Nobody wants to watch the Discovery Channel…
Only 2.9 million people viewed Naked and Afraid. But a 100 million paid for it. More than a buck a month. The CEO made $156 million. Now what?
Lawsuits.
Verizon is following the customer, allowing its FiOS TV subscribers to pick and choose channels. And the content providers are going nuts!
Sound familiar?
Let me analogize for you.
A CD cost $12. But people only wanted to hear one song.
However there was no other way to get it than to purchase the entire album. The labels liked the income and the acts believed the other nine tracks had value, but not to the ultimate customer, who didn’t care and oftentimes didn’t believe in the act at all, moving on to someone else soon thereafter.
What changed the equation?
PIRACY!
Piracy is disruptive, sure it’s theft, but it breaks the logjam…
Napster begat the iTunes Store.
Thus the great unbundling already happened in the music business, and the acts still haven’t recovered. Turns out most people only want the single, and with everything available they don’t want your music, maybe not at all.
Kind of like in cable…
The three networks used to have 90% of the audience, but now the four and a half networks get a fifth of the viewers, with the rest spread amongst a zillion outlets.
And these outlets get paid by the cable company, via extortion.
That’s right, the providers consolidated the channels, such that if you turn off one, we won’t give you the other. As a result, customers are paying for what they don’t want to watch. And they’re sick and tired of it.
Now in music we’re ahead, you can get all the programming in one spot, whereas in TV you’ve got to have a subscription to Netflix, Hulu, HBO, Showtime, cable, internet… They’re inviting you to pirate.
However, we’re also moving in the wrong direction in music, with the exclusive. Once Apple/Spotify/Tidal all have different product people will return to piracy, or stop paying all together, as they’re doing with cable, cutting the cord.
HBO is going direct. You no longer need a cable contract, you can subscribe on the internet for $15.
But HBO is a winner, Discovery is not.
Taylor Swift is a winner, you are not.
That’s right, the old model was different.
Very few people could record and distribute. Radio was the only way to get traction, and the major labels controlled the slots. And, as stated above, music was sold in a bundle for a high price. So, if you ran this gauntlet, you were a winner, you made money, whether it be the advance on your deal, even if you were a failed artist, or the royalties you got as a songwriter.
But now that old system has been decimated, via the internet and piracy, and it turns out most people don’t want most music and you just can’t make what you used to.
Like Discovery. I’d cancel it tomorrow if I could, I haven’t watched it in years.
Nor have I viewed the vaunted ESPN, which costs every cable customer six plus bucks.
That’s right, the success of sports is built upon a fiction, that we all care.
But we don’t. Go a la carte and sports turns niche. They tumble to a level far below the perch the media puts them upon now. As for the value of live sports, that’s to the advertiser.
Other than the Super Bowl – which is a national holiday -and most people aren’t watching the game either. And if we all stop paying six plus bucks a month…
Everybody makes less money.
The corporations didn’t beat you, the public did!
It turns out people have time for great, they’ll even pay for it. HBO has got over 30 million subscribers, it costs $15 a month. Just like people will pay triple digits to see a superstar in concert. But they won’t pay to see you.
Superstars are making more than ever before. Sure, recorded music is a smaller piece of the pie, but ticket prices have far outpaced inflation and sponsorship offers are legion.
But it’s hard to become a superstar. You have to be great, you have to have promotion, to gain traction and stick you have to be at it for years.
And there are very few shortcuts.
They scaled down from stadiums, their new album was distributed and not heard. The people going are all Gen-X’ers who still believe. There are no new fans, because U2 is irrelevant, because the band doesn’t have hits.
You hate that you need hits.
But that’s what Game of Thrones is.
No one wanted to watch John from Cincinnati.
And that obscure show you love on Animal Planet, it’s being paid for by those who never watch, who aren’t even aware of it. And it’s going to disappear when the great unbundling appears.
Which is happening now.
In five years the TV landscape will look totally different.
You’ll pay less, but there will be fewer high quality shows available. Then again, maybe TV should be made on the cheap, for YouTube.
You can be on YouTube. You can put your music up there and get paid just like the superstars. But you won’t make much because most people don’t care, you have a tiny audience not because your promotion sucks, but you do.
Sorry to wake you up.
But what killed you was the customer. Turns out the customer only wants great. And if something is superior, there’s seemingly no limit to what he’ll lay down for it.
Them’s are the rules, that’s the game we’re playing.
Don’t shoot the messenger, your cheese was not only moved, but completely stolen. You can complain all you want, but it ain’t gonna make any difference.
u2 will sell out….(biggest grossing tours)
taylor will sell out (already has)
even the old bands (Fleetwood) are selling out in kc.
because there just aren’t the number of concerts and people love concerts.
the big news in kc….royals are killing the networks….every night they
steal hundred of thousnds of viewers they play and that’s going to
really hurt the networks in this city…and its only on cable tv (fox)
viewing habits are changing every day…listening habits are changing
every day.
Pandora is soaring..while the free radio stations deny it.
change or die!
Yeah, mediocrity rules, Harley…
Your favorite place to be?
all those subscriptions add up, so there needs to be a content provider where I can get what I want. time-warner ain’t it, but if I subscribed to all the others, and only got internet service from TW, I doubt my monthly bill would be a whole lot less anyway.
having said that, I hardly turn on my family room TV now, except maybe for PPV. and when TW forced us to add on those digital whateverboxes, with a remote, that they’re going to charge us for in another year, I turned off the bedroom TV and that annoying box, and haven’t had it on in almost two months. instead, I’ve been watching Netflix on the tablet.
so if it all gets upended and shakes out, I sure as hell hope it doesn’t take 5 years. needs to happen now. TW should have unbundled years ago.
The $64 million question is, will The Great Unbundling go down in a cost effective way…
Netflix is a good deal…until you add in Hulu and Amazon Prime, the WWE Network and a few others. At that rate, the a la carte costs could soar.
At some point things should become priced halfway reasonably.
But how many of these little networks (and how many ESPN channels) may bite the dust in the process?
I’m as happy as can be with Google Fiber. Blazing internet speeds, plenty of channels. Even with adding in my Netflix subscription, I’m still paying $100 per month LESS than I was with AT&T Uverse. And due to Google Fiber’s ridiculous internet speeds, there is no long buffering wait with Netflix. Pick your tv show and within 5 seconds, you are watching it. It’s beautiful.
ATT Uverse has gone crazy — it goes up every month. Can’t wait until Google installs the actual fiber in the tube they laid the past week.
Must be nice!
Nice article.
I’m getting ready to cut the cord when I move to my house in Aug and I couldn’t be more excited. Yeah, the high speed Internet will be expensive but I won’t be fuming mad for 5 days every month when I get my cable bill.
I do understand Cable now provides High Def where they didn’t have it even 10-12 years ago, at least not like they do now. It’s just that they lie to your face, they sneak in charges, they screw you 6 ways from Sunday. Like a lot of other greedy corporations they got greed down to a science/art.
The only way to halfway beat the cable/U-Verse game is to drop the service and/or threaten to move it.
My new U-Verse is almost $100 less than what they were bagging me for late last year before I dropped everything except the Internet.
Now I’m about $140 all in…plus of course Netlix, Amazon Prime and WWE (yeah, I know, WWE)
ESPN is one of the worst offenders and costs more than it’s worth – I’d dump it today if I could and still keep other channels that I like. I never watch it anymore — too political, too much gossip talk … it’s become E! Entertainment Television.
I agree…
ESPN is out of control and sports in general is way overrated.
I like sports.
I just don’t worship at the altar.
Hey, I liked John From Cincinnati. It was a not perfect but Milich held my interest.