The cable industry's in trouble, and the FCC isn’t all that interested in helping it. Six cable networks are suing the Federal agency in an attempt to block "dual must-carry" requirements set to take effect in 2009. The nuances of the issue highlight that cable just isn't keeping up with the competition in terms of capacity, and it appears the FCC is very content to help telephone and satellite companies steamroll an entire industry.
Polka said capacity constraints and the cost of compliance will make it difficult, if not impossible, for small cable operators.
The flipside of this is that the cable industry has run itself rather poorly for years. Under a free-market theory, the market would dictate that consumers demand something and companies respond. There has been large support for a-la carte programming in the market, where customers could choose which channels they'd like to subscribe to rather than having packages with 30, 40, 100 channels they don't want. Cable and satellite make a lot of money by stacking their packages with shopping channels and such, even though most don't watch. Most watch about 15 channels regularly.
A-la-carte programming could be a viable solution to the problem the dual must-carry rule presents – after all, this is a pickle for both the government and the cable industry. A-la-carte programming would not only allow customers to choose which channels they want in their packages, they could also choose which ones to drop, thereby freeing up the capacity taken up by all those worthless forced channels. It would also keep Kevin Martin's censorship brigade out of cable programming.
But cable doesn't want to that either. Cable likes trying to make you watch stuff you don't need or want. It's part of how they make their money. And no competitor within the industry has stepped up to let the free-market economy do its work. Like oil companies, and phone companies, consumers' choices are limited, and the industries collude to maximize profit.
But something's going to have to give, probably a little on both sides.
All of these sudden conundrums cable finds itself in points to a larger issue: when it comes to keeping up with telecoms and satellite providers, cable just can't keep up and is in big, big trouble. Their biggest problem is capacity. The recent scandal over
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