even if the national networks go the way of the dinosaur.
Thanks, will do.
I think we just need a government-option TV station. That’ll solve everything. /s
Thanks, I’ll check it out. The Fox/Time Warner Contract might not resolve itself before the 1st.
I quit watching years ago. Nothing worth watching.
Having said that, you have to just search through the various "tv" applications. There is tvuplayer and watchtvrightnow (from watchtvrightnow.com), among others.
You are right to start early in setting it up because if you wait, you'll spend the entire game searching the 'net.
Good luck. The links work and then don't work and then work again. The main challenge is getting a fast enough baudrate in order to stream. I hope this helps.
dinosaur media
Good idea. Tracphone and Gophone. When I get over my disgust (and get back in the country!), I’ll keep those products in mind. My daughter said that I must have a cell phone and that eventually even her neanderthal dad would have one. HA! We’ll see about the last.
I used the camera feature on the phone more than I used the phone.
I am most grateful. I’ll be setting several of these links up tomorrow. EST here. Take care!
;-)
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