http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-lazarus12-2010mar12,0,946179.column

What?! Another Time Warner Cable rate hike?
It's time for cable and satellite subscribers to pay only for the 
channels they want, rather than the dozens that they don't.

David Lazarus
Los Angeles Times

March 12, 2010



There's definitely an art to informing customers that you're about to 
smack them upside the head.

About 500,000 Time Warner Cable customers in Southern California 
probably knew they were in for trouble when they received a letter the 
other day that began: "At Time Warner Cable, we strive to bring you the 
best products and services available."

Does a sentence like that ever signal anything except bad news?

Time Warner takes two full paragraphs to clear its corporate throat 
before it finally gets to the point:

"We are making some adjustments effective with your next billing 
statement. Certain services, packages and equipment prices will change."

Even then, the company can't quite bring itself to clearly state that 
prices are going up again. The letter refers only to "price 
adjustments," and nowhere does it say that your cable bill is about to 
get more expensive.

You have to make your way to the back page of an enclosed pamphlet to 
finally learn that the cost of the typical cable package is rising by as 
much as $3.04 a month.

That's a more than 4% increase, or nearly twice the inflation rate last 
year.

The company's latest rate hike, which takes effect April 1, follows an 
identical increase in January for the rest of Time Warner Cable's nearly 
2 million SoCal customers, as well as prior increases last year.

Patricia Fregoso-Cox, a Time Warner spokeswoman, blamed the higher 
prices on rising costs for content.

"The programming costs are the key driver for our rate increases," she 
said. "The costs continue rising year after year."

A spat over just this issue kept Walt Disney Co.'s ABC affiliate in New 
York, WABC, off Cablevision's local network until 13 minutes into the 
Academy Awards last Sunday. The two sides were bickering over how much 
Cablevision should have to pay for Disney's shows.

Time Warner and News Corp., owner of the Fox family of channels, had 
their own such slugfest in December. They managed to cut a deal only 
after their contract expired and the threat of Fox channels going dark 
drew lawmakers' attention.

Time Warner joined other leading cable operators this week in asking the 
Federal Communications Commission to block broadcasters from pulling 
their shows during contract disputes. They want an official arbitration 
system put in place.

I say: Enough already. Leave consumers out of it.

Even though the average U.S. home now gets 118 cable channels, the dirty 
little secret of the industry is that the typical subscriber watches 
only about 17 channels regularly, according to Nielsen Co.

Basically, cable companies and programmers are duking it out over a 
bunch of channels that most people don't even watch -- yet we're all 
left holding the bag for the full cost of these bloated cable packages.

It's time for cable and satellite subscribers to pay only for the 
channels they want, rather than the dozens that they don't.

Yes, this will require an overhaul of how the industry does business, 
but, hey, cable companies aren't the only ones facing a new revenue 
reality (see: "newspapers, effect of Internet").

I've heard rumblings from cable industry insiders that smaller packages 
are on the horizon -- 40 or 50 channels, say, instead of two or three 
times that number. That would be a step in the right direction, but it's 
not good enough.

It's time for so-called a la carte pricing: giving consumers the power 
to design their own programming packages. Want Turner Classic Movies but 
not AMC? Help yourself. ESPN but not the Golf Channel? Go for it.

Or if subscribers have to receive a minimum number of channels to make 
cable or satellite service commercially viable -- say, 20 or 30 channels 
-- then let us choose from a menu of programming options, rather than 
let someone else decide what we can watch.

It's a different media world. Just as iTunes lets people buy specific 
songs rather than whole albums, cable companies need to end the 
heavy-handed practice of forcing customers to buy unwanted channels.

And if cable companies can't find the wherewithal to do it themselves, 
lawmakers and federal regulators should do it for them.

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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