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- Aug 26, 2011
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I'm not rooting against espn so much, as I can't believe that such a successful enterprise buried their head in the sand as to what was coming.
Truth. ESPN shows have raised banality and braying to art forms. Moronic, unwatchable stuff.If it wasn't for live sporting events, I would never even turn the clicker to ESPN, once they were bought up by Disney it was the beginning of the end.... I literally can't stand most of their personalities they have on tv today.
A year ago espn was paying the bills at Disney, fast forward a year and they're a drag on the company stock? This happened mighty fast. Cord cutting is realer, than anyone could have imagined.
I find that article a little deceiving. Iger dismissed the idea (admittedly may be meaningless but it's the only actual news in the article), but a few market analysts are suggesting that a split might sort of be a good idea for the mouse. It's an opinion piece derived from other op-ed's.A year ago espn was paying the bills at Disney, fast forward a year and they're a drag on the company stock? This happened mighty fast. Cord cutting is realer, than anyone could have imagined.
Evian spelled backwards is Naive .The funny part...half of all bottled water is tap water that someone bottled....
The easy marks are those latte slurping, volvo driving, leftist thinking, tofu chewing idiots sporting their fitness watches.
The bottle of water you just bought is probably tap water... Here's what to know & how to save
Yeah. well Stroh's spelled backwards is Shorts.Evian spelled backwards is Naive .
Yeah. well Stroh's spelled backwards is Shorts.
Because of Funky Cold Medina?Alex from Stroh's never leaves my dog alone.
Uconn buys ESPN, moves to P5. Wow!
Well.....Yet ESPN still keeps putting in programing and crappy on air personal. It's like trying to fight a fire with gasoline
Anyone tried VUE that can give a review?
There was a good discussion on this a year or so ago. The cable companies are double-dipping and once the transition to stream-dependent services becomes more prevalent, it's likely that ISP's will move to pay-per-bandwidth (which some have already started to do). Either way, these guys hold the keys and they want their money.It will be interesting to see how the entire cord cutting phenomenon plays out. Right now people are using a number of different services to bypass traditional cable offerings and are saving a good bit of money in the process. That said for many people, myself included, the cable company is also my ISP. What happens when the value of traditional cable TV goes down, but the demand for better/faster internet connections continues to go up? What happens when the companies that provide these services are one in the same? How do people expect to circumvent paying a premium for programming when the same companies provide the conduit for receiving it? Right now traditional cable is still profitable, but as subscribers move to streaming based services it is only a matter of time before prices escalate.
It will be interesting to see how the entire cord cutting phenomenon plays out. Right now people are using a number of different services to bypass traditional cable offerings and are saving a good bit of money in the process. That said for many people, myself included, the cable company is also my ISP. What happens when the value of traditional cable TV goes down, but the demand for better/faster internet connections continues to go up? What happens when the companies that provide these services are one in the same? How do people expect to circumvent paying a premium for programming when the same companies provide the conduit for receiving it? Right now traditional cable is still profitable, but as subscribers move to streaming based services it is only a matter of time before prices escalate.