Archive for the ‘Cablevision’ Category

Here We Go Again – Cablevision to Yank ABC from Lineup

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

Do you watch ABC (channel 7 or channel 707) on Cablevision? Well as of March 7, 2010 you won’t be able to get it anymore. Sound familiar? It should. Cablevision pulled the same stunt with the Food Network and HGTV in January.

For a Bloomberg news report on this, see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZrXeBivNLok

According to http://www.saveabc7.com/:

“Thank you for helping to make ABC7 New York’s favorite television station. We work hard to earn your support every day by bringing you the best in local news, community affairs and top-quality entertainment programming.

Unfortunately, as of March 7th, ABC7 may no longer be carried on Cablevision systems.

For the past two years we have tried, without success, to reach an agreement with Cablevision to carry ABC7. Why? Because Cablevision’s position is that ABC7 is worth little to nothing to its business and its proposed offers have been consistently unreasonable and unrealistic.

In fact, ABC7 delivers some of the most popular programming carried on Cablevision today, shows like LOST, Grey’s Anatomy, Jeopardy, Dancing with the Stars, Wheel of Fortune, Desperate Housewives, General Hospital, Regis and Kelly, Modern Family, The Academy Awards, The Oprah Winfrey Show and Eyewitness News.

We think these shows are valuable. And your bill shows that Cablevision must agree, since you already pay for ABC7 as part of your Broadcast Basic Tier – a service for which, as a Cablevision customer, you pay as much as $18 each month.

What your bill doesn’t show is how much Cablevision pays us for these programs.

The answer: They Pay Nothing. That’s right…Cablevision charges you for ABC7 and then keeps ALL the money.

We will continue to work with Cablevision to reach a fair agreement, but regardless of the outcome, ABC7 is available to you through a variety of other providers, including Verizon FiOS, AT&T U-verse and DIRECTV, and, as always, FREE over-the-air.”

Personally I’ve had enough of Cablevision’s games. It’s time to dump these chumps and show them that we wont put up with their shoddy service and high prices. I’ll be changing service immediately and urge you to do the same.

See also:

Mayor Fried Wants His Food Network Back!

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

Happy New Year!

According to a posting on the township’s website, Mayor Fried is ticked off about the recent disappearance of HGTV and the Food Network channels from the Cablevision lineup. Being that Cablevision has a monopoly on the township’s cable services, most residents have been left high and dry with little alternatives to satisfy their cooking and decorating needs.

Cablevision surprised many people with an announcement over the holiday weekend, just a day before HGTV and the Food Network channels were yanked off their lineup. Currently Cablevision is blaming Scripps, the provider of these channels, while Scripps blames Cablevision. While both companies act like spoiled children, the viewers, including the Mayor, suffer. However the Mayor has drafted a letter to the Board of Public Utilities and Cablevision, the text of which appears below:

Like many others in Robbinsville and beyond, I was surprised to learn on New Year’s Day that Cablevision had interrupted service on two popular channels, HGTV and The Food Network. I was especially disturbed after learning there had been no advance notice, either to Cablevision’s subscribers or to the Township, as the grantor of the local franchise.
Instead, our residents and others in Cablevision’s service area awoke to a public information message that sought to blame Scripps Networks for the interruption in service, over what is apparently a financial dispute between the two companies. I can only presume that the timing and nature of this move, coming as it did on a holiday weekend, is an attempt by Cablevision to use paying customers as leverage in a bid to squeeze Scripps to lower its asking price for these two channels. At the very least, this move was greedy; as a representative of my residents, I must call on the Board of Public Utilities to investigate whether this action violated any laws or regulations. Like most cable subscribers, a high share of our residents look forward to programming on HGTV specials and The Food Network on New Year’s Day.
It is clear that Cablevision executed a calculated plan that held no regard for its subscribers and that their strategy was to blame Scripps. Let me be clear – those who promoted this ill-fated plan failed in their mission. My residents are outraged at Cablevision, as I am sure the company will experience today and in the days ahead.
As a consequence of Cablevision’s actions, I am requesting that the Board examine three issues:
(1) Whether Cablevision’s actions violated any laws or regulations that require adequate notice for interruption of all or part of a service. If Cablevision was not required to notify individual subscribers, was the company required to notify the Township, as the grantor of the franchise, so that the Township could have provided impartial information on its Web site?
(2) Whether Cablevision is required to grant subscribers credit for the loss of these channels, especially if this interruption continues for an extended period.
(3) Whether Cablevision should have sought mediation, through the Office of Ratepayer Advocate or some other party, before taking such an extreme action as an unannounced service interruption on a holiday weekend. The BPU should immediately order the parties to work through the Ratepayer Advocate to end this impasse.

While competition for television is coming slowly to Robbinsville, technical hurdles will make Cablevision the monopoly in many parts of town for years to come. I trust you share my belief that when a cable company is given the exclusive right to provide service in a community, it has a duty to behave responsibly toward its customers. In my view, Cablevision has not fulfilled that duty and it must be called upon to explain its behavior. More disturbing is the fact that this is part of a pattern of consumer abuse that the Board must address, once and for all. Thank you for your time and consideration of this most important matter and I am happy to assist you in any way and I look forward to hearing from you.

Sincerely,
Dave Fried
Mayor