The Death of Cable Television

This might not be a big deal to the younger generations. However, for the Baby Boomers and GenX, this is potentially a big shift.

Like most things relating to technology, there is disruption to the point where what we know goes away. When it comes to entertainment, specifically broadcast, it seems the death of cable television is upon us.

The cable and satellite package was one of the most powerful we have seen. Starting in the 1980s, the media companies placed themselves in a very powerful position. This set off a multi-decade run where their success was unrivaled.

But the early 2010s, people started to move away. The Internet presented options, many of what led to cord cutting. Here is where people dumped their cable packages and went strictly with an Internet connection.

This has continued. It also have affected those who are still operating in that business.


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Cartoon Network and MTV To Close?

These two channels are well know to the generations mentioned. MTV and cable television will be forever linked. The music channel was the rage for many of GenX, creating a sensation.

Recently, both the parent companies of these networks shut down the websites. There is a chance the networks will either be sold or could, possible, just be shut down.

The problem is the parents, time Warner and Paramount are bleeding. Paramount was just sold to Skydance, which is cutting costs. The former just wrote down $9 billion as the value of these television networks plummeted. Right now, they are basically worthless.

This is no surprise since it was mentioned by one of the top executives almost two years ago:

Sitting on stage at The Beverly Hilton’s International Ballroom, Iger told his interviewer, Kara Swisher, that “Linear TV and satellite is marching towards a great precipice, and it will be pushed off … I can’t tell you when, but it goes away.”

When the CEO of Disney says that, it is best to listen.

A couple years later, it seems his forecast is coming to life. The cliff is now here and many in the business are going over the edge.

Cable television is rapidly dying. When companies start writing down the assets, you know they are dealing with things viewed as worthless.

This is why channels such as the Cartoon network and MTV might just be shut down.

Massive Carnage

Something that was mentioned in the past as a potential decline is coming sooner than people thought. This is leaving many in the industry unprepared.

The decline has been driven by cord-cutting, of course, but in recent quarters the cable business has faced a double whammy: Not only are subscribers declining faster than carriage fees are rising, but advertising dollars are fleeing TV, as the proliferation of ad-supported streaming options provide new places for marketers to spend their budgets.

Source

Do not believe that channels cannot be shut down. These corporations are in survival mode.

Just this week, it was announced by the aforementioned Paramount that it was closing their television division. Everyone was let go this week.

Paramount Television Studios, a production facility originally aimed at getting Paramount Pictures back into the business of making TV series, will shut down, the latest bout of cost cutting by parent corporation Paramount Global as it seeks to eliminate $500 million amid a chaotic shift in the entertainment industry.

Source

Consider how bad things have to be for the closure to take place immediately. Granted, the company does have other television properties but the reports are all are going. Those assets do not carry great value although they are a bit better than this one.

The fallout will continue as the choices people have keep expanding.

The Fragmentation of Media

We are dealing with a complete shift in the industry.

Many want to point to streaming, wokeness, COVID lockdowns, and poor programming. None of these are the major reason for the demise.

Fragmentation is the cause and there is no coming back.

Of course, we have seen this story before.

According to analysts, the chaos is only just beginning. Cable channels could become the new newspapers: Targets for investment funds looking to milk cash out of them for as long as possible.

For those who recall what the late 1990s/early 2000s were like for the newspaper business, we are about to witness it again.

As stated, some of these channels will be bundled to companies seeking to suck out whatever they can. They will be sold at a discount, mostly to get off the holders books. The acquiring entity will have a steal of a deal, able to pull some profits out until the end does occur. Over time, we will see more shut down.

Naturally, the acquiring entity will have other areas of profitability, not depending upon these assets.

This is the proverbial bleeding of the turnip.

Notice how many of the names in these articles also pop up regarding the demise of Hollywood. This is a story that spread both television and film.

We are watching a long standing industry change right before our eyes.


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Personally, I buried him fifteen years ago, only holes in the walls from the TV cable remain :) !BEER

Oh wow, those two are channels that I haven't seen in a while. I think both are also big to older millennials. I know their popularity have dwindled a lot these past years, with CN's cartoon quality taking a nosedive. I think they can easily sell/rent out the streaming rights to a lot of their shows to streaming. I have read of people still watching some of the shows for nostalgia.

They are going to place the content on the streaming platforms that these entities own. That is the direction they are going. But the channels themselves are dead now.

It is only a question of what they do with them. My guess is they end up being bundled with other assets and sold off. Someone will try to bleed them.

Well I will say it is really expecting because our world keeps evolving and evolving and there are some things that look like important before will no longer be important again

I really do look at people who still subscribe for cable tv bouquets funny . For one these cable networks don't offer varieties anymore ,its still basically the same old routine with little or no modifications to their programs. Secondly, mobile phones are slowly replacing tv(s) so it's really difficult to see cable tv(s) not dying .

It is really getting quite obvious that the world is really advancing and changing a whole lot of things which is awesome to see

This is one industry where the disruption is taking place right before our eyes.

I don't think the shift has even been that big of a deal for boomers and GenXers. I'm GenX and 5 years go I used to watch cable TV. I would DVR some shows, watch news, etc. And I would occasionally watch a movie or show on Netflix. My DVR started filling up faster than I watched stuff and cable and network news got too frustrating to watch so I just found myself gradually spending more time on Netflix on whatever else I could find on my Amazon Fire Stick. Likewise, while my parents still have cable, I've observed they spend more time on streaming services than watching cable.

Streaming services, combined with the ease of pirating shows that used to air on cable, contributed to the downfall of these companies. It's sad to see them go, but times are changing, and they need to adapt.

It’s strange to see cable TV dying off. I grew up with channels like MTV and Cartoon Network, and now they’re disappearing. Streaming and the way we watch shows is changing everything we knew about TV. I wish they never left at all. But we will cope actually. 😭😭

It was a blunder on the part of the media studios. Now they are scrambling.

Everything is going to change regarding entertainment over the next 5 years. The only thing that will remain the same is live events.

Yeah, I don't think anything can change the live event because they are streaming it directly. But, let's hope a better version comes up over the next 5 years, just like you said. I will be so happy to see that day come.

The fragmentation will really expand things. It will be more specialized.

Of course, when individual content development comes along, then everything will change.

No problem then. I guess I just have to keep anticipating that time to come..

The next few years will be telling how things go. I am watching the video generators to see how fast they advance.

Hmmm. Probably I will look forward to seeing that and hearing the good news you will share about it soon.

Cant say that I'm sad to see them go and hopefully the propaganda networks (CNN, CNBC, FOX, MSNBC, Etc...) with them. Filling the void will be the likes of Joe Rogan, Elon Musk, Tim Pool, Viva Frei, Mark Dice, etc..
I cut the cord almost a decade ago. Have not missed really missed it except for the pain in the ass it is to get the Eagles Games (Damn the NFL) lol.
Although the nostalgia bug does pop up, I can still hear Sting singing "I want my MTV". You know that Dire Straits video was from 1985, forty freaking years ago... damn I feel old 🙃

The problem is propaganda is nothing more than a point of view expressed over and over. Whether it has much basis in reality is not relevant.

It is funny how the mainstream news media went from being trusted to now just outright liars. This was mirrored by the financial networks. As you mention, cable news takes it to a new level.

Actually, it was always that way, people didnt just realize it. Rather, Brokaw and Jennings told us what they wanted. Today, the claims can at least be double checked.

Of course, with #ai, this is going to get really interesting since we will see deepfake videos that most believe.

It used to be "Believe none of what you hear and half of what you see" now it is "Believe none of what you hear and NONE of what you see"
Trust is near 0% and that is not good. This fragmentation is everywhere, not just tech. I don't remember people fighting so viscerally over stupid political positions.
I guess there is not much we can do about it except pick up the pieces and build something better, but we need trust, trust is the glue that holds it all together.

Divide and conquer. That is what they use.

We are going to see everything change. Blockchain can help with the trust. But you are right, trust has left the stage.

I use the television to watch videos on YouTube or 3Speak that interest me. Also now I've started putting my music on 3Speak. First music video uploaded yesterday on my 3Speak channel. I would like to contribute to transforming 3speak into a music player, like YouTube is. Conclusions: I also believe that classic television will have fewer and fewer users

I agree with what you are doing. Hopefully we can start some of the transition.

My view is that #web3 will only accelerate things even more as greater fragmentation occurs. Each video, song, or piece of news is one away from the traditional, either media or social media.