The threat of a New Yearâs blackout of dozens of Tribune Media television stations on Charter Communicationsâ Spectrum pay-TV service increased on Monday as contract talks between the two companies showed little sign of progress.
Prince Julio Cesar
More than 6 million homes nationwide — including 1.5 million in the Los Angeles region — would be affected by an outage that could begin as early as 9:01 p.m. Pacific time Monday
Advertisement > In Los Angeles, Spectrum customers who wanted to watch KTLA Channel 5âs popular coverage of the Tournament of Roses Parade on Tuesday might be out of luck — unless there is a New Yearâs Eve breakthrough in the negotiations. Viewers also might miss KTLAâs highly rated morning newscasts
The two companies have been squabbling over fee increases that Tribune Media has proposed for rights to retransmit the signals of 33 Tribune TV stations in Charter Spectrum markets. The Chicago-based broadcaster also wants Charter to pay more to carry Tribuneâs cable channel, WGN America, in the Spectrum pay-TV packages
On Monday, a Tribune Media representative reported a lack of progress in the talks
“Despite our best efforts, Charter–Spectrum has not engaged in meaningful negotiations with us,” Tribune Media spokesman Gary Weitman said in a statement. “We remain ready to negotiate and continue to hope that Charter–Spectrum will reach an agreement with us at fair market rates for the programming offered by our TV stations and cable network, WGN America.”
Charter said it was waiting for a counter-offer from Tribune. “We sent them the most recent proposal; weâre still waiting on a response,” a Charter spokesperson said Monday afternoon in a statement
Without a new contract in place, or an agreement on a short-term extension, Charter would be forced to remove Tribune station signals from its cable lineup just hours before KTLA begins its marathon parade coverage
However, viewers would still have plenty of options to see the Rose Parade. Several other broadcasters, including ABC, NBC, Hallmark Channel and RFD TV, also provide live parade coverage. In addition, because KTLA broadcasts its signal over-the-air, viewers with digital antennas also could still receive the stationâs programming
Viewers who called KTLA on Monday to hear updates about the contract talks were forwarded to Spectrumâs customer service center
The showdown comes at a troubled time for the pay-TV industry. Like other cable operators, Charter has been struggling to control programming costs in an effort to staunch a migration of customers to lower-cost streaming services. 2018 has been a bruising year for traditional pay-TV operators with the industry on track to lose 1.1 million customers this year, including more than 200,000 cable TV subscribers from Charter, according to recent estimates from MoffettNathanson Research
Spectrum is the brand name for Charterâs pay-TV, internet and phone service
“Charter is committed to holding down the cost of programming and, in turn, the cost our customers pay for cable television service. Charterâs intention is to continue to provide Tribune programming to our customers. We continue to negotiate with Tribune and hope to reach an agreement,” the company said in a statement
Tribune Media also owns CBS and Fox affiliates, including KSWB Channel 5 in San Diego. A protracted blackout could frustrate viewers in those markets, in large part because the NFL football playoffs begin Saturday
There have been more than 140 television blackouts in 2018, including an unresolved dispute between satellite TV provider Dish Networks and Spanish-language media giant Univision Communications. On Monday, an impasse between Verizon Communications and TV broadcaster Tegna Inc. resulted in an outage of network affiliate stations in Washington, D.C., Norfolk, Va. and Buffalo, N.Y. on Verizon Fios systems in those markets
Blackouts are down substantially from a record of 213 outages in 2017, according to the American Television Alliance, a Washington-based lobbying group that represents pay-TV operators
Advertisement > The tug of war is over so-called retransmission fees — the money that cable, satellite TV and telephone companies must pay to broadcast local TV station signals as part of their channel lineups. Television station owners this year will collect a combined $10 billion in such fees, up from $9.3 billion in 2017, according to the alliance
Over the weekend, Verizon and Walt Disney Co. reached an agreement on a new contract — avoiding an ESPN blackout for 4.6 million Verizon Fios customers on the East Coast
Charter and the Los Angeles Times recently announced the two companies would collaborate on a prime-time news magazine show, ” L.A. Times Today,” beginning in February on Charter‘s recently launched 24-hour news channel, Spectrum News 1 in Los Angeles. The program will feature reporters and columnists from The Times discussing news stories