BREAKING NEWS! 2ND UPDATE: More than 3 million Cablevision customers lost their ABC affiliate tonight and may lose the Academy Awards broadcast as well. It happened at 12:01 AM ET Sunday in this retrans impasse between Disney/ABC and Cablevision, which has tried to personally blame Disney CEO Bob Iger. “It seems their attacks on Bob have not worked,” a Disney insider just told me. “They miscalculated his resolve. Bullying and name-calling will not change the fact that
Cablevision’s customers are switching to other providers en masse.” Indeed, Disney has been urging its WABC-TV viewers to switch to satellite. A source close to Cablevision refuted the claim that viewers were leaving the provider in droves and responded to me, “Disney may thinks it’s good business to attack its own viewers and black out the Oscars in NY. They may call it resolve. We call it stupidity.”
Frankly, I’m shocked that Disney/ABC would jeopardize its Oscar ratings given that WABC-TV, Channel 7, is the most watched local television station in the United States, serving more than 7.4 million television households in 29 counties covering New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and Pennsylvania. I’m equally shocked that Cablevision would want to anger that many of its subscribers. But these retrans battles usually involve major hardball, and this is no exception. Obviously, Iger et al believe they have the upper hand for the next 17 hours until the Academy Awards telecast begins.
I’m told that Cablevision shut down all the broadcast stations — NBC, CBS, Fox, WPIX – before ABC went dark. The last thing that the Cablevision viewers saw while watching WABC-TV was: “Cablevision betrayed you again. First HGTV and Food Network. Now ABC 7…” You may remember that after the new year Cablevision subscribers lost their Food Network and HGTV on the channel lineup after the Scripps Networks also fought with the No. 5 cable giant over retrans fees. That battle took weeks to settle. Cablevision taunted Iger by portraying him as yet another greedy Big Media baron. And he is. Yet here we are with another publicity nightmare for Chuck and Jim Dolan who are among the most made-fun-of moguls because of their scattershot dealmaking, their dysfunctional intra-family squabbling, and their arrogant dismissing of shareholders. There’s even been something called the Dolan Discount for a long time — a penalty put on the stock of their Cablevision because investors don’t trust the duo. The Wall Street Journal even called recently for Jimmy Dolan to exit as Cablevision CEO and just run his company’s Madison Square Garden subsidiary.
The whispering is that it’s time for Time Warner Cable or Comcast to take over Cablevision’s coveted franchises concentrated in NYC’s most affluent suburbs. But the source close to Cablevision defended the company to me: “Cablevision was the best performing cable operator in the country in terms of stock price, cash flow growth, and number of subscribers. It also has the deepest penetration of their digital services of any cable company.”
The only people who lose these wars are the consumers whose already astronomical cable bills go up no matter who wins.
Cablevision was first out with a statement tonight:
BETHPAGE, NY, March 7, 2010 – Cablevision Systems Corporation (NYSE: CVC) today issued the following statement after ABC Disney pulled WABC from Cablevision customers, calling on Disney CEO Bob Iger to return WABC immediately while the negotiations continue. Cablevision pays ABC Disney $200 million for programming, more than any other company, and ABC Disney is demanding $40 million more in new fees for the same channels.
Charles Schueler, Cablevision’s executive vice president of communications, said:
“It is now painfully clear to millions of New York area households that Disney CEO Bob Iger will hold his own ABC viewers hostage in order to extract $40 million in new fees from Cablevision. We call on Bob Iger to immediately return ABC to Cablevision customers while we continue to work to reach a fair agreement.”
Cablevision customers should urge ABC Disney to put the WABC programming back on Cablevision by calling 1-877-NO-TV-TAX, visiting http://www.cablevision.com/abc or joining its Facebook group “Cablevision Viewers Say: No New Fees, ABC!”
Then came Disney/ABC’s statement:
12:01 a.m., ET, March 7, 2010
Statement from Rebecca Campbell, President and General Manager, WABC-TV, regarding Cablevision’s loss of ABC7:
“Cablevision has once again betrayed its subscribers by losing ABC7, the most popular station in the tri-state area. This follows two years of negotiations, during which we worked diligently, up to the final moments, to reach an agreement. Cablevision pocketed almost $8 billion last year, and now customers aren’t getting what they pay for…again. It’s time for Jim Dolan and the Dolan Family Dynasty to finally step up, be fair, and do what’s right for our viewers.”
Cablevision customers can call 1-877-990-ABC7 or visit www.saveABC7.com for information on how to switch service providers or receive ABC7’s signal free, over-the-air.
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.






I watch many of ABC’s shows however after this fiasco I will now watch it on Hulu and forget about it live. Ridiculous. This is a free broadcast station and trying to embezzle $40 million dollars for rebroadcast of a free station is pure greed. Not that Cablevision are saints in this however my fees are high enough and their greed will make them higher. A pox on their houses and I am done with ABC live. Hulu.com here I come. ABC is now dead to me. And I watch Desparate Housewives,s Brothers and Sisters, Castle, DWTS, Lost, Grey’s, The Middle, Modern Family an 20/20. A good way to lose ratings and viewers ABC. You are going into fourth place now and you deserve it after this blunder.
I was a Directv subscriber until this past January when my converter box fried itself. I was pissed at Directv for dumping Versus, which is the US home for the NHL. As of this date, Versus is still off the air on Directv. Switched to Cox,which I am not happy about, but I do understand the plight of those in the NYC area in the Cablevision-ABC7 screwup. It is ALWAYS the customer who loses in this deal.
I believe Cablevision should make the reception for the regular channels 2, 4, 5, 7, 9, 1e, 11, FREE and all the other channels you can see for free with a converter box. Maybe this would not have happened. They could charge for their equiptment rental and that’s it for those customers who only request to have reception service. Basic and Family packages should be for specific “other” channels. This way everyone can be happy. No one should have to pay for channels that are FREE anyway.
i’m waiting for the advertisers who paid out big bucks to start wanting a return on their money because the biggest market in town will not see any of their commercials. they are our only hope as both abc and cablevision ceo’s could not give a rat’s ass about any of us.
I live in Fort Laud. and i happened upon this story, we have the other giant, Comcast. Just substitute company names and we would be in the same sinking boat. good luck New Yorkers and really, the Oscars are over rated.
ABC and others are focussing on Cablevision’s total profits, and that’s fair, but no one seems to be noting the enormous 20% increase in price demanded by the most poorly-programmed network. Picking Oscar night to press their leverage with consumers is a nakedly manipulative and disgusting way to treat their end-use customers, the viewers they hope to not just keep but increase. The fight is being billed as inevitable, but that resigned attitude loses sight of the big picture.
20% is a huge price hike, especially when the increase comes in one stroke instead of spread out over time, as with other utilities or even consumer goods. If the price of a stamp went up 9¢ overnight, customers would start walking their mail to its destination. And Fox, with more attractive programs, is about to twist consumer arms even harder. Big picture: In any other business, crapping on your customers would simply be bad business in the long run and create customer resentment and eventually revolt. Viewers who can’t unplug from American Idol or even the Oscars are letting the networks have their way.
Anyone reminded of the days when Ma Bell had her way with customers because they had no choice? Maybe it’s time to play more Monopoly and watch less TV.
Nikki Finke writes, “The only people who lose these wars are the consumers whose already astronomical cable bills go up no matter who wins.”
What utter nonsense. Our cable bills may be high, but certainly NOT astronomical. Get a grip, tone things down, and try to keep things in perspective.
Sick of all of them. In Jan Cablevision cried the same – nobody pays us enough story with Scripps Network. since the shows i watch are on ABC – Cablevision you will be the loser. Holding now to cancel my service. By the way your customer service sucks I’ve been holding for and hour and tried for 3 hours last night to get thru. The Dolan’s should be answering the phones. And I think I’ll hold Cablevision hostage for my final bill….It’s time for the FCC – The Attoney General’s Office and Goverment to step in and put a stop to this!
If you live in New York and can not view the red carpet arrivals on ABC then log onto Oscar.com and watch LIVE FROM THE RED CARPET hosted by Brett Chukerman and Lisa Guerrero from 6:00 – 8:00 PM EST. You can even send in your questions and comments to the hosts via Facebook Connect. So even though you can not see the coverage on television you get even more live on Oscar.com!
Someone better get their act together. I have never missed an Oscar broadcast, and now thanks to this greed, I will. I will also be replacing Cablevision. Not that ABC acted any better in this situation. You are immature and incompetent business people. Shame on the both of you. Cutting off loyal, paying customers in a overnight hissy fit!! WE DO NOT WANT TO TURN ON THE TELEVISION AND BE FORCED TO SEE YOUR BATTLES. Handle it.
Both Cablevision and ABC have handled exceptionally poorly and both companies come off looking like spoiled babies. It’s really depressing to see the messages that both companies have come out with publicly (especially on the air -commercials and the still message when ABC was yanked off). It makes me wonder who is running these companies so ineptly and where did they learn the art of business communication? I guess they’re big enough that they could care less about public opinion but I do find it funny that they are telling us, the public, about their private business problems, as if we are their mommy and daddy and will solve it for them… uhm isn’t that what the CEOs of these companies get paid the big bucks to do? Solve the problem?
A rat vs. The Mouse. Who to root for? Who’s got the cheese?
Thank God for “illegal” web streams, my antenna and Time Warner.
Can’t watch the Philly affiliate from where I am. Thanks, I prefer the Oscars over the Academy Awards and now I have to watch the trickle from the internet. Quit your bitchin’ ABC, makes me livid whenever I pay my cable bill.
Nobody’s going to remember who the bigger villain was in this war. Customers will simply regard the whole TV production-and-delivery model as controlled by douchebags, and migrate to other channels, legal or not. (Dish Network / Charlie Ergen used to have these same stupid showdowns with Viacom all the time, with the net result at our house that we dropped Dish AND got out of the habit of watching CBS.) Disney and Cablevision are collaborating to accelerate the death of TV.
Yeah, when choosing between the local assholes (Cablevision) and the Hollywood assholes (ABC, especially Bob Iger), I’ll go with the local assholes.
Fucking Hollywood man. I mean, this is basically “give us four times as much money or we’ll take our ball and go home.”
These guys have just decided to fuck everybody: actors, writers, now, their own viewers.
The problem is, nobody is saying “fuck off.”
SAG is as weak-ass a union under its current leadership as its ever been, AFTRA is in Hollywood’s pocket, make that begging to BE in Hollywood’s pocket, the WGA folded, the DGA IS Hollywood, so no union spine there either.
See, the problem is, the entertainment companies are coming through the “Great Recession” just fine (record profits, Theatrical 2009 – RECORD!) and now they’re saying, “what the hell, none of these people have any guts, so let’s run up prices.” It’s ridiculous, and I do think regulation (let’s all hold our breath – ready? And! HOLD!) – regulation would wipe the smile right off Hollywood’s face, same as the financial industry.
Not stopping anybody from making a killing, just, you know, regulating things a bit so they don’t ACTUALLY kill us.
Is that too much to ask? Where the fuck is the government?
Free enterprise, the market economy? Sure, fine, God Bless, but, “fuck you, you morons, we’re taking your money, then we’re gonna PISS ON YOU?”
I think it’s time for a Hollywood and financial industry ass-whuppin – don’t you?
Cablevision is a greedy MF, but at least it’s telling the MUCH bigger greedy MF on behalf of its customers, to kiss their ass. Cause if Cablevision folds? Guess who’s already obscene Cable rate is going up?
i’m wondering if the dolans subscribe to fios
I REALLY DON’T CARE IF WABC-TV EVER BROADCASTS,THE SAME GOES FOR CABLEVISION, YOU ARE BOTH GREEDY & HAVE NO REGARD FOR THE PAYING CUSTOMER. I MAY DO WHAT ONE PERSON DID, GET A PHILLIPS HD ANTENA THIS WAY I’D NEVER HAVE TO DEAL WITH EITHER OF YOU AGAIN!!!!!
I live in Los Angeles and I have Time Warner Cable. Can someone PLEASE black out the Oscars tonight?
You have the power. It’s called the off switch on your TV set. And I’m right there with you. This annual ego-fest isn’t worth any time out of my life.
If ABC didn’t want to damage its brand along with Cablevision’s they’d make their programming available for free live online streaming for affected customers with no strings attached.
As far as I’m concerned they’re both villains and all this says is that there MUST be more competition in markets. FIOS is not an option for me yet and I refuse to switch to Dish Network because of the way its employees routinely harass me by phone in ignorance of the fact that I’m on the National Do Not Call list. Direct TV is an option but until now it has been the greater of two evils because of the unreliability of satellite TV.
I guess I’ll be relying on online streaming.
A friend on Long Island whio is served by Cablevision says that WNBC was pulled at 12:30 P.M., and WCBS, WNYW, WWOR, andf WPIX have also been pulled between 12:30 and 1 P.M. EST.
PBS stations WNETand WLIW may be next!
Chuck Dolan, who is still THE power behind Cablevision, must be getting senile if he’s pulling ALL broadcast stations!
Rebecca Campbell should be fired today. Secodly, I don’t care there is a dispute you don’t turn off service on one of the biggest live events of the year. The Oscars are like the super bowl you don’t watch it the next day
What’s on pay TV that anyone still needs to have it? Just get high speed internet, and if you must watch shows on a television, get a box like AppleTV. Cablevision’s Newsday ran a story telling you how to dump Cablevision…er, watch the Oscars. Some folks will realize that it’s dumb to be held hostage to corporate monopolies and just not keep their Cablevision, DirecTV or VerizonFios TV at all. I have great reception with indoor rabbit ears and a set with a digital tuner.
Shame on ABC to ask for more money from its TV audience when everywhere else you can watch it for free. You are disgusting for only thinking about how to get more money. I was planning a family trip to Disneyworld but have now changed to Universal Studios instead. Screw You.
Reading the comments, people must be really stupid, or really dumb. Before satellite, before cable, there was a thing called an antenna. Get off your asses and put one up, ABC NBC CBS were free 60 years ago, and guess what they are still free. YOU DON’T NEED CABLE TO WATCH BROADCAST TV. I could see all the bitching if you were in a podunk town in the middle of nowhere, but, it’s New York. I’m sure they sell antennas somewhere in Cablevision’s area.
I could see all the bitching if it was something like HGTV / Food Network like in January with Cablevision, but WABC? IT’S FREE!
America has gotten soft, lazy, and this proves it, they can’t do anything with out a button to press.
Another great example of why net neutrality is so important….