[opendtv] TV Downloads May Undercut ABC Stations

  • From: Monty Solomon <monty@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: undisclosed-recipient: ;
  • Date: Wed, 26 Oct 2005 01:12:40 -0400

TV Downloads
May Undercut
ABC Stations

By NICK WINGFIELD, JOE FLINT and ETHAN SMITH
Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
October 17, 2005; Page B1

Last Thursday morning, Apple Computer Inc. started selling an episode 
of the hit television series "Lost" through its iTunes Music Store 
for $1.99 after the show aired the night before on ABC. It marked the 
first time a popular show was made available for legal downloading 
over the Internet so quickly after its original airing.

With that, Apple may have helped open a Pandora's box for the media 
business. The Cupertino, Calif., company and its first TV partner -- 
Walt Disney Co., the parent of ABC -- have taken a potentially 
significant step in the dismantling of a decades-old system for 
distributing TV programming to viewers, a move that could have 
profound long-term consequences for broadcasters, cable systems and 
satellite companies if more users download shows instead of watching 
them the old-fashioned way.

Apple's deal with Disney, which also includes past and current 
episodes of "Desperate Housewives," "Night Stalker" and "That's So 
Raven," is already causing waves in the TV business. On Friday, Leon 
Long, the president of the association representing ABC's affiliate 
stations, expressed misgivings about the partnership, which was 
announced publicly by Apple Chief Executive Steve Jobs and Disney CEO 
Robert Iger at an event last Wednesday. In a letter Mr. Long sent to 
the president of the ABC network, Alex Wallau, Mr. Long said ABC 
affiliates are concerned that they weren't given an opportunity for 
financial participation in a new form of distributing shows that 
derives value through the promotion and broadcasting of affiliates.

The letter, a copy of which was reviewed by The Wall Street Journal, 
says: "It is both disappointing and unsettling that ABC would embark 
on a new -- and competitive -- network program distribution 
partnership without the fundamental courtesy of consultation" with 
its affiliates.

Mr. Long, who runs the ABC affiliate WXON in Biloxi, Miss., didn't 
return calls seeking comment. Mr. Wallau said he would respond to the 
affiliates this week but declined to comment further.

For TV affiliates, Apple's new offering "is really bad," says Josh 
Bernoff, an analyst at Forrester Research in Cambridge, Mass. "You 
don't get anything. You just get a smaller audience," he says.

Also concerned about the Apple-Disney partnership are the unions that 
represent TV-show writers, producers, directors and actors. Soon 
after Disney and Apple's announcement, those unions issued a joint 
statement saying, "We look forward to a dialogue that ensures our 
members are properly compensated for this exploitation of their work."


...

http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB112951305777370362-IUm_bODHiRRSv_Y0eY7YkpXrTWY_20061025.html

 
 
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