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Demon_Skeith

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Media giant Viacom Inc. said its Nickelodeon, MTV, Comedy Central and 16 other channels will go dark for 13 million subscribers at 12:01 a.m. Thursday if a new carriage fee deal with Time Warner Cable Inc. is not agreed upon by then.

The impasse would mean "SpongeBob" and other popular shows like Jon Stewart's "The Daily Show" and Stephen Colbert's "The Colbert Report" will be cut off on the nation's second-largest cable operator. Time Warner Cable primarily serves people in New York state, the Carolinas, Ohio, Southern California and Texas.

Viacom has asked for fee increases of between 22 percent and 36 percent per channel, or a total of $39 million more, an amount that could increase customers' cable bills, said Time Warner Cable spokesman Alex Dudley.

"The issue is that they have asked for an exorbitant increase in their carriage fees and their network ratings are sagging," Dudley said. "Basically we're trying to hold the line for our customer."

Viacom spokeswoman Kelly McAndrew disputed the figure, saying Viacom requested an increase in the very low double-digit percentage range.

Viacom said the increases would cost an extra 23 cents a month per subscriber. It said that Americans spend a fifth of their TV time watching Viacom shows but its fees make up less than 2.5 percent of the Time Warner cable bill.

"We make this request because Time Warner Cable has so greatly undervalued our channels for so long," Viacom said.

"Ultimately, however, if Nickelodeon, Comedy Central, MTV and the rest of our programming is discontinued — over less than a penny per day — we believe viewers will see this behavior by their cable company as outrageous," Viacom said.

Time Warner Cable's Dudley said Viacom rejected his company's proposal to extend the contract while the sides continue to negotiate.

Instead, Viacom appealed directly to Time Warner Cable's customers, with TV ads in major markets. In Wednesday's New York Times, the company ran a full-page, color advertisement with Nickelodeon's animated bilingual heroine "Dora the Explorer" crying and clinging to her monkey pal, Boots.

"Why is Dora crying?" the ad asks. "Time Warner Cable is taking Dora off the air tonight!" The ad urges viewers to call Time Warner Cable and demand that their favorite shows remain on the air.

If the shows go dark after midnight, Time Warner Cable will send people to the Internet to catch episodes. Dudley said the cable operator also will make available a video teaching people how to hook their computers up to the TV to watch online shows — a tactic it used during a contract dispute with broadcaster LIN TV in October.

Part of the disagreement is that most of Viacom's popular shows are rerun on Web sites where Viacom collects advertising revenue that it does not share with Time Warner, Dudley said. "We don't think that's fair," he said.

Viacom has staked much of its revenue-growth prospects on its ability to extract higher carriage rates out of its cable and satellite affiliates despite an ad slowdown and weak ratings.

In the third quarter, media network revenue, which accounts for about two-thirds of Viacom's total, grew 6 percent to $2.1 billion, despite global ad revenue falling 2 percent, largely because of double-digit percentage growth in affiliate fees and the success of its "Rock Band" video game.

Viacom shares rose 45 cents, 2.3 percent, to $19.71 in late morning trading Wednesday. Time Warner Cable shares lost 39 cents, 1.8 percent, to $21.37.

The channels that would be affected are: Comedy Central, CMT: Pure Country, Logo, Palladia, MTV, MTV 2, MTV Hits, MTV Jams, MTV Tr3s, Nickelodeon, Noggin, Nick 2, Nicktoons, Spike, The N, TV Land, VH1, VH1 Classic, and VH1 Soul.

source

good thing I don't live in those states.
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update:

As quickly as things got ugly between Time Warner and Viacom, things also got settled – Variety is reporting that the two companies have come to an agreement on a new deal that will keep Viacom owned MTV Networks (including MTV, VH1, Spike TV, Nickelodeon, Comedy Central and many other cable channels) on the air for Time Warner Cable subscribers.

The rift was over Viacom asking for an increase in the fees Time Warner pays to air their programming. When Time Warner refused the increase, it looked like all MTV Networks would be pulled from Time Warner Cable on January 1st, meaning 13.3 million Time Warner subscribers would find themselves without programming like The Daily Show, SpongeBob Squarepants and The Hills.

The two sides quickly began a PR war against one another, but Variety says that cooler heads prevailed, and negotiations went on between the two last night, ending at 2am ET Thursday, January 1st. CNN reports that Time Warner has agreed to a modest increase in the carriage fees they pay Viacom for their programming.

Earlier in the week, both sides were quick to put out statements deriding the other for the lack of a new deal, with Viacom using characters from their series, such as Nickelodeon's Dora the Explorer and Comedy Central's South Park, to express to viewers the shows they would be missing without any of the MTV Networks channels being aired on Time Warner Cable.

source
 
QUOTE (Demon_Skeith @ January 02, 2009 06:33 pm) QUOTE (ubertrance @ January 02, 2009 04:49 pm) god dont remind me

i was scared for a minute
I take it you have that cable provider?
yes....VERY GOOD...very fast internet
 
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