Barring an eleventh hour reversal, Time Warner Cable
subscribers on Thursday will lose channels such as Nickelodeon, Comedy Central,
and MTV.
Financial negotiations between the channels’ owner Viacom
and Time Warner Cable, the second largest cable operator in the U.S., broke
down late last night, and Viacom took the unusual step of taking details of the
impasse public.
In a statement Viacom said that it is seeking an increase
of less than $0.25 per month, per subscriber, which it said adds up to less
than a penny per day for all 19 of MTV Networks’ channels.
Viacom, the largest cable programmer in the country,
believes that its current deal with TWC undervalues its programming. (Time Warner Cable Goes Public)
According to Viacom, Americans spend about a fifth of
their viewing time watching Viacom’s programs yet its compensation adds up to
less than 2.5 percent of Time Warner’s average revenue per customer.
If the companies don’t come to an agreement, shows such as
The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, Dora the Explorer, SpongeBob SquarePants, and The
Colbert Report, will go dark starting at midnight on Wednesday.
SNL Kagan senior analyst Derek Baine expects the impasse
to end relatively quickly.
“Viacom is too big a programmer for Time Warner to lose
and Time Warner is too big a customer for Viacom to lose,” he said in a
statement. “The only question is how much pain will be inflicted on Time Warner
cable subscribers.”
Viacom has asked for increases averaging 28 percent per
channel, which works out to about $36 million. A TWC spokesman called Viacom’s carriage
demands exorbitant.
Cable carriage fee negotiations are never easy as
technology and consumer taste change, but a big chunk of the problem between TWC
and Viacom involves Viacom’s reuse of its content online.
Cable
operators continue to balk at what they perceive as a lack of fairness in
content owners offering their shows online and collecting ad revenues, which
they don’t share with cable operators.