FCC Report Supports a la Carte TV Pricing 567
An anonymous reader writes "The FCC may soon allow cable/sat companies to sell individually customized TV channel packages. From the article: ' FCC chairman Kevin Martin spoke to a forum, sponsored by the U.S. Senate Commerce Committee in Washington, which has been examining indecency on radio and television. Martin told the forum that the FCC will soon release a report that concludes that offering TV programming a la carte is economically feasible and in the best interest of consumers.'"
About time (Score:4, Insightful)
I've been wishing for this for as long as I can remember. Now that I am paying my own cable bill I want it even more. Why should I pay for channels like Lifetime if I never watch it?
The cable industry really has a choke hold on consumers. I'm glad the FCC is finally doing something right.
Re:About time (Score:3, Interesting)
Right now, unlike the FTC which ruled that Microsoft was out of line when they bundled software, the FCC rules specifically allow channel owners to sell bundles of channels to cable carriers, specifying in the contract which channels need to be in which tiers. On my local cable system, [twcnyc.com] this results in having lots of channels in the broader digital tiers that no one ever watch
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:About time (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:About time (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:About time (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, you're probably not as alone as you think. Everyone I talk to that still watches TV typically watches those channels or similar ones.
Indecency? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Indecency? (Score:2, Insightful)
Again, this is all in theory. In reality, we'll probably eventually see some sort of price scheduling by the FCC based on the content rating system as to deter people from purc
Re:Indecency? (Score:2)
Re:Indecency? (Score:2)
The idea is that, in the FCC's collective mind, people should be able to sign up for cable programming without receiving, say, Comedy Central which they might find "offensive." Granted, the tools certainly already exist for irresponsi^Wconcerned parents to block these channels out; if you watch TV any, you've also seen that broadcast and cable networks are showing commercials for ControlYourTV.org and promoting parental responsibility.
I believe the issue now is that
Re:Indecency? (Score:2)
Re:Indecency? (Score:3, Insightful)
So true.
After all, it takes a village to raise an idiot...
Re:Indecency? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Indecency? (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem is We (the people who watch) aren't in the market any more. Rather, the cable companies are now "the demand". And evidently they are getting what they want. The Watchers have no recourse other than to not participate (or complain, which does nothing).
Personally I think any market where a middle man exists eventually favors the middle man, the examples keep building up. Such as the pork market several years ago, the gasoline hike this summer, even the PC i
Capitalism must suck (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course, nevermind that the channels that are "less-popular" are probably useless beef anyway.
Re:Capitalism must suck (Score:5, Informative)
Or they simply cater to a much less mainstream taste, such as literary or arts programs. Just because something isn't to your taste (or mine) doesn't make it "useless beef".
Re:Capitalism must suck...not (Score:3, Interesting)
Television is an awful medium for education. It's passive, and it's single speed (you can't go back and study a bit th
Re:Capitalism must suck (Score:3, Interesting)
Concerned? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Concerned? (Score:5, Insightful)
"Give me smut and nothing but!"
-Tom Lehrer
What I'm Concerned About (Score:5, Insightful)
A person stepping out of the shower is natural, legal and a very real part of millions of people's lives and yet it is "indecent" to show on television. On the other hand, an action sequence with some demon from the pits of hell tearing a person apart in front of their children is fine for a Sunday afternoon movie promotion. I like to watch an occasional sporting event with my kids (11,6,2,2 years old) and have to have a hand on the remote. It would be one thing at 9:00pm, but quite another at 2:00 on Sunday. I would like to let my oldest watch a football game (he is more into it than I am), but you can actually see a response to the flashing explosive movie trailers in my younger kids.
I am frustrated as a parent that the human body and sexuality that is natural, legal, etc...is considered too dirty for television, but antisocial violent behavior that is both illegal and unnatural is "fine for family viewing". It's a strange world we live in!
Re:What I'm Concerned About (Score:2)
= NoCommercials + InHouseReply
= BetterSportsEnjoyment
Re:What I'm Concerned About (Score:2, Informative)
But it does not solve the problem. With that, you still have to sit there with your finger on the button and do the fast forwarding. He was saying that he can't walk away and let his kids watch alone. PVR does not solve that unless you can program it to auto-skip commercials, and that isn't going to happen.
Re:What I'm Concerned About (Score:4, Insightful)
That's a fundamental issue there, the FCC by their own complaint acceptance policies has decreed that violence is a-ok and not indecent.
But do they rate commercials? (Score:2)
Re:What I'm Concerned About (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:What I'm Concerned About (Score:5, Funny)
But on the other hand, it's only a matter of time before americans will ban both childbirth and nursing, as they expose children to breasts and female genitalia.
NO, no. (Score:3, Insightful)
Theory about that... (Score:5, Insightful)
This used to puzzle me as well, but the more I thought about it, I came to realize that people don't seem to mind their kids seeing violence as much as sex because they don't actually think their kids will do any of the violent things they see, but they might actually do the sexual things. Certainly there are those who think kids do mimic the violent things they see, and for a very small subset of society, that's true. But, the vast majority of people exposed to violence rarely re-enact it. But, if kids see "natural and legal" sexual behavior, their going to think, "Hey, why can't I do that?" And therin lies the concern about sex in the media.
Re:Theory about that... (Score:3, Insightful)
The main part of the problem isn't so much merely with sex and/or nudity being shown; the problem is with the portrayal of casual sex as acceptable behavior. Pretty much every portrayal of sexuality you see is between people who aren't married and don't give any thought to the consequences of their actions. No one ever gets AIDS in the movies, unless it's a movie about AIDS. No one ever experiences th
Re:Concerned? (Score:2)
Ultimately, it helps both groups of activists... But you're right to be concerned. Be prepared to resist a big push to enforce the same "Decency" standards on satellite television, cable, and the internet, as you see on regular broadcast television and radio in the near future--because the "harmful
Re:Concerned? (Score:2)
Letting viewers choose what's indecent (Score:4, Insightful)
Why on earth does that concern you?
This proposal allows the viewer to decide what is indecent and what is ok.
Everyone, including Joe Righteous, should have a right to do this.
Remember, You do not have a right to impose your values on 'Joe Righeous' any more than he has a right to impose his on you.
Right Answer, Wrong Reason (Score:5, Insightful)
A la carte pricing could be really great (I haven't studied the economics of it, but it sounds good). But it irks me no end that this conclusion is drawn in the context of fighting "indecency" on the air.
Now, I certainly don't want television to become nothing but porn and violence--but the way indecency restrictions work these days is quite ridiculous. Moreover, its only purpose is to push strongly religious-based values as if they were the "one, true way", when our Constitution explicitly forbids the government from so much as suggesting that there might be a "one, true way".
Why not let us make our own decisions about what to watch--and let the networks make their own decisions about what to air?
Dan Aris
Re:Right Answer, Wrong Reason (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Right Answer, Wrong Reason (Score:3, Informative)
From the Treaty of Tripoli, Article 11:
"The Government of the United States is not in any sense founded on the Christian religion."
Re:Right Answer, Wrong Reason (Score:3, Insightful)
I have no problem with religious people, until they try to force me to share their religion. I have my own beliefs, thank you very much, and they don't include "Naked people EVIL, killing people FINE".
Dan Aris
Re:Right Answer, Wrong Reason (Score:3, Insightful)
Popular channels subsidize less popular ones (Score:3, Insightful)
If I watched MTV, CNN, and the Country Music Network, I wouldn't care. But since I watch the History Channel, the Science Channel, Discovery, etc, I do care. These channels will probably fall by the wayside as their revenue is reduced by a huge margin. =(
Re:Popular channels subsidize less popular ones (Score:2)
Re:Popular channels subsidize less popular ones (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd be more than happy to pay $5 each for the good channels (discovery channels for example, mtv is not an example) instead of paying $30 (or whatever) to have 3 good and 400 shitty channels.
and that is what is wrong with the industry. (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't want to pay for certain channels let alone fund them. Currently I don't have a choice, if I want certain channels I have to pay for those I
Re:and that is what is wrong with the industry. (Score:2)
Okay then, but when you're old and break a hip, don't expect any taxpayers to pick up the tab.
Re:and that is what is wrong with the industry. (Score:2)
You will (maybe) still have the option to buy all (say 100) channels for (say $50). But don't think that this means you will be buying channels for $0.50 each
Re:Popular channels subsidize less popular ones (Score:2)
Re:Popular channels subsidize less popular ones (Score:3)
Re:Popular channels subsidize less popular ones (Score:2)
Absolutely
TV a la carte increases overall price? (Score:5, Informative)
Who determines how much a channel is worth? The FCC? A parental group who hates Howard Stern and anything deemed indecent by their 'decency' standards?
Will you have the choice of either or plan? To opt out?
Can you choose from something other than one monopolistic cable company that only serves your area?
If you do not have the choice of leaving your plan the way it is, I see this only increasing the price of your overall bill if you want to keep the same amount of channels you already had. Then again, maybe this will inspire people to stop watching TV altogether...but probably not.
Oh Great... (Score:2, Funny)
"But Mr Cheney, you are already subscribed to all the porn channels we offer."
On demand would be better. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:On demand would be better. (Score:2)
Re:On demand would be better. (Score:2)
What the... (Score:2, Funny)
GREAT idea (Score:2, Informative)
Not a good idea (Score:2, Insightful)
Wrong: A very good idea (Score:5, Informative)
Why can't we just buy the episodes? (Score:3, Interesting)
You only have to look at how popular recorded TV episodes have become on bittorent sites to see that people these days don't want to sit in front of the TV at prescribed times.
If they want to stop piracy they'll have to provide programming around other people schedules. People have a lot more things to do and are not prepared to fit their lives around their schedule.
Good for HD fans (Score:3, Informative)
If people only subscribed to HD channels it would give the other networks some incentive to switch to HD.
Excellent! (Score:2)
I would probably end up watching more TV
I can't see it being a great deal for couch potatoes though
Government sponsored business models (Score:2, Insightful)
Indecency has nothing to do with this subject. If only people (parents) would exercize their parental rights and use the already present Goverment mandated control systems built into TVs and cable boxes....
But I would like to see the God chann
A la carte *allowed*? (Score:2)
Re:A la carte *allowed*? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:A la carte *allowed*? (Score:3, Insightful)
Same thing with NFL football: we add the US Net
Right thing... wrong reasons. (Score:5, Insightful)
What if every time you bought a ticket to an NBA game, you were forced to buy one for a WNBA game too? Not fair? Don't like it? Tough.
What if every time you bought an X-Box 360 or Nintendo DS, you were forced to buy an N-Gage, Gizmondo, or Virtual Boy too? Not fair? Don't like it? Tough.
What if every time you went to see a popular movie, say Revenge of the Sith or Harry Potter, you were forced to buy a ticket to something like Gigli or Ashlee Simpson's Undiscovered or the latest Uwe Boll masterpiece? Not fair? Don't like it? Tough.
Consumers generally appreciate having a choice, and hate the feeling of forced decisions, especially ones that don't seem particularly logical ("What? You like to watch CNN and The Sopranos? Well you're sure to love the Competitive Quilting Channel too!")
It's sad that this is being rolled out in the name of "decency", but it's still a good idea.
It's been possible for a while (Score:5, Informative)
With the digital set top boxes, it'd be a piece of cake.
I don't see it being offered with the possibility to save you money on your cable bill, though. It requires individualized effort (unless they tie a web interface to the head end, and allow you to select your channels online, which would be cool). Even then, there would have to be added cost to do it. But I'd love to get rid of shopping channels, crazy religious channels, and other channels that I will never watch (spanish, BET, etc).
This doesn't have to be a Bad Thing(TM) (Score:4, Interesting)
Right now there's a TON of crap on TV, and I don't mean 'offensive' I just mean crap (every reality show ever created comes to mind). And if a la carte means that some of the crap will go away for lack of interest, that's fine by me.
But just because there's a minority of interest doesn't mean that a channel will necessarily disappear. It just means that the viewers of that channel will be called upon to donate to the content providers to help keep the channel alive (much like PBS' tele-thons). That's where the real interest will be shown by the viewers of the content.
I mean consider for a moment that not everything on TV should remain on TV. When a business starts up, it needs to be able to maintain some market share and operate within its revenue streams. When the revenue stream disappears for lack of customer interest or access, the business dies. In our current situation these "other channels", like the struggling businesses, would be dead or dying if it weren't for subsidization by the giant channel packages. I think that's not necessarily good because anytime someone wants to throw in a niche channel that will have 5 viewers, the cost of support for the whole thing necessarily increases to take on that additional burden. It's TV socialism.
I'm also not saying we shouldn't have any packages at all, just not 600 channels in one bundle (though that could certainly still be an option - as long as it's not the only option). For example, with most cable/sat providers, HBO and others come in packages of 3 to 5 or more channels of that type of content. You get all or nothing, but that's ok because you're paying for movie channels, not for some eclectic mix of different content much of which you're not interested in.
Only time will tell if the FCC tries to take this too far or just leaves well-enough alone by opening the door for a la carte.
v-chips? (Score:2)
Why not a la carte "Packages"? (Score:2, Insightful)
Why can't There be a sports package. Tier one is ESPN, and Comcast Sports Net. Tier two gets you ESPN2, ESPNews, OLN, Speed, and the Golf Channel. Tier three gets you Fox Sports Net, ESPN Classic, ESPNU, and whatever other sports channels I'm forgetting.
Then, theres your "Pop Culture" package. Tier one is MTV, VH
I think this is a great idea but.... (Score:2)
However I'd love to see this work assuming the consumer doesn't get screwed.
Yeah, I bet... (Score:2)
Yeah, but not for the cable companies. Many companies pack channels the way they do in order to get people to sign up for larger packages so they can get the 2 or 3 channels they want. Besides, I doubt the big cable companies will make the rates of a la carte TV reasonable.
If they do, you can bet I will only have like 30-40 channels and 12 of those will be my HD channels I get now (ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox, WB, PBS, ESPN, Comcast Sports HD, Discove
Uh Oh (Score:3, Insightful)
Martin said he doesn't plan to push the industry to adopt a new business model, but he suggested that more restrictions on basic cable programming be added if the industry doesn't offer consumers more choice.
Does anyone else read this to say the FCC will begin overstepping their bounds and begin to regulate cable television?
Sadly (Score:2)
http://www.tv.com/story/story.html&story_id=2524 [tv.com]
Isn't this precisely why the V-Chip hullabaloo was created? I guess that didn't work cause people don't know how to set the stupid parental lock password?
So instead of people actually parenting, the government wants people to pick and choose their cable options? This is a horrid idea (i'd be all for it so I could actually limit the number of extranneous channels I have to s
I don't beleive it (Score:2)
This comes from a part the same government that feels it's ok to rack up a $8 trillion debt [brillig.com] with a spend now, pay never mentality. Please excuse me from not beleiving financial advice from you guys.
A la carte pricing will reduce bills for that only watch a couple of stations. If you watch a diverse number of stations, expect y
Make cable bill like real utility company instead (Score:3, Interesting)
Open up all the channels to be viewable by anyone, and you only pay for the channels that you watch on a given day, perhaps for the amount of time that you watch them if you watch for more than 30 minutes total over the course of the day (allows for free channel flipping, to a certain point). Sure, folks with TiVos would get screwed on this for those times that TiVo isn't actively recording something and is just sitting there... although when TiVo is just sitting there, it's usually just sitting on a channel that has already been recorded, so maybe that's not an issue. (TiVo Suggestions automatically recording notwithstanding)
The point is why should someone pay for SPEEDCHANNEL (for example) if they never watch it? But if there's something that happens to be on that channel on a particular day, then let me watch it and pay a nominal fee (pro-rated monthly amount, comes to what - $0.25 a day?) for the time spent watching without having to buy that particular package for the month.
With this model, then you don't pay the cable company for the usage while you're not home, just like the water/gas/electric bills work. It turns the cable industry into a true utility instead of a continual money drain for resources you may or may not be utilizing 100% of the time during the course of the day.
Allow? (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't count your chickens before they hatch!!! (Score:3)
Does not mean no packages (Score:3)
I highly doubt that moving to this á la carte scenario will result in them dropping packages. Chances are that they will price point it to where if you get say two channels in a suite (like Discovery), buying the whole package will cost about the same, pennies more, or possibly less.
What would be nice about this is that I wouldn't have to pay for stuff I never watch at all. There are stations I watch on rare occasion that are worthwhile, like TNT and Spike, but others, particularly MTV and MTV2, that I never watch. I'm not interested in having Disney on my TV (I have no kids).
Depending on how they price it all out, I could end up saving money. Or perhaps buying the whole big package will save me money. For me, buying a whole bundle of services through Comcast makes no sense right now, but for my mom, who always has kids in her house, it makes a lot of sense, with her 5+ TVs, and her four computers online.
If I could drop myself down to basically the networks, CNN, History, History International, TNT, Spike, Sci-Fi, BBC America, Comedy Central, Discovery, TLC, Cartoon Network, TBS, and a premium lineup like HBO, I'd be pretty well set. I'd have around 30 channels, and I'd have about as much to watch as I do with 150+.
What we really need is more competition (Score:3, Insightful)
http://www.stockmarketgarden.com/ [stockmarketgarden.com]
Ya right, save me money, I remember ... (Score:3, Insightful)
Awesome (Score:3, Insightful)
On the television in my bedroom, I already have a channel add/delete option on my remote. I delete the majority of the channels, and then I just flip through the ones I like until I find something I want to watch.
As far as indencent content on television goes, I am opposed to censorship. It should be up to the viewer to decide what he or she wants to watch, not some regulatory commission financed by my tax dollars. Also, parents that do not want their children to be exposed to such content should just use the parental controls. If you are extra paranoid, put your children in plastic bubbles and throw away your television sets. Remember that the television is not a babysitter, it is up to the parents to monitor their children's viewing habits if they want to be sure that the shows they are watching are beneficial to their learning. My niece loves to watch Dora the Explorer, and she learns many different things like Spanish, problem solving, and positive social values. I make sure that what she is watching reinforces her understanding of the world, I do not let her watch television without parental supervision.
Re:FP: What a great idea! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:FP: What a great idea! (Score:2, Interesting)
Unless you watch all of the channels you currently receive, look for your cable bill to stay about the same, while you end up paying for only the channels you want...
-JMP
Re:FP: What a great idea! (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't know if that's economically feasible for the cable/sat companies or not and I'm sure that's not how the content providers want their content priced, but it is similar to how CDs and DVDs are priced. Sure CDs
Re:FP: What a great idea! (Score:3, Interesting)
It actually worked quite well, except for the fact we ended up with 50 auction channels as base channels
Re:FP: What a great idea! (Score:2, Insightful)
Of course, there will be technical limitations to overcome for this, assuming you are not on the digital cable thang...
Re:FP: What a great idea! (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, it's not necessarily a good idea, for two reasons.
a) It will mean higher prices.
b) It will mean fewer choices.
Pretty much exactly the opposite of why some people seem to want it. Let me explain.
Right now, you pay what, $30 for 100 channels or whatever your cable company charges for the package you have. Switch to a-la-carte and do you really think any channel is going to allow themselves to be priced for under a buck a month? It's one thing to be included as part of a package, but if you break it down and say "this channel is worth 20 cents, this channel is worth $2", no channel is going to accept being priced on that low end. And the whole point of a-la-carte pricing is to take the power out of the cable company's hands, so it will be the channels themselves that do the pricing.
A lot of channels right now are subsidized by other channels that whatever media conglomerate that owns them requires the cable company to include as part of a package of other, more popular channels. This is how channels like Sundance Channel and BBC America exist. It both helps new channels mature and grow a customer base and it brings prestige and cross-marketing opportunities to the channels' owner. These channels will be gone under a-la-carte pricing, because they will be forced to pay their own way from day one, and they will not be able to command the prices required for them to operate profitably.
What you're going to end up with is a bunch of lowest common denominator, mainstream channels that are as driven by the cable equivalent of "ratings" as the major TV networks are now (in cable's case, those "ratings" would be represented by subscriptions). Is that really a good thing? Not to me, it isn't.
Now, you can argue that it's the free market, blah blah blah, and that's true, but I'd like to point out that it's the free market that made Titanic the #1 movie of all time and Britney Spears the #1 selling music artist of the past few years. Do you really want to be relying on your fellow customers to support the channels you want well enough to keep them afloat on their own?
Now, I'm not saying the current system is perfect; it isn't. It needs major changes, and it is a government-sanctioned monopoly right now from the bottom on up. But one of the good things about the current system, which will be thrown out the window with a-la-carte pricing, is a sort of immunity to mainstream whims that the major networks have to contend with. It's why cable channels can be a little edgier, why they can take more chances in finding and building an audience. You should really be asking yourself why it is that the FCC is recommending this in the name of promoting decency on television - it's not about price. It's about putting out of business channels that do anything outside the mainstream.
Re:FP: What a great idea! (Score:3, Insightful)
I'd be happy to pay up to $6 a month for each of the 5 or 6 channels that I watch, rather than $60 per month for the 250 channels that I never watch.
If choice means I get to choose between 250 channels of pure garbage, I guess I don't care so much about giving it up.
I still think the majority of the public will go for the large package deals because many people watch a wide variety of channels, especially famil
Re:FP: What a great idea! (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:FP: What a great idea! (Score:2)
Right now I pay $45.28 a month for the basic cable service with Comcast, my ONLY choice becasue they refuse to open their lines to competitors despite what the federal law says. While I could go with satellite the cost is essentially the same but I'd have to have a dish hanging off the front communal porch area.
For that price I get way less than 100 channels and only watch on a regular basi
Re:FP: What a great idea! (Score:3, Interesting)
Take a look at the FCCs website for the statistics of this organization. 99% of all indecency complaints originate from the PTC. In fact, this link [religionlink.org] shows that 99.8% of all complaints originate from this organization.
Just li
Re:FP: What a great idea! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:FP: What a great idea! (Score:4, Insightful)
A related example to that one is stuff like PBS which is required to be carried and is subsidized by non-profits and by the government. That wouldn't change in this pricing model. PBS could still be subsized and the consumer won't even know it.
Actually, that's how all channels are now. Ratings = more viewers = more advertiser dollars. Actually, I wonder if some channels will actually become FREE in the hopes of selling ads. (I guess that didn't work in newspapers and magazines, but they are cheap.) I know that you are obviously a much better consumer than everyone else, with better tastes. That's because you read Slashdot.Totally off the wall: I am curious what cheap TV programming was never available before, that might become available now.
Re:FP: What a great idea! (Score:3, Insightful)
some channels alread do it...they are called over the air and have existed for many many years (even before cable--gasp!!!). and i know a great many people that don't have cable or sattelite and only watch these "free" channels.
seriously, it shows that it is possible for a company to broadcast without charging a fee. heck making yourself avai
Re:FP: What a great idea! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:FP: What a great idea! (Score:4, Interesting)
a) It will mean higher prices.
b) It will mean fewer choices.
You forgot one..
c) It will suck
Think of this: there are channels out there that built their viewer-base through popularity. (FoodTV, Discovery) How did they get popular? People could tune in and check it out because they already had the channel. How will that work if people only get certain channels? Will there be a preview option? How do you know if any of the other channels are interesting? What if a channel kind of gets out of "focus" for you? I thought I would love having the Speed channel, but it is mostly crap now - NASCAR, American Chopper knockoffs, NASCAR. blech. I am glad I have it because I can catch something interesting every once in a while, but if I had to choose whether or not to pay for it, I probably wouldn't.
I have been channel-surfing or have seen something in the guide that made me stop and watch it, sometimes on a channel I would never watch. Sometimes I am in the mood to watch a dog show! But I don't think I'd pay for Animal Planet. But I guess I am not "normal". I don't have 30 different shows that I follow religiously. If I miss a show that I do like - oh well. One thing I wish they would do is if you buy a channel, they give you a free re-run channel so you can catch things you miss.
But the big point that some people are missing is that you probably will still be able to buy your tier channel packages, they will most likely just add on the ala carte channels as an option. And probably a relatively expensive one too. If the cable companies don't want you to use this option, they will make sure that you don't. I do think it is a great idea, in theory. But I think that the media companies will make sure that it isn't so attractive. They can then comply with the gov (who they are clearly in bed with) and still keep doing what they are doing.
Been tried (Score:2)
Dish Network used to do this. They had a package called Dish Pix. You could purchase channels at $1.50/mo each, with a $5.00 minimum purchase.
Customers with the 50/100/150 channel packages (which have since become 60/120/180 channels) could also subscribe to individual channels (I had subscribed to 8)
The problem with this was that customers were tying up customer service reps hemming and hawing about what channels they wanted to have. It ended up costing too much to do, so they stopped.
Re:FP: What a great idea! (Score:5, Insightful)
The underlying idea of A la carte programming seems like a good idea, and will even cost those of us who couldn't care less about sports a LOT less (disgustingly enough, the bulk of your "extended basic" cable bill goes toward subsidizing the sports channels, which cost more than premium channels like HBO and contractually force cable carriers to include them in anything beyond their most basic package).
However, BEWARE of this FCC "ruling" - It counts as little less than an attempted power-grab.
The FCC does not currently have the authority to regulate cable. They can't tell the cable companies to unbundle their offerings, and more importantly, they can't censor cable-only channels on the basis of content. In even looking at this issue, the FCC has bluntly said "we support this extremely popular move, but don't have the authority to make it a reality... But! If congress would just give us a little more power..."
I'll gladly pay a bit more if it means the PTC can't make cable as pablum-like as broadcast TV. I would hope that some day the cable companies would grow a pair and tell the sports networks to take a hike, but in the mean time, I'll take bundled programming over all "child friendly" programming.
Re:FP: What a great idea! (Score:3, Insightful)
Talk to Disney (Score:2)
...Unless the FCC forces content providers. to unbundles what they sell to the cable companies, too. An example: for cable companies to carry the incredibly popular ESPN, they also have to carry ESPN2, ESPN News, and ESPN Classic. I think they even have to carry Disney channels, since ESPN is owned by Disney. So there's no way that the cable company is going to pay for these crappy ch
Re:Expect to pay $12/mo for ESPN (Score:3, Interesting)