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Ryudo
04-14-2010, 08:15 AM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ytech_gadg/ytech_gadg_tc1598


Make no mistake: The big cable, satellite, and telco carriers are still sitting pretty with more than 100 million TV subscribers. Nevertheless, a new report claims that more and more viewers are "cutting the cord" in favor of watching their favorite shows via over-the-air antennas (remember those?), Netflix, or the Web.

TechCrunch has the scoop on a new report from the Toronto-based Convergence Consulting Group, and though the figures may not be a "serious threat" to the big cable and satellite carriers yet, the trend might eventually spell trouble for the like of Cablevision, Comcast, DirecTV, and Time Warner Cable.

To wit: Nearly 800,000 households in the U.S. have "cut the cord," dumping their cable, satellite, or telco TV providers (such as AT&T U-verse or Verizon FiOS) and turning instead to Web-based videos (like Hulu), downloadable shows (iTunes), by-mail subscription services (Netflix), or even good ol' over-the-air antennas for their favorite shows, according to the report.

Now, as TechCrunch points out, the estimated 800,000 cord cutters represent less than 1 percent of the 100 million U.S. households (give or take) currently subscribing to a cable/satellite/telco TV carrier, so it's not like we're talking a mass exodus here. But by the end of 2011, the report guesstimates, the number of cord-cutting households in the U.S. will double to about 1.6 million, and if the trend continues, well...

Even more trouble for the big carriers is the report's assertion that U.S. TV watchers are getting a taste for online video, with an estimated 17 percent of the U.S. TV audience watching at least one or two shows online in a given week last year, up from just 12 percent in 2008, and set to rise to 21 percent this year.

Personally, I find the temptation to cut the cord pretty enticing, especially whenever I get a load of my monthly $130 cable bill (which includes unlimited broadband and HD but no premium channels). Why am I paying so much for all the hundreds of channels that I rarely ever watch, anyway? Wouldn't it be easier — not to mention a lot cheaper — just to ditch my DVR and watch my favorite shows on iTunes and Hulu, catch up on the news via CNN.com, and be done with it?

There's one important factor that's keeping me from pulling my scissors out: live sports, and particularly ESPN, my 24-hour sports companion. Sure, as a football fan, I could keep up with the Jets and the Giants via over-the-air TV (although I'm not sure my landlord would be all that ecstatic about my installing a TV antenna on the roof of our Brooklyn brownstone), but without cable, I'd be left high and dry when it comes to Monday Night Football.

What about you? Anyone out there count themselves as one of the 800,000-plus cord-cutting households in the U.S.? If not, would you ever consider it, or are you too attached to basic cable?

Correction: This post originally said that 800,000 U.S. TV households "cut the cord" in 2009. They didn't all cut the cord in 2009; the number reflects how many had cut the cord by the end of 2009 — a somewhat important distinction. Apologies for the goof.

bartleby
04-14-2010, 08:22 AM
The problem with trying to read anything into numbers like this right now is that they don't know how much is caused by economic concerns with people losing their jobs and cutting back on frivolous spending.

dasNdanger
04-14-2010, 08:26 AM
The only reason I keep my provider (DirecTV) is because I like the local news, and my rugby/football (soccer) channel (hard to find live rugby on tv)...but I'm about ready to let it go if I have to. I watch all of a handful of shows, and probably wouldn't miss the hundred channels or so that I rarely, if ever, watch.


das

cPol
04-14-2010, 08:40 AM
I'd love to dump my cable provider and go all streaming/rental, but with the useage cap from my ISP and the net neutrality ruling being overturned, I'd be concerned that my video-watching would be hampered.

Natty P
04-14-2010, 08:40 AM
If it weren't for Yankee games then I would cut out cable in favor of other means of watching stuff. Then again, you can get all the yankee games for 30 bucks a year online...

NickT
04-14-2010, 08:49 AM
Correction: This post originally said that 800,000 U.S. TV households "cut the cord" in 2009. They didn't all cut the cord in 2009; the number reflects how many had cut the cord by the end of 2009 — a somewhat important distinction. Apologies for the goof. Making the whole article a lot less serious. Less than 1% have left at some point, and we can't be 100% if this discounts people who have added it or people who have gone back.

BGPu
04-14-2010, 09:03 AM
We've been getting a bunch of channels we're not supposed to for years because the Comcast guy told me that the tuner in the TV would pick up anything it could. In the recent weeks those channels have been disappearing, and last night everything that wasn't "free" TV was snow. We're still getting the cable channels on the Tivo thanks to the cable card, albeit with an annoying message screen that pops up every hour or so, but I don't know how long that will last.

I remember when "basic cable" was $15-20 and included all the channels we've been getting. Now it's $18 for the channels I could pick up using an antenna. I'm not too eager to raise our cable bill by $40 to recover all the channels that have disappeared, just to watch 4 or 5 shows.

Gregory
04-14-2010, 09:05 AM
DirecTV has a 24/7 horse-racing channel. We can't quit that.

Marcdachamp
04-14-2010, 09:43 AM
This is something I've thought about a lot lately. With Netflix instant streaming, I could totally go without cable. The only reason I never will? Hockey.

Buk Was Right
04-14-2010, 09:51 AM
If it weren't for Yankee games then I would cut out cable in favor of other means of watching stuff. Then again, you can get all the yankee games for 30 bucks a year online...

Yup.

If MLB.tv didn't have local black outs I think I could cut my cable entirely.

EDIT: Not for yankee games of course... fuck those guys. I wanna watch the Giants.

Foolish Mortal
04-14-2010, 10:03 AM
You know that Springsteen song, "57 Channels and Nothing on"?

I think that's how a lot of people feel about their cable service. Lots of channels, but very little content that they actually want to watch. I feel the same way. Seems like we pay a lot and get little in return.

So I understand why more people go to the internet now.

BenC (formerly Ape-X)
04-14-2010, 10:07 AM
Coming up on 3 years now the Wife and I have been TV-provider free. Oh, we still have cable internet. We watch everything we want via Dual Haupauage TV tuner or streaming service like Hulu or Netflix. Just about any major tv show you could wanna watch is legally streaming somewhere.

Fygar
04-14-2010, 10:29 AM
Yeah, but how many people ditched their over priced package for something they can afford? Most people I know did that at some point in 2009, because Comcast prices are absurd. Plus it makes sense to at least have their basic service, because basic cable with Internet is cheaper than just having Internet. I hope all of these providers go under in the next ten years.

TV Zombie
04-14-2010, 11:41 AM
I would be interested in the demographics of some of these cancelers. For example, in my house there is me, the wife, 2 kids and my mom (yes my mom is temporarily living in my house). So to just cancel DirecTV would be a major decision. Throughout the week 4 different DVRs are recording 10 or so shows. To go from that to one PC where everyone would want to watch/catch up on their programming would not only be disasterous but a major pain in the ass.

Fygar
04-14-2010, 11:43 AM
I would be interested in the demographics of some of these cancelers. For example, in my house there is me, the wife, 2 kids and my mom (yes my mom is temporarily living in my house). So to just cancel DirecTV would be a major decision. Throughout the week 4 different DVRs are recording 10 or so shows. To go from that to one PC where everyone would want to watch/catch up on their programming would not only be disasterous but a major pain in the ass.

Yeah but this coming from someone named TV Zombie :lol:

Shwicaz
04-14-2010, 11:48 AM
I cut my cord over a year ago.

We were paying $55/month for DirecTV. (or $660 year). to watch tv.

We realized that we only like 3 or 4 shows.

We currently watch:

Damages
Breaking Bad
Mad Men
The Closer


We got rid of our TV and our cable. Now, to watch those 4 above listed show, combined, cost us about $90 year.

we eliminate channels we don't want to watch. Yes, we lost sports and news, but that's what the radio is for, you know..?

We've never been happier.

RegularJoe
04-14-2010, 11:55 AM
This is something I've thought about a lot lately. With Netflix instant streaming, I could totally go without cable. The only reason I never will? Hockey.

even with netflix, how will that net neutrality thing affect it? if they start charging based on how much you stream, that would change things a lot.

TV Zombie
04-14-2010, 11:59 AM
Yeah but this coming from someone named TV Zombie :lol:

Ha-Ha yeah I do record and watch a TON of television :-) I probably should be writing my stories but then what would I do all day at work.

Patrick King
04-14-2010, 12:13 PM
Yeah, I cut my cable last month because I end up watching all of my shows online since I usually work in the evenings and didn't have a DVR.