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ABC Spat Is Latest, Not Last in Cable Wars - CBS Evening News - CBS News
NEW YORK, March 7, 2010

ABC Spat Is Latest, Not Last in Cable Wars

3M Cablevision Customers in N.Y. Lose Channel Due to Fee Dispute with ABC Parent Disney; Service Later Restored

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  • Play CBS Video Video Cable Wars Continue

    Millions of TV viewers may miss the Oscars due to a standoff between a cable-provider and ABC. As Elaine Quijano reports, this may just be the beginning of 'cable wars'.

  •  (CBS/AP)

(CBS)  Note: ABC was restored to Cablevision customers at 8:43 p.m. EST Sunday, during the Oscars broadcast. An on-screen message said that the sides had "reached an agreement in principle" over retransmission rights.

Millions of New York City area film fans have to find another way to watch the Oscars Sunday night after ABC's parent Disney pulled the plug in a bitter dispute with cable provider Cablevision over fees, as CBS News correspondent Elaine Quijano reports.

When Cablevision customers (and CBS employees) Beth and Rob Schafer turned on their TV Sunday morning, they saw found terse message where ABC network programming used to be.

"Pulling WABC off Cablevision was wrong," the Cablevision spot said.

The Schafers, along with 3 million other subscribers in parts of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut - were dragged into a nasty, public fight over fees between Cablevision and Disney.

The months-long dispute came to a head overnight, when less than 24 hours before the Oscars, Disney pulled its ABC channel from cablevision.

"Let Disney and Cablevision work it out but what matters is tonight is the Oscars and it's live and I want to watch it at home in my own living room on my own gigantic TV," Beth Schafer said.

Cablevision accused Disney CEO Bob Iger of holding "his own ABC viewers hostage in order to extract $40 million in new fees from Cablevision."

Disney fired back - accusing Cablevision of betraying its subscribers, saying the company that charges for basic broadcast signals, "pocketed almost $8 billion last year, and now customers aren't getting what they pay for."

"This is a big issue because this could blow up," said media analyst Walter Guarino. Guarino notes this has happened before. Time Warner and News Corp. narrowly averted a similar showdown that had threatened to hit during college bowl season.

Guarino says in a tough advertising market, networks are demanding more for programming, so more battles could lie ahead.

"It will probably happen again focused around an event because you're getting up to the point where you can get the trauma and the drama - so look for big events for this thing to happen again and in other cities in other pocket," he said.

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Add a Comment
by Commbo March 8, 2010 10:05 AM EST
Hello! I have ABC on Channel 4 on my Suddenlink cable service here in Lufkin, TX. There's nothing wrong here. Alas, I feel very sorry for those New Yorkers due to their losing ABC at the hands of Cablevision and Disney. This fee dispute is making these two companies so selfish and jealous of one another, when it comes to payment of such fees. I am afraid their CEO's should get grounded , at least till they change their ways and pay the fees in a timely manner.
Reply to this comment
by magnus4000 March 8, 2010 2:22 AM EST
The whole system is run by cavemen any way you look at it. The whole system is obsolete. Show PRODUCERS should put their show up on the internet free to download, no commercials except for the product placement type if they can work it in without ruining the story. Maybe and episode or two for free with the understanding that they need two million dollars per episode in contributions before they can carry on with the series. If the show sucks, bye bye nice try. A good show and a million fans wiling to paypal two bucks a week and they are good to go. Want more special effects? Throw in an extra buck. Firefly would still be going if it worked that day. Who needs Networks? Their schedule, their show destroying ad bombs. Hope this don't get me banned. I love you CBS! I'd give you a dollar to drop the ads! I just slept off some disappointing pot roast and it made me grouchy. Oh and I would miss Castle, so it would be great if he'd do two shows. Maybe three, one with Eddie Izzard.
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by IndiasWorstTechSupport March 8, 2010 1:48 AM EST
I don't know why the customers have to suffer or feel the ill effects of the disagreement of fees if the dispute is between Disney and Cablevision. It should be done behind the scenes without cutting off airtime for the paying customers. It is implying paying customers are also at fault for being a subscriber to Cablevision.
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by m0u5y March 7, 2010 8:54 PM EST
Sad that this is news. Who cares. It's just television. Go outside and do something with your life.
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by superbenA02 March 7, 2010 7:09 PM EST
Just do what I did when my cable was out to watch the news if you have a digital TV, analog TV with a DTV converter box, or an HDTV, connect a set of rabbit ear antennas to the TV, scan for channels, and flip the channel to New York Channel 7-1/7.1 and you can watch them for free. I was stuck to doing this 2 years ago because my satellite TV provider wasn't airing the Super Bowl channel in HD when the digital over the air signal was HD capable.
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