Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Mid Term Proposal - Bye Bye Traditional Television

Cord - Cutters

Roku can replace the cost of Cable
   For my project I intend to create a short video about the role the internet takes in the future of television.

The number of households that are cutting cords isn't exactly staggering.  What is keeping the cable company CEO's up at night are the millennials that are moving out. The new generation doesn't see a point in having cable anymore when there are so many streaming services to choose from, those like Hulu, Netflix, YouTube, Huffington Post has their own Live streaming shows and even the Star Ledger has been coming around to streaming online content.


Still waiting on you CW.
     For instance the CW offers their favorite shows for free on the website (ads included), sometimes the day after the show is released.

    But the biggest player to now arrive to the show is the stand alone HBO service. The USA Today asks an interesting question in their article, "First Take: HBO's stand-alone service could open the floodgates" and what they're asking is:

Could Time Warner and HBO have just broken the logjam preventing the move to a full-fledged Net-delivered TV future?

  And that still remains to be seen.






http://www.citi.columbia.edu/elinoam/articles/Is_Cable_Television_Natural_Monopoly.pdf
http://www.debate.org/opinions/are-cable-companies-monopolies

Cord Cutters - Bad Deal - Roku - San Diego - CBS & HBO - Cord Cutter Study

Matthew Cole
Convergence
Professor Cacoilo
Nov. 6, 2014

2 comments:

  1. We are all guilty of being abusers of our television and Internet. Some of us may even believe we can't live without our favorite cable channel. Many of us may even be naive to the fact that certain shows impact us personally or even help shape the person we have become. As usual, we are paying to be to be influenced with commercials and the shows that are being aired for us to view.
    Why should we pay expensive monthly cable bills to watch the same four channels repeatedly, and fifty other channels we never watch? Who's responsible, the networks or is it based on the content aired? I think this is a great topic to discuss and inform many of us of the future of our Internet and network options.

    Suggested Link:
    http://www.informationweek.com/strategic-cio/executive-insights-and-innovation/cable-tv-the-monopoly-that-keeps-on-taking/d/d-id/1114115

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/04/29/future-of-tv_n_5215120.html

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    Replies
    1. I know I'm guilty as all hell c: My crux are comic book movies, tv shows and books; pretty much anything really having to do with superhero culture.

      Thank you for the readings and your experience in what you've seen concerning cable networks role in our lives as well as yours.

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