NEW YORK – Cablevision's 3.1 million subscribers in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut had their access to the Academy Awards telecast restored Sunday night after the cable operator reached a deal with ABC's parent company in a dispute over fees.
"It is a deal that is fair to our customers and in line with our other programming agreements," Cablevision Systems Corp. spokesman Charles Schueler said in a phone interview with The
Associated Press after the signal had been restored. He declined to
disclose details of the deal.
"We are very grateful to our customers for their support and pleased to welcome ABC back," he added in an e-mailed statement.
A stalemate in the dispute had led ABC's parent company, the Walt Disney Co., to pull its programming from the cable operator's subscribers at
midnight Saturday. The move, which imperiled viewers' access to the
highly rated Oscar show broadcast, marked the first time in a decade
that a major broadcast station went dark in a dispute with a cable
company.
The signal was switched on at 8:43 p.m. Sunday, Cablevision said. The awards show began at 8:30 p.m.
Disney Chief Executive Bob Iger was seen in the Oscar audience, about a minute
after Cablevision announced it had reached a deal to get the telecast
on the air.
A spokeswoman for ABC did not immediately respond to phone or e-mail messages.
The cable operator's subscribers had been scrambling to hook up antennas or find live TV on the Internet to watch the Academy Awards after the signal was switched off.
The companies traded blame for the stalemate ahead of one of the most-watched nights of television.
"Cablevision has once again betrayed its subscribers," said Disney spokeswoman
Charissa Gilmore. "Cablevision pocketed almost $8 billion last year,
and now customers aren't getting what they pay for ... again."
The dispute is another example of how networks are struggling to find
profits as advertising revenue dwindles and programming costs grow.
Networks are transmitted freely over the airwaves, but expensive event
programming has led the companies behind them to increasingly demand
fees from cable TV and satellite operators for retransmitting those
signals.
Cablevision had argued that Disney was seeking an additional $40 million a year in new fees, even though the company pays more than $200 million a year to Disney.
Disney countered that Cablevision charges customers $18 per month for basic broadcast signals but does not pass on any payment for ABC to Disney.
The dispute is similar to a standoff at the end of last year between News Corp. and Time Warner Cable over how much Fox television station signals were worth. That tussle, which threatened the college football bowl season and new episodes of "The Simpsons," was resolved without a signal interruption.
Cablevision also feuded with Scripps Networks Interactive Inc. in a January dispute that temporarily forced the Food Network and HGTV off the service. Neither side provided terms of an agreement that restored the channels after three weeks.
Disney was asking Cablevision to pay about $1 per subscriber per month, the same amount that News Corp. demanded from Time Warner in their dispute. Some analysts think News Corp. eventually accepted about 50 cents per subscriber.
Derek Baine, a senior analyst at SNL Kagan, said that if all four networks
charged $1, that would total $4 a month in new fees. Most cable
companies couldn't absorb that cost increase and would have a hard time
passing them onto consumers, he said.
"That's a lot of money," Baine said. "They're just playing chicken here."
Disney's previous contract with Cablevision expired more than two years
ago, but it was extended month by month as talks continued. Under
previous arrangements, Disney gave away its ABC broadcast signal for
free, a situation that most broadcasters are now trying to change.
WABC-TV is the most-watched TV station in the country, said Disney, which is based in Burbank, Calif.
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