No doubt there are idiots involved. (And why aren't they losing their jobs too). But there's a direct correlation between declining cable subscribers and ESPN cutting bait with top talent.
I'm curious why cable cutting and going to subscription based things like Sling is hurting ESPN. Almost every digital package has ESPN. Ad revenue? They run ads.
Yea that's the driving force behind it all. But again, you have folks like me who are still attached to the cord that have shut them off because of their damn social justice shit.
In short, they get the most money per subscriber of any cable company. I can't tell you the exact number without looking it up, but it's significant. Decline in subscribers + ridiculous rights fees = loss of revenue
It's both. The money they generated from subscribers (and advertising of course) paid for the rights fees.
I was thinking 8 or 9, but didn't want to throw something out. Clay Travis is a huge ********, and has had a hard on about this story since it popped up, but he's not been wrong about it either.
Exactly. I think one of the reasons people are cord cutting ESPN is because of their shitty non live sports coverage and a major part of that is not wanting to hear a political agenda when watching what should be escape tv
Understood, but ESPN is one of the few things on cable that isn't easily replaceable by Hulu, Netflix, etc
I'd say the number of people who cut cable due to ESPN's increasingly obnoxious politics is pretty damn small.
I guess you didn't read my post. Cool. I'm suggesting their shitty non live sports content makes them less valuable to people and encourage cord cutting. I.e. Is it worth it for people to keep paying for ESPN all year just to make sure they see their team 6 times a year or whatever when there is nothing else on there they care about.
I certainly did. The point is that there likely isn't a huge number of people who cut the cord because of anything related to just one channel.
Disagree. Live sports content is all cable offers at this point that isn't easily replaceable by streaming services. ESPN is the primary provider of that.
If it wasn't a big factor, which it likely wasn't, then the last part of this post isn't true at all.