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elmerland | 8 years ago
If right now they rely on people paying for the channel but not watching it. Wouldn't switching to a streaming model mean that advertisers would be more interested because more people were actually watching the channel and saw ads?
bmh_ca|8 years ago
Most people (>50% iirc) don't watch sports, but because of the arrangement described above most cable subscribers end up subsidizing it.
As a result: Selling sports directly to people who watch it dramatically undercuts their business model.
coldcode|8 years ago
maxlybbert|8 years ago
ESPN probably expected that as well. In the US, you would expect almost any sports channel to have enough fans to make a profit. If people are going to drop channels they don't want, you would expect sports channels to be immune.
Apparently it hasn't turned out that way.
I can say that the last three times I went shopping for cable TV, the sports bundle was extra. Personally, I like hockey, but not much else. I would be happy to pay $7 a month for hockey games, but I wasn't given that option. I needed to pay much more, for a much larger bundle, and I chose to live without it.
voltagex_|8 years ago
Cable/satellite isn't really as big in Australia as it is in the States and Canada, but the last time I looked it was still $30+ a month if you wanted sport in HD (you know, so you can actually see where the ball is)
1: http://www.afl.com.au/news/2016-12-06/foxtel-decides-against...
1a: https://www.reddit.com/r/AFL/wiki/streams
maxerickson|8 years ago
That's a lot of streamers to get to commit to 12 months of subscription.