LOS ANGELES, Dec. 31, 2008

Many May Be Left Wanting For Their MTV

Dispute Over Fees Paid To Viacom By Time Warner Cable Could Cut Off 13 Million Customers From Popular Channels

  • Viacom claims Americans spend a fifth of their TV time watching shows on its channels, including the popular children's cartoon Photo

    Viacom claims Americans spend a fifth of their TV time watching shows on its channels, including the popular children's cartoon "SpongeBob SquarePants."  (Viacom/Nick.com)

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(AP)  "SpongeBob SquarePants" may be getting squeezed off Time Warner Cable.

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 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, said spokesman Alex Dudley, a vice president at Time Warner Cable. The nation's second-largest cable operator primarily serves customers in the Carolinas, New York state, Ohio, Southern California and Texas.

Viacom has asked for fee increases of between 22 percent and 36 percent per channel, an amount that could increase customers' cable bills, Dudley said. Viacom spokeswoman Kelly McAndrew said the requested increase was in the very low double-digit percentage range.

"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 said the increases would cost an extra 23 cents a month per subscriber - which works out to $35.9 million more in total. 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," it 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," it said.

Negotiations are continuing at the highest level, Dudley said.

Viacom accused Time Warner Cable of not negotiating.

"It is our sincere hope that they will come to the table and negotiate a deal," said McAndrew. The network operator also intends to tell viewers about the dispute in TV ads in 11 major markets.

Part of the disagreement is that most of the 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. "They're trying to have their cake and eat it too online, where anybody can get it for free."

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 the 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 69 cents, or 3.7 percent, to close at $19.26 on Tuesday, while Time Warner Cable shares added $1.56, or 7.7 percent, to $21.76.

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.

Pop-up alerts on "The Colbert Report" and "The Daily Show" Web sites Wednesday morning informed fans that Time Warner Cable customers will lose Comedy Central shows soon and urged them to call the cable company and protest the change.


© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Add a Comment See all 18 Comments
by eggy1620 December 31, 2008 12:25 PM PST
This is the end result of government granted geographic monopoly. The customer gets it in their end. And before any of you start raving about satellite TV, it probably does not snow where you live and you do not have to climb your roof to clear out the dish.
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by debinok1 December 31, 2008 12:37 PM PST
How about just asking the customers if they want to see their bills go up. You would likely get a resounding NO. People are struggling to make ends meet and a higher bill may force some to rethink the neccessity of cable or satellite.
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by likeitis5050 December 31, 2008 12:48 PM PST
Add them to the Premium Channel list and let the ones who want them pay for them. Pay the Greedy Viacom directly from the Premium increase...this will tell the real story.
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by likeitis5050 December 31, 2008 12:51 PM PST
This is why, come February I''m dumping all this junk....it makes no difference whether it''s cable or satellite...the bills just creep up and up until you realize your bill has gone from the still-too-much to ah-he11-no in just a matter of months. They can all sti.ck it where the sun don''t shine, and soon.
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by swingset4u December 31, 2008 1:32 PM PST
This is why, come February I''''m dumping all this junk....

Posted by likeitis5050

Why wait till Feb.? If you say because of the digital transition please don''t! If you are that upset about paying your cable bill and ordering all the latest and greatest crapolla they hawk, why wait? T.V. programming is still free on your local channels. So I don''t see your point.
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by lewiston14 December 31, 2008 1:32 PM PST
Great now get rid of BET, the religius channels and about 100 other filler channels and lower the bill.
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by bigal321321 December 31, 2008 2:05 PM PST
Goes to show you....Americans are TV junkies. But that''s what it''s about, eh? Don''t get involved with your life, just sit there and watch the 100 channels being pumped into your home. Just like the Roman Games of so long ago. Control the media and you can control the people. "I''m mad as hell and not going to take it anymore!" was once used in a movie to tell the story. How sad we have become. Just pay the freakin'' 23 cents and be happy. Sheeesh!
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by amurguz December 31, 2008 2:11 PM PST
What amazes me, to this very day, is that there are all those channels, an cable or satellite, and at times of the day, there is still, NOTHING, WORTH WHILE, TO WATCH!!!

Who needs a hundred channels of "Paid Programming" at two o''clock in the morning, when insomnia may take hold?
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by shanev137 December 31, 2008 2:12 PM PST
What in the hell is 23 cents a month to anyone?

Why is this even news?
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by cbscrash072 December 31, 2008 2:29 PM PST
Frankly these stations should be free. I''m sick of paying for cable that includes a bunch of channels that spend most of their time playing commercials. A 26 percent increase for a channel that makes a good chunk of change from ads is ridiculous. Let them loose 13 million viewers and let us see how that reduces their income. Viacom can blow me.
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by cbscrash072 December 31, 2008 2:33 PM PST
You can buy these shows on Itunes with no commercials. We should all call our cable companies and demand these channels be dropped.
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by December 31, 2008 3:07 PM PST
Hmm...no problems with my DTV setup. I pay less to DTV for more channels than I ever did with TW. Their price structure is ridiculous!
Reply to this comment
by gprtracy December 31, 2008 3:30 PM PST
I don''t want to lose my channels. There should be a way to let us pick and pay for the channels we want. I don''t agree with raising the bill, but 19 channels is a lot, is the bill going to be lowered any? Doubt it. I''ve been trying to call Time Warner all day and they obviously have their phone off the hook.
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by DocD--2008 December 31, 2008 3:51 PM PST
The loss of Viacom would be a great present! Send those idot greedy butt heads packing. Their shows suck anyway!

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by pqsbabygirl December 31, 2008 3:52 PM PST
i am saddened. 95% of the shows i watch are on these channels. my son and i watch Nick Jr. together (no comments from ridiculous people saying i shouldnt let my son watch tv) i work 40+ hours a week and pay all my bills on time. why shouldnt i be allowed to watch what i want IF I AM PAYING FOR IT???? 23 extra cents, whoopee. big deal. Oh well, this just makes me more inclined to dropkick TW and go with dish network =)
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by walt1944-2009 December 31, 2008 5:38 PM PST
Three years ago, I lost my job and couldn''t afford cable TV. I went back to good, old-fashioned "RABBIT EARS" and have since refused to go back to "pay TV" again!

Thanks to cable, TV was running our lives, and not having it has been a real BLESSING! Sure, there are channels and programs I miss, but now I can go online and catch any episodes I miss, or buy the DVD.

And now with the "DIGITAL REVOLUTION" hitting TV, we are getting 26 channels and counting with cable-like reception, and we AREN''T paying $100 to $130 a month to a GREEEEDY cable company like Comcast or Time Warner!

So, if you people want to waste your money and make the cable companies rich, it''s your, soon-to-be-theirs, money. Otherwise, get a $40 coupon from the government, get a digital converter and a "smart" indoor antenna to lock the digital signals in (the digital signal drifts and you will be continually adjusting rabbit ears!), then sit back and watch FREE TV!!!!!

SIG HEIL, YOU MEAN I FINALLY DID SOMETHING RIGHT???, BUSH!!!
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by jojo10002 December 31, 2008 11:43 PM PST
I already pay for cable then all the companies invovled get paid for the excessive amount of commercials on all cable stations. 80% of their late night programming is paid infommercials which they get paid for even though no one that pays for cable wants to watch them.I have decided to cancel my cable and start reading good books and best of all no commericials
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by rushman71 January 2, 2009 9:19 AM PST
Honestly, I don''t want my MTV!!! Ever since they stopped doing what the channel was specifically designed for--MUSIC VIDEOS!!!
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