Anyone who's taken even a brief glance at their video provider's channel offerings knows that the number of networks currently available is staggering. We've come a long way from the days when a ...
As an on-demand society affects TV-viewing habits, the FCC supports what is being called "a la carte cable programming." Viewers would pay for the channels they actually watch. New York Times business ...
Every so often, I get an email or read a comment online asking why the TV industry won’t just give the people what they want. As more people abandon cable and satellite TV—or grow up accustomed to ...
Last week, I reviewed T-Mobile’s new TVision streaming service, which the company touted would do to the cable TV business what its “Un-carrier” strategy did to cellular phone industry. The TL;DR on ...
Cable won a key battle in Maine, but the war looks like the industry will continue to endure big losses. When should it raise the white flag? The cable TV industry won a major legal decision in Maine, ...
A new PricewaterhouseCoopers study says that 44 percent of consumers would like a total a la carte pay-TV system and 73 percent would prefer at least more customization of packages than is currently ...
Viewers of cable and satellite TV may soon have the option of subscribing to only the channels they want to watch, if the Federal Communications Commission gets its way. On Tuesday FCC chairman Kevin ...
No, I have not watched the new “Star Trek” series. Sore subject. CBS is airing the latest spinoff, “Star Trek: Discovery,” only on CBS All Access, yet another paid video streaming service, in this ...
With studies saying most U.S. households watch less than 20 of the sometimes hundreds of available channels, a movement is building for "cable a la carte." Some of its backers are those offended by ...
Since the beginning of the month, Canadian pay-TV companies have been required to offer channels on an a la carte basis — that is, allowing customers to pay only for the channels they want, rather ...
Intel has joined the club of tech companies who want to revolutionize television, but unsurprisingly it’s meeting some resistance in Hollywood. According to Forbes, Intel wants to launch an ...
The streaming television channel wars encompass everything from known prestige programming behemoths Netflix, Hulu and Amazon Prime Video to more niche services like the Anglophile-catering BritBox ...
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