[opendtv] News: Cable Prices Keep Rising; Customers Keep Paying
- From: Craig Birkmaier <craig@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: OpenDTV Mail List <opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 24 May 2008 08:50:20 -0400
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/24/technology/24cable.html?th&emc=th
Cable Prices Keep Rising; Customers Keep Paying
By MATT RICHTEL
Published: May 24, 2008
Americans discouraged by higher gas prices and
airline fares may decide to spend more vacation
time at home, perhaps watching television.
But that, too, will cost them more than ever.
Cable prices have risen 77 percent since 1996,
roughly double the rate of inflation, the Bureau
of Labor Statistics reported this month.
Cable customers, who typically pay at least $60 a
month, watch only a fraction of what they pay for
- on average, a mere 13 percent of the 118
channels available to them. And the number of
subscribers keeps growing.
The resiliency of cable is all the more
remarkable because the Internet was supposed to
change all things digital. Technology has led to
more choices and lower prices for news and music
as well as cellphone and landline minutes - not
to mention computers, cameras, music players and
phones themselves.
Yet here is a rare instance where Silicon Valley
has failed to break a traditional media
juggernaut. And not for lack of trying.
Technology companies keep insisting they will
provide new low-cost ways to get video into the
home, but so far their efforts have created more
black boxes to stash under the TV, not real
competition for cable that could bring prices
down.
"A couple of years ago, there was a thesis that
we were at the twilight of Comcast as the
gatekeeper," said Craig Moffett, a cable industry
analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Company. "That
thesis still titillates some. But technologically
and economically, it's probably not going to
happen."
So why hasn't technology had a bigger impact? One
answer is the alliance between cable companies
and Hollywood producers of content to sell
channels in bundles, rather than letting
consumers pay only for the channels they want.
The producers of cable television content share
$15 billion to $20 billion a year in fees from
cable subscribers, roughly equal to the $20
billion they receive in advertising revenue, Mr.
Moffett said.
Without those fees, the cable companies say, prices would go up.
"If each channel depended on individual consumers
electing to pay individually for it, this would
slash potential viewership and seriously hurt the
ability of most channels to attract their current
level of advertising dollars," said Jenni Moyer,
a spokeswoman for Comcast. "Lost ad revenue would
have to be replaced by higher license fees."
The industry says the digital era has brought its
customers better image quality, more on-demand
services and solid value through packages that
combine cable, phone and Internet service. It
also says consumers are actually getting more
viewing value for their dollar, at least relative
to inflation. The National Cable &
Telecommunications Association says that from
1998 to 2006, the price consumers paid for each
viewing hour was essentially flat.
The chief economist of the Federal Communications
Commission, Gregory S. Crawford, disagrees,
saying the industry is not factoring in the real
cost of the programming that subscribers are
watching. By his analysis, the increase has been
around 50 percent from 1997 to 2005.
The F.C.C. and some politicians have been in a
pitched battled with the cable industry, trying
to get it voluntarily to offer so-called à la
carte pricing. But cable companies insist that
this is not economically feasible.
Kevin J. Martin, chairman of the F.C.C., said in
an interview that since 1996, when Congress
increased competition in telecommunications,
prices have dropped for many other services.
"We've seen the opposite occur in the cable
industry," he said. "The dramatic increases in
pricing we've seen are one of the most troubling
issues from a consumer point of view."
In 2007, average monthly revenue for each
Cablevision subscriber was $75, up from $65 in
2005, according to SNL Kagan, a research company.
At Time Warner it was $64, up from $54.50.
The cable industry has never felt the pricing
pressures the music industry is feeling. The most
obvious reason is that Internet speeds have not
been fast enough to permit easy downloading of
movies and other video material.
That is changing, though. People are viewing
millions of videos online each month - albeit
mostly short video clips, and not Hollywood
movies. At the same time, the use of file-sharing
tools like BitTorrent to download illegally
popular movies and television shows is growing.
Another factor helping the cable industry is the
difficulty of getting video from the computer
onto the TV. That may not be a deterrent for
those who have grown accustomed to watching
movies on their laptop. But the last thing many
consumers want to do is hook up wires or program
a new box before sitting back to relax and watch
TV.
In that sense, the lure of cable appears to have
a sociological component. In a stress-filled
life, cable television is easy to use.
"I work eight hours a day facing a computer. When
I come home, the last thing I want to do is mess
with another computer," said Eric Yu, 24, a
college student in San Francisco who pays around
$80 a month for cable.
Mr. Yu said he watches only a handful of
channels, including some in high definition like
National Geographic. But to get them, he has to
pay for a premium package. "I just pay the bill
and try to forget about it," he said. "It lessens
the pain."
Evelyn Tan, 22, a friend of Mr. Yu, takes a
different approach. She pays Comcast $33 a month
for Internet access and does not get cable
television - but she does watch TV programming.
In fact, she watches ABC shows like "Desperate
Housewives" and "Gray's Anatomy," which are free
on the Web. When she wants to watch shows or
movies that are not readily available online, she
says she easily pirates them. "I would not pay
for cable TV at all," she said.
Broadcast networks like ABC, NBC and Fox are
starting to put their programming on the
Internet. But most cable channels do not because
they depend on subscriber revenue.
Albert Cheng, executive vice president for
digital media at the Disney-ABC Television Group,
said the industry was trying to prepare for an
era in which more video is watched on computers.
"It wasn't lost on us what happened to the music
industry," Mr. Cheng said. Even though the
audience is growing for ABC shows online, he
said, this is supplementing, rather than
undercutting, the television audience.
Enter Silicon Valley. It is trying to marry the
content people want with their preferred setting
for viewing it. There is a host of new set-top
boxes and consumer devices aimed at bringing
video and other content from the Internet to the
TV.
Apple's iTunes store offers 20,000 episodes of
some 800 shows at typically $1.99 or $2.99 an
episode, effectively creating an à la carte
option. But consumers must either watch on their
computers, wire the computer to the television or
get an Apple TV.
This week Roku, a Silicon Valley start-up, began
selling a $99 box that streams movies from
Netflix straight to the TV. And this summer
Hewlett-Packard is expected to introduce a device
called the MediaSmart Connect, a sleek box
connecting computer and TV that lets users watch
Internet videos as well as rent or buy some 6,000
movies through CinemaNow, an H.P. partner.
But the box will also demonstrate how much of a
gap still separates the computer screen and the
TV screen.
Carlos Montalvo, vice president for marketing of
connected entertainment at H.P., said the
MediaSmart Connect and similar devices would not
offer much of the programming provided over
cable, or even programming that content companies
allow to be delivered over the Internet to
computers. The reason, he said, is that this
content is licensed to be shown only on a
computer, not delivered via computer to a TV.
"Simply because the technology is there doesn't
mean that the large opus of content - both
television and movies - that is available on the
two-foot screen can move automatically to the
large-screen TV," he said.
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