Teams like WVU need the ESPN's of the world.
If there's no money in it showing every Big12 game in football and basketball nationally will go away.
Imo top 3 reasons for espn decline and people dropping the 4 letter are
1. Technology-Google can tell me everything Sportscenter use to and none of the garbage I don't care for
2. Programming - how many reporter/wanna be journalist/commentator shows with phony arguing do they need?
and
3. Social/political agenda with sports-which most sports fans watch sports to get away from the world not be reminded of it in sports
For me, that makes everything on espn but college football season able to do with out. There are other options.
To make matters worse they have over paid on college football with their conference networks. You need it football Saturdays and that is really it.
Day to day ESPN non live sports content while I agree is not doing itself any favors is not moving the needle in the collapse of ESPN. Live sports has always been ESPN's bread and butter, while CBS, Fox, NBC, Turner all used to rely on scripted content as their bread and butter. With DVR/On Demand/Netflix/HBO/Showtime all now competing with the prime cable networks and driving down their advertising dollars those networks are attempting to fill the void with live sports which means that instead of ESPN mostly having a monopoly on sports coverage they're now competing with the prime cable networks who all have deeper pockets. I also haven't even covered the trend of cord cutting which is another hole in their ship that will probably not be able to be filled. The result is ESPN is losing and is going to continue to lose. I think there is enough live content to keep ESPN afloat for a very long time but you will likely see channels like ESPNU, ESPNews, ESPN Classic, LHN, SECN all go belly up in the near future. I predict by 2020 it will be back to ESPN and ESPN2, the streaming ESPN3 will stay as well.
ESPN took a bath on the NFL Wild Card game between Oakland and Houston. They also boxed themselves into a corner with the College Football Playoff games on New Year's Eve the last two years. The Rose Bowl and Sugar Bowl refuse to move from the traditional NYD slots. Both will host the semi's next year. ESPN's big mistake was pushing for the playoffs and forcing all the conference realignments. Maryland and Rutgers being in the B1G makes as much sense as us in the Big XII and Notre Dame, Pitt, and Louisville in the Asheshe.
Mike and Mike tired TV. Tired of whining about J E T Jets
I miss Jade McCarthy, Sara Walsh and Lindsey Czarniak..........:sunglasses:
Any minute topdecktiger will pop in and remind us that we have a moral obligation to buy ESPN.
I see posts about ESPN suffering -- because they are now political. I will be honest... I find out what time a game comes on, then turn it to that channel at that time. I never watch a minute of guys sitting around in chairs talking... so I will have to take your word for it about the politics.
But as mentioned above, I now check out games - also - on FS1, NBCsports, CBSsports, etc. 10 years ago, NBCsports was Versus Channel showing bicycle races. But also, it just seems like people are dropping cable... and - kids today do not seem as interested in sports, IMO.
I do think about - had the Big 12 expanded - and forced ESPN's hand on the expanded contract payments - would it accelerate ESPN's impending(?) doom?
-Winter Tim
I'll pop up to tell you how stupid your comment is, and explain reality to you.
Here's the reality. ESPN is not losing money because of being too liberal, or too SEC, or anything like that. ESPN is losing money for one reason: many customers are leaving cable, and thus not paying subscription fees for ESPN every month. That's it. That's the reason. It's no more complicated than that.
Now, here is the part that makes you go all ape ****. This reality has consequences. Here they are:
ESPN isn't the only network with this problem. FS1, CBSSN, NCBSN, all those other channels are having the same problem. They are all losing subscribers to cord cutting. What that means is, none of these other channels are going to be able to step in and take up the slack. They aren't going to be able to match the contracts that ESPN was paying out. So, that means:
1. Conferences won't get as much money. (This means schools, like West Virginia, won't get as much money.)
2. Fewer games will be televised.
3. Conference networks are dead. (We see how the Pac 12 Network has floundered without a major partner.)
4. If the conferences are able to find an alternate distribution model (like streaming), you are going to be paying a lot more than $6.50- or $1.30 a month for that content.
Your problem is, you live in this fantasyland, where you think the sports landscape will be exactly like it is now, except that ESPN will be gone. The reality is, the forces that are changing ESPN are changing the entire landscape of sports, and it's not going to be the same as it is now. You are either too wrapped up in your ESPN hatred to see this, or you just don't want to face reality.
LOL - You know ESPN is getting desperate when their paid online shills resort to fear mongering.
None of those so-called consequences bother me.
If I were a big fat couch potato who watched TV all day, maybe I'd care.
I'd gladly pay a high monthly fee directly to WVU, or an individual conference.
Another development is local Internet companies are starting to bring fiber to their customers, so you no longer need to purchase quality Internet from TWC, Comcast, ect., that raise their Internet fees to offset cable losses.
Copper wire is an antiquated technology.
IMO, this is a diversionary move by ESPN to send positive signals to their stockholders.
They want to show that they are making hard decisions to right the ship by saying they will lay off talent, knowing fully well that when the time comes for the cuts, there's no talented people there to fire.
Sly as a fox, they are...Sly as a fox...
Again, your paid shill comment is stupid. There's nothing about simply stating reality that is "shilling."
It doesn't matter if the consequences bother you are not. Your opinion doesn't change what happens.
You personally paying more to West Virginia or a conference isn't going to make up the difference lost from the current contracts.
This is what you don't get. You are going to be paying somebody. For some reason, you get your rocks off because you don't have to pay cable or ESPN. You are going to pay somebody. The reality is, you will still end up with some kind of bundling system, just like you have now with cable. A la carte is a fantasy. Most content isn't profitable enough to stand on its own. You are always going to have bundling, whether you are getting it from a cable company or streaming service.
Overthinking.
ESPN is losing money for one reason: many customers are leaving cable, and thus not paying subscription fees for ESPN every month.
Sorry, but you can't convince me I have a moral obligation to purchase ESPN or cable.
ESPN is a failing company and a drag on Disney stock. Their product isn't important enough to keep cable subscribers and I can get sports news anywhere online - without all the social justice porn.
I don't watch much TV and cut the cord a couple years ago. Most people I know also have or have been exploring options.
We can't prop up a failing business and technology just because we are adverse to change, and that won't change no matter how hard you shill.
Subscribers mean very little if viewership is stable. If you are an avid ESPN viewer you get and pay for your content one way or another. It's just shifting the profit center. However, stable viewership is not the case either.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/jaysom...viewership-continues-to-decline/#7f2d2f1e7bf8
Um, no. Subscribers are the foundation of these networks. The entire business model of cable is the idea that channels are subsidized by viewers who don't watch the channel. It's not just sports. The History Channel or the Food Network would not exist if they had to stand on their own. They only exist because they are bundled as part of a larger package. Very few channels on cable could exist without being bundled as part of a package. The reality is that we subsidize each other's viewing. Food Network only exists because sports fans (who don't watch the channel) are also paying for it. ESPN only exists because history buffs (who don't watch sports) subsidize the channel.
That's why services like Sling or Vue still offer packages, and not a la carte. If it was pure a la carte, only 10-20 channels would make enough profit to survive.
Um, no. Subscribers are the foundation of these networks. The entire business model of cable is the idea that channels are subsidized by viewers who don't watch the channel. It's not just sports. The History Channel or the Food Network would not exist if they had to stand on their own. They only exist because they are bundled as part of a larger package. Very few channels on cable could exist without being bundled as part of a package. The reality is that we subsidize each other's viewing. Food Network only exists because sports fans (who don't watch the channel) are also paying for it. ESPN only exists because history buffs (who don't watch sports) subsidize the channel.
That's why services like Sling or Vue still offer packages, and not a la carte. If it was pure a la carte, only 10-20 channels would make enough profit to survive.
I hope Jockitch is the first out the door.I hope espnbc goes bankrupt
Um, no. Subscribers are the foundation of these networks. The entire business model of cable is the idea that channels are subsidized by viewers who don't watch the channel. It's not just sports.
That's true if you are only talking about cable, traditional cable. But if you are talking about ESPN or any non-OTA network viewers COULD remain stable by just switching platforms. You're talking like ESPN doesn't get any revenue from SlingTV if subscribers to Sling get ESPN as part of their package. ESPN still gets revenue, though I will agree that I do not know if there is a difference in what Sling pays ESPN vs. what Comcast pays ESPN. Comcast is the one who should really be concerned.
The current reality is that not only are cable subscribers to ESPN declining the alternate platforms are not picking up the slack, at least not in a revenue stream context. Right now I can watch almost anything on ESPN through multiple internet platforms across multiple devices, including ESPN's own platform, and all I have to do is select my service provider and log-in. Does ESPN get a piece from AT&T (my internet provider) when I watch ESPN programming on my tablet? I'm not sure. But this is something that ESPN and other broadcasters will need to figure out to remain viable.
The shift doesn't work for everybody. I live in a rural area in the N. GA mountains and I have two options for traditional TV - Dish TV or Direct TV, no cable available. I also only have one option for internet, the local phone company. It is slow and sometimes hard to stream content. So for right now I am stuck with a more traditional TV package for the majority of my viewing purposes. I won't be platform shifting anytime soon. And there are tens of millions of people just like me all across the country.
The reality is you work for ESPN and/or a cable provider and you're just shilling.
People are happy to pay a reasonable fee for moderate TV service but the days of bullying customers with gouging fees are over.
ESPN is a bad product that people are tuning out. Hopefully something good will come from their ashes but that network has seen its best days and something better will emerge.
Customers want something less costly, less political, and technology is fueling options that didn't exist years back.
Cable is an antiquated technology. The fact ESPN is sending people like you on message boards to beg for subscribers shows how desperate they have become.
I want to deconstruct the cable state and get antiquated technology out of our lives.
ESPN got rich from price gouging grammy, we need to upend the system and get cable out of homes.
That's true if you are only talking about cable, traditional cable. But if you are talking about ESPN or any non-OTA network viewers COULD remain stable by just switching platforms. You're talking like ESPN doesn't get any revenue from SlingTV if subscribers to Sling get ESPN as part of their package. ESPN still gets revenue, though I will agree that I do not know if there is a difference in what Sling pays ESPN vs. what Comcast pays ESPN. Comcast is the one who should really be concerned.
The current reality is that not only are cable subscribers to ESPN declining the alternate platforms are not picking up the slack, at least not in a revenue stream context. Right now I can watch almost anything on ESPN through multiple internet platforms across multiple devices, including ESPN's own platform, and all I have to do is select my service provider and log-in. Does ESPN get a piece from AT&T (my internet provider) when I watch ESPN programming on my tablet? I'm not sure. But this is something that ESPN and other broadcasters will need to figure out to remain viable.
The shift doesn't work for everybody. I live in a rural area in the N. GA mountains and I have two options for traditional TV - Dish TV or Direct TV, no cable available. I also only have one option for internet, the local phone company. It is slow and sometimes hard to stream content. So for right now I am stuck with a more traditional TV package for the majority of my viewing purposes. I won't be platform shifting anytime soon. And there are tens of millions of people just like me all across the country.
No, I don't work for ESPN, and I'm not a shill. This is just a stupid statement on your part.
You have this hardon against cable, and that keeps you from thinking clearly.
What you don't understand is, cable isn't the issue. Packaging is the issue. Go look at SlingTV or Playstation VUE. You can't go to either one of those services and buy channels a la carte. You have to buy a package of channels. Whether you get that package via copper wire, fiberoptic cable, or wireless, you are still getting a package of channels. You are going ape **** over the delivery system. That isn't the issue. The issue is the content, and that's basically the same. You have to buy a package of channels from cable, or you have to buy a package of channels from streaming services. Either way, you are buying a package of channels.
Now, when I tell you about the cost of games increasing, for example, what I'm doing is illustrating to you why a la carte won't happen. Most of this content can't survive individually. It has to be part of a package. That's why services like Sling or VUE still offer packages, and not a la carte.
And I'm telling you, the technology isn't going to change the business model. You are still going to have channel bundles. That WILL NOT change. The business model just got shifted from cable to streaming.
It's pretty safe to say ESPN doesn't get anywhere near the revenue from Sling that they do from cable. You just look at what Sling charges, and there simply isn't any way they can match the $6.50 ESPN gets from cable.
That said, if you read all these articles, viewership isn't the problem. When these articles mention revenue loss, they talk about the subscriptions, not the viewership. You people are overthinking this. It's pretty simple. You have cord cutters who are switching to services where they don't have to get ESPN. These people weren't watching ESPN in the first place. They just aren't paying for it anymore because they don't have cable. That's where the revenue drop is coming from.
What cord cutting is doing is just exposing the flaw in the cable business model. Cable is built on the premise that people are paying for channels they don't watch. What happens when people can get around paying for channels they don't want? Less money, that's what it means.
You are thinking too much of the old business model of the three networks. Their revenue was entirely dependent on advertising. Cable networks make a significant portion of their revenue from subscription fee. The SEC Network is a perfect example. SECN makes about $500 million a year. The majority of that is simply due to subscription fees. They make little from advertising revenue, because their ratings are so low. In other words, SECN could have the exact same viewership, yet lose half their revenue if subscriptions drop.