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So Disney picks up 15 million subscribers for Disney+ which appears as 15 million reasons to get a deal done. Disney+ is saved! Hallelujah! Well, we dropped a few channels, but did you hear? We saved Disney!
 
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/business/business-news/disney-spectrum-charter-pay-tv-1235587933/

Disney and Charter Avoided Breaking the Pay TV Bundle. Is That Good?

If the bulk of new content investment is on streaming, and if the linear channels are just serving as windows to a streamer, then maybe that's where there are changes to be made.

by Alex Weprin
September 12, 2023 11:26am PDT

If you squint, you can see a new type of pay TV bundle beginning to form.

The landmark carriage deal between The Walt Disney Co. and Charter Spectrum not only ended the blackout of Disney channels like ESPN and ABC for Spectrum customers, but it also created a new template for pay TV, one that other providers will surely seek to emulate.

As an executive at another media company with cable channels said, the industry was watching the dispute with “bated breath,” hoping that the worst-case scenario (Charter exiting the pay TV business) wouldn’t come to pass.

In the end, there was a deal to be cut. And while the worst-case scenario didn’t happen, everyone else in the TV business is reckoning with the fact that they will be next.

“Simply put, this agreement (at least for now), removes the worst-case scenario from the table — a potential dramatic decline in the linear subscriber universe that would also have had a significant earnings impact on the broader ecosystem,” wrote Bank of America’s Jessica Reif Ehrlich.

Charter CEO Chris Winfrey told Wall Street analysts that the stance his company was taking with Disney is the stance the company will be taking with all of its carriage talks moving forward, and a Charter source confirmed that the Disney deal will serve in many ways as a template for the types of deals Charter is seeking.

So what does it mean for the industry? Analysts and industry sources point to two key pieces of the deal that will likely be felt across the industry: Including ad-supported streaming in the bundle, and a “re-sizing” of the linear business.

In the end, Disney agreed to let Charter Spectrum include the basic ad tier of Disney+ in its cable TV package, with the cable company paying a “wholesale” price on behalf of its customers.

It’s a deal that companies like NBCUniversal (which owns Peacock), Paramount (which owns Paramount+) and Warner Bros. Discovery (which owns Max) are surely looking at closely.

Charter executives argued that the big entertainment companies devalued their linear assets by producing less programming and moving much of their content to streaming, while bragging publicly about how the cash from linear TV is helping to subsidize their streaming ambitions.

“Disney has been forced to give up its attempt at double-dipping: no longer can the company get paid by Charter for channels and charge subscribers directly for what is generally the same general entertainment content,” wrote Stratechery’s Ben Thompson. “That was what Charter wanted, and Disney, lacking leverage and the reality of massive sports rights fees that presumed the presence of Charter’s millions of TV subscribers, gave in.”

And that, ultimately, is the key point of the streaming push: If the bulk of new content investment is on streaming, and if the linear channels are just serving as windows to a streamer, then maybe that’s where there are changes to be made.

“We’re on the sidelines of this,” WBD CEO David Zaslav said at a conference earlier this month, noting that his company’s deal with Charter isn’t up until 2025. “I think we’re one of the good actors in the industry that’s spending a lot of money still in linear because we believe in it.”

Of course, WBD, like every other company in the space, has also cut back on the number of programs on its linear channels and has increased its investment in streaming.

There are complicating factors. Both Max and Paramount+ have the bones of HBO and Showtime within them, premium channels that used to be add-ons for pay TV. The addition of content that in the past would have been in the traditional bundle (like all those Yellowstone spinoffs, or HGTV content), as well as the launch of cheaper ad tiers (something legacy HBO and Showtime never had), could make them fair game for Charter to demand including in their bundle.

But amid questions of new forms of bundles, Charter (and perhaps other distributors) may be the ones to offer the first meaningful bundle of entertainment content.

“Monday’s renewal also is a precedent for Disney to get full penetration of Disney+ across the linear video ecosystem over time; we expect more distributors would be willing to support this transition,” wrote JPMorgan’s Phil Cusick.

And then there is the resizing of the cable TV business. For years, entertainment companies padded their balance sheets by seeking higher fees for their channels, and by demanding the inclusion of newer, smaller channels into the core-TV bundle.

Disney’s deal with Charter suggests those days are over. The fees for core channels (like ESPN) may continue to rise, but the padding of the bundle is now in the past. As part of the Spectrum deal, Disney agreed to drop Freeform, Nat Geo Wild, FXX, Disney Junior, Disney XD and other channels from Spectrum lineups.

Dana Walden, the co-chairman of Disney Entertainment, noted to The Hollywood Reporter in an interview that those channels were already being used to funnel content to larger cable channels, and to Disney’s streaming services.

“The digital networks are for the most part targeted and they super-serve an audience in the linear ecosystem, but they are also windowed onto what we are calling our primary channels,” Walden said. “So you know the Nat Geo suite, ultimately that programming also airs on Nat Geo and then it is windowed over to Disney+, similarly with Disney Junior and Disney XD, and then FXX has been a valuable source of programming for Hulu.”

But these moves were no small give. Freeform and FXX were in more than 70 million homes, according to Nielsen. And Freeform can trace its origins to the very beginning of cable TV, when it launched as the Christian Broadcasting Network in 1977 (as part of a 1990 for-profit spinoff, the channel agreed to continue carrying Pat Robertson’s The 700 Club, which it still airs to this day).

If Freeform is on the chopping block, there are other major cable channels at other companies that could end up being cut as well.

“Like much of this deal, we anticipate this setting a precedent for similar surgical culling in all future renegotiations across the industry,” MoffettNathanson’s Michael Nathanson wrote in a note after the deal was announced.

“We expect that Disney will re-evaluate these networks and the amount spent to operate them as other distribution agreements come up,” added Guggeinheim’s Michael Morris.

In other words, the long-term future of these channels is now firmly in doubt.

Of course, not every cable company has the scale or leverage that Charter has. But every company has expressed a desire to reevaluate their video offerings, which have become less lucrative year after year. A new model that proves to be stabilizing — or even proves to be a good value for consumers by bundling streaming services and linear programming — could end up being a boon to the entertainment business at large. Even if it means sacrificing a few cable channels to get there.

“I think this particular deal is unique to Charter — or a distributor like Charter — and recognizes their needs, their goals and getting to their consumers, and it syncs up now with what our goals and priorities are,” Walden said. “I think that there isn’t a set model.”

Or as Michael Nathanson wrote: “While perhaps not the end of the pay TV world as we know it, we very much can look back at this Disney/Charter deal as an opening salvo of a broader rebundling and a step in giving customers smaller linear bundles with increased SVOD functionality.”
 


https://deadline.com/2023/09/disney...-acquire-directv-carriage-dispute-1235546028/

Disney’s ABC Stations Could Be Bought By Nexstar With “Little Friction” If They Are Sold Off, Company Advisor Tom Carter Says; Hails “Progress” In Lengthy DirecTV Carriage Dispute
By Dade Hayes
Business Editor
September 13, 2023 2:27pm PDT
Tom Carter, a longtime former Nexstar exec who is now a senior advisor to the CEO and board of directors, says the company could acquire Disney’s local ABC TV stations with “little friction” if they become available.

Disney CEO Bob Iger spurred talk of a potential sale of the eight stations over the summer when he said some of the company’s linear TV holdings “may not be core” to the company in the future. Private equity firms are among those putting out feelers, given their sizable investments in local TV in recent years. Nexstar is a poster child for growth through M&A, with Carter estimating that the company pulled off about 40 acquisitions in his first 10 years at the company. Multi-billion-dollar deals for Media General and Tribune Media vaulted what had been a boutique Texas firm two decades ago to the No. 1 spot among all U.S. station owners, and last fall it showed its appetite again by taking a majority stake in The CW.

“We think there could be some opportunities depending on how things fall out,” Carter said of the ABC situation at an investor conference in New York hosted by BofA Securities. The former president and COO, who segued to his advisory role last month, appeared alongside Nexstar CFO Lee Ann Gliha.

Asked about investigations by Paramount Global and Disney of strategic options for their linear TV assets, Carter focused on the latter. “Disney had talked about it this way: ‘Let’s morph into a GrowthCo and a SustainableCo,'” he said, referring to the media company’s outlook during Iger’s second stint as CEO. “The only issue is, the SustainCo is funding the GrowthCo, and if you sell one, you’ve lost access to that cash flow. Granted, you’re going to have proceeds, but is that really what you want to do?”

If the answer to that question ends up being “yes,” Carter said, then Nexstar would be a strong candidate to take over the stations. Given the “massive” cash flow benefits resulting from past deals, “I think you’ll see us take a look at it,” the exec added, though one potential complication would be programming overlaps. “You’re seeing ESPN simulcast a large portion of their sports telecasts on ABC. If you were to buy the ABC complex, how would that work going forward? There are a lot of questions that need to be answered.”

Asked about the FCC’s 39% cap on station ownership by one company, Carter acknowledged that the company is already at that limit. “But that would not preclude us from buying stations,” he said. “ABC’s portfolio of stations is modest. It’s only eight, largely in the top 10 markets. We’re in eight of the top 10 markets already with a CW station. We could buy a second station in that market and not increase our household footprint. There may be a few stations that would require divestiture of either a Nexstar station or an ABC station, but we could onboard those with relatively little friction.”

Helping fuel Nexstar’s acquisitions spree has been an enviable balance sheet, which has had a considerable amount of cash on the books and little debt, a rare combo in the media business. Carter focused his comments on the ABC stations, which is Nexstar’s core competency. While it has run The CW for the past year, that broadcast network is a far smaller operation than ABC, and it’s not clear whether ABC’s mother ship would be among the linear assets Iger views as possibly “non-core.” Owners of all broadcast networks have been taking ever-closer looks at their operations given the stresses that were mounting even before dual strikes emerged to jeopardize the entire 2023-24 season.

After a moment or two passed and the conversation was about to move on, Carter added a final tag to his Disney observations. “I don’t know if there’s a deal to be done there,” he said. “I think they’ve got to be a bit clearer in their own thinking about how that goes. We can take direction but we’re not necessarily out there leaning into this stuff without a clear path.”

Carter also shared an update on a protracted carriage dispute with DirecTV that has seen Nexstar stations remain dark for about 10 million customers of the satellite TV operator. The impasse began in July, and over the first month, “there wasn’t a lot of movement going on,” Carter said. In recent weeks, however, “we’ve been in pretty constant contact” with DirecTV, he said, without going into specifics. “Progress has been made. We’re not going to do a bad deal. But our expectation is that we’re going to reach an agreement at some point, hopefully sooner rather than later, because everyone agrees that it’s not in anyone’s best interest to alienate the consumer.”

On the carriage front, Carter and Gliha were asked for their takeaways from Charter’s closely watched renewal with Disney. “The outcome is good for us,” Gliha said, given that it preserves foundational elements of the pay-TV bundle. Carter agreed, saying of fellow stakeholders in pay-TV, “We’re putting the band back together.” By integrating streaming services with other channel offerings, as is called for in the Spectrum-Disney deal, “We’re recreating the bundle by bringing Disney+ back into the pay-television ecosystem and not strictly as a DTC product. So, one of the potential benefits of the Charter-Disney deal is that it could potentially lessen subscriber attrition going forward, because there’s less reason for customers to leave the bundle.”
 
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/business/business-news/charter-cfo-disney-deal-1235584205/
Charter CFO Says Subscriber Losses During Disney Blackout Were Smaller Than Expected

Jessica Fischer also told an investor conference that she was bullish on having a model to "moderate" content cost increases in future carriage deals.
September 13, 2023 8:19am PDT

Georg Szalai
Global Business Editor

Cable giant Charter Communications CFO Jessica Fischer told an investor conference on Wednesday that “everybody wins” in the just-struck carriage deal with the Walt Disney Co., including consumers. “It’s a win for everyone.”

“We are really happy with the deal,” she said during an appearance at the Bank of America Securities Media, Communications & Entertainment Conference, which was webcast. “We met all of our objectives.”

She acknowledged that “who won” was a big question on everyone’s mind, saying: “I really think everybody wins in this deal. I think it was a win for us, I think it’s a win for Disney, I think it’s really a win for consumers.”

Detailed the Charter CFO: “On the Disney side, Disney is going to get distribution growth across all of our linear [operations]. And then, in addition to that, they’ll have the distribution that we can offer to our broadband system, so access to a really great distribution engine. They’ll get the ad revenue, because the DTC that we’re bundling in is ad-supported.”

Fischer added that another all-around win was to ensure the sustainability of the pay TV system. “The other thing that we’ve done that I think was important for Disney and Charter is that we’ve pulled together a package that we think can stabilize the linear video ecosystem and provide a glide path that gets us to the new direct-to-consumer environment,” she argued.

Fischer was also asked why Charter was unusually and publically confrontational with Disney before striking a deal. “We have tremendous respect for the Disney management team. We have tremendous respect for the content that they create,” she replied. “But they had the linchpin asset in ESPN. You couldn’t move to a new transformational model without ESPN. Because of that, we needed them to lead. … We needed them to be a first mover to get us into this transformational model.”

Asked about the key benefits of the deal, Fischer said: “First, it was about taking the valuable content that had been leaking out of the system and putting it back in our packages, and we did that, bringing Disney+” and ESPN+ and the planned ESPN standalone streaming service in.

Second, Charter kept the flexibility to offer various bundles, including skinny bundles, to serve various customer needs. In terms of “total economics,” the company exceeded expectations. Third, Charter was looking for “total economics,” where Fischer said the company “really exceeded our expectations in terms of our ability to drive total economics that we think will enable us to offer our video packages to customers at a value, which was always our goal.”

Asked what the Disney deal means for future carriage agreements with other media giants, the Charter CFO said that “going forward in the long term, we’ll be able to moderate the growth in content costs for consumers based on what happened in the arrangement” with Disney.

How about Charter pay-TV subscriber losses during the blackout? “Those losses have been much less than what we initially anticipated. The impact on broadband subscribers has been very, very small,” Fischer said. “And so we believe that we’ve come out on the other side of this really still doing well from a subscriber perspective.”

At the end of August, a major carriage dispute erupted, leading the Walt Disney Co.’s TV channels, including ABC, ESPN, FX and Freeform, to go dark on Charter/Spectrum, the country’s second-largest cable TV provider with 14.7 million subscribers. The blackout meant that its customers couldn’t see such popular programming as the U.S. Open tennis tournament and college football.

Then, on Monday, Disney and Charter reached a new carriage deal, which they touted as an “innovative model for the future,” with Disney CEO Bob Iger and Charter CEO Chris Winfrey saying in a joint statement: “This deal recognizes both the continued value of linear television and the growing popularity of streaming services while addressing the evolving needs of our consumers.”

Wall Street touted the greater packaging flexibility for Charter, access to Disney streaming services for its subscribers and not having to carry smaller networks as key wins for the cable giant, while saying that Disney should also gain from higher fees for its major networks and increased reach of its Disney+ ad tier, among other things.

Charter, in which John Malone’s Liberty Broadband owns a major stake, earlier this summer reported that it lost 200,000 pay TV subscribers in its second quarter, compared with a loss of 226,000 in the year-ago period. Charter plans to launch its Xumo-branded streaming devices in late 2023 after current field trials to help stem video customer losses.

Charter has been touting losing the least amount of video customers of any of its pay TV peers amid cord-cutting but has also argued that content companies were in part to blame for the pay TV bundle coming under pressure in the streaming age as they insist on higher carriage fees for programming available elsewhere at lower prices
 
Disney statement in response to a Bloomberg article reporting a discussion of sale of channels to Nexstar

Statement From The Walt Disney Company

BURBANK, Calif., September 14, 2023 – The Walt Disney Company (NYSE: DIS) issued the following statement in response to media reports regarding our linear businesses.

“While we are open to considering a variety of strategic options for our linear businesses, at this time The Walt Disney Company has made no decision with respect to the divestiture of ABC or any other property and any report to that effect is unfounded.”
 
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https://www.bnnbloomberg.ca/disney-...of-abc-to-local-broadcaster-nexstar-1.1971608

Disney Holds Initial Talks on Sale of ABC to Local Broadcaster Nexstar​

Christopher Palmeri and Thomas Buckley, Bloomberg News
September 14, 2023 at 1:07 PM CDT

(Bloomberg) -- Walt Disney Co. has held exploratory talks about selling its ABC network and TV stations to local broadcaster Nexstar Media Group Inc., according to people familiar with the discussions.

The talks are preliminary and haven’t involved a specific valuation, according to one of the people, who asked not to be identified because the discussions aren’t public. Nexstar would only be interested at the right price.

Media mogul Byron Allen, who owns a string of TV outlets, has also had discussions with Disney about an acquisition of the network and its stations, according to another person, who was familiar with his involvement.

Shares of Nexstar rose 5.5% to $157.85 at the close in New York. Disney gained 1.2% to $84.48.

Disney, in a statement, said that while it’s still considering a variety of strategic options for its traditional TV businesses, the company has made “no decision with respect to the divestiture of ABC or any other property.” Nexstar declined to comment.

Tom Carter, Nexstar’s former president and now an adviser to its CEO and board, told investors at a Bank of America Securities conference Wednesday that the company is interested in acquiring assets from legacy media owners like Disney that are looking to restructure. Nexstar could acquire the ABC outlets with possibly only a few divestitures to stay within limits on broadcast station ownership, he said.

The adviser added that there are some complications to a sale. ESPN, Disney’s sports network, shares many of its telecasts with ABC.

“If you were to buy the ABC complex, how would that work going forward?” he said. “There’s a lot of questions that need to be answered there.”

He also said Nexstar, the largest US owner of TV stations, needs more guidance from Disney on what it wants to do.

“They’ve got to be a little bit clearer in their thinking,” Carter said. “We can take direction, but we’re not necessarily out there leaning into any of this stuff without a clear path.”

Disney Chief Executive Officer Bob Iger said in July that he is considering divesting traditional TV networks like ABC. Broadcast and cable channels have been losing viewers to streaming services such as Disney+ and Hulu.

Nexstar, based in Irving, Texas, has 200 owned or partner TV stations in 116 markets, including many affiliated with Fox, NBC and CBS. The owners of those networks could object to the company buying ABC and its stations.

Federal regulators have been challenging mergers in general. Earlier this year, the
would-be buyer of TV station-owner Tegna Inc. dropped its bid in face of delays by the Federal Communications Commission.

“As Nexstar is already the largest owner and operator of local broadcast stations, we do not see how it can lawfully purchase the full suite of ABC stations given they are already at the national ownership cap,” Rob Thun, content chief officer at satellite-TV provider DirecTV, said in an emailed statement.

The two companies are in a contract renewal fight that’s led to blackouts of Nexstar stations on DirecTV systems.

Nexstar recently acquired majority ownership of the CW network from Warner Bros. Discovery Inc. and Paramount Global last year. It also owns NewsNation, a cable news channel.

ABC and the company’s eight TV stations could bring in $4 billion, according to estimates from Bloomberg Intelligence. That’s about seven times its roughly $575 million in earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, analyst Geetha Ranganathan said.

--With assistance from Scott Moritz.
 

https://www.ocregister.com/2023/09/...of-subscribers-looks-to-cut-streaming-target/

Disney, short millions of subscribers, looks to cut streaming target​

Disney+ has been losing customers to price increases​

By Bloomberg | wordpress@medianewsgroup.com |
PUBLISHED: September 14, 2023 at 1:25 p.m. | UPDATED: September 14, 2023 at 1:40 p.m.

By Thomas Buckley and Lucas Shaw | Bloomberg

Walt Disney Co. expects to fall tens of millions of subscribers short of its last publicly stated 2024 target for the Disney+ streaming service, according to people familiar the matter.

The goal of 215 million to 245 million subscribers was set in August 2022 by then-Chief Executive Officer Bob Chapek. In February, returning CEO Bob Iger said Disney would no longer provide subscriber forecasts, matching a decision at Netflix Inc.

Disney+ has been losing customers to price increases, as well as collapsing demand in India after the company failed to win cricket streaming rights. That’s led management to conclude it will fall short of those earlier numbers, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing internal targets.

Wall Street’s focus in the past year has shifted from sign-up numbers at online video platforms to profitability, and Disney has narrowed its losses in its streaming division by hundreds of millions of dollars in recent quarters.

Price increases have helped. Iger has raised the price of Disney+ since its launch in 2019 as part of an effort to reach profitability in the streaming business as early as next year.
The company is still seeking to increase customers to Disney+. A deal announced this week with Charter Communications Inc., the No. 2 US cable provider, will package Disney+ with the Spectrum TV service, adding millions of new customers. Disney will receive a reduced, wholesale price for those subscribers.

In 2020, it set a target for as many as 260 million subscribers by the end of fiscal 2024 for Disney+ and the Hotstar product in India, before lowering the target last year.

Earlier Thursday, Bloomberg News reported that Nexstar Media Group Inc. and broadcast entrepreneur Byron Allen have separately expressed interest in buying Disney’s ABC network and local TV stations.
 
https://www.reuters.com/business/me...h-nexstar-abc-sale-bloomberg-news-2023-09-14/
Mogul Byron Allen makes $10 bln bid for Disney's ABC, other networks
By Dawn Chmielewski, Kanjyik Ghosh and Dimpal Gulwani
September 15, 2023 - 6:47 AM CDT

Media entrepreneur Byron Allen has made a $10 billion bid to buy Walt Disney's (DIS.N) ABC television network and assets including the FX and National Geographic cable channels, a spokesperson for Allen said on Friday.

Disney has also held exploratory discussions about selling ABC to regional TV station operator Nexstar Media (NXST.O), two people familiar with the matter told Reuters on Thursday.

The discussions come after Disney CEO Bob Iger said in July the company could sell some of its traditional TV assets, which have struggled for years due to the rise of streaming services.

Nexstar's interest is preliminary and may not lead to any deal, one source said. Both sources requested anonymity because the matter is confidential.

A Disney spokesperson said while the company was "open to considering strategic options for its linear business", it has not made a decision yet on selling ABC or any other property.

Nexstar and Disney did not respond to requests for comment. Bloomberg News first reported the Nexstar-Disney talks and Allen's bid for ABC.

ABC comprises a national TV network and eight regional stations. It has affiliation agreements with about 240 local television stations reaching almost all U.S. television households.

Disney's then-Chief Executive Michael Eisner agreed to buy Capital Cities/ABC for $19 billion in 1995.

Nexstar has 200 owned or partner stations in 116 markets, reaching over two-thirds of the U.S. population, as well as national TV networks such as CW and NewsNation. It has a market value of $5.25 billion.

Reporting by Dawn Chmielewski in Los Angeles; Additional reporting by Akash Sriram, Dimpal Gulwani and Kanjyik Ghosh in Bengaluru; Editing by Josie Kao and William Mallard
 
https://www.cnn.com/2023/09/14/media/abc-disney-reliable-sources/index.html

ABC News staffers ‘freaking’ out over reports Disney is in talks to sell the outlet
By Oliver Darcy, CNN
Published 10:55 PM EDT, Thu September 14, 2023

Alarm bells are going off at ABC News.

The Disney-owned newsroom was jolted on Thursday after a report suggested that the outlet could soon be expelled from the Magic Kingdom. Bloomberg’s Christopher Palmeri and Thomas Buckley reported that Disney has “held exploratory talks” about selling ABC to Nexstar Media Group. The duo also reported that media mogul Byron Allen has also spoken with Disney about a possible deal.

In conversations with more than a half-dozen people inside and around ABC News that CNN spoke to Thursday evening, it was made clear that a feeling of dread and trepidation is washing over the outlet as they face the unknown.

“Everyone is freaking the f**k out,” one ABC News staffer bluntly told me about the state of affairs inside the network.

“It’s all anyone at work is talking about,” added another.

Indeed, mergers and acquisitions always inspire feelings of anxiousness as staffers wonder what a new corporate parent might mean for them. Will a new parent move to install its own leadership? Cut costs? Make other changes?

With Nexstar already owning NewsNation, the little-watched cable news channel that embraces bothsidesism and was happy to host a town hall with notorious anti-vaccine conspiracy theorist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. earlier this year, what would that mean for the future of ABC News and its editorial direction? Would Nexstar move to meld the two and supercharge its cable news operation with the more robust resources of ABC News?

Staffers who CNN spoke to, who acknowledged that a divorce with Disney seemed inevitable after Bob Iger’s infamous comments earlier this summer that the television asset “may not be core” to the company, were apprehensive about how quickly a potential sale appeared to be progressing.

The ABC News’ers suggested that they are frustrated that they remain in the dark about the future of their company. Instead of hearing directly from Disney leadership, they’re instead reading in the press about what the House of Mouse plans to potentially do with the company.

That might soon change. CNN was told Iger — likely recognizing the frustration radiating out of the news division — is expected to make a visit to his ABC News troops next week in New York City. But, for obvious reasons, he is likely limited on what he can say about the future of the outlet.

Whether a deal to offload ABC and Disney’s linear stations is ultimately in the cards remains to be seen. A deal with Nexstar, the nation’s largest owner of television stations and majority owner of The CW network, could also come with some regulatory complications, potentially forcing some stations to be divested. A potential deal would also raise questions for ESPN and Disney’s simulcast of sporting events on the broad terrestrial network.

Nexstar declined to comment on Thursday when I reached out. And Bloomberg described the talks as “preliminary.”

Iger has also talked up the importance of ABC News — as recently as July, when he tried to clean up his mess after speaking to CNBC at Sun Valley. “I’m ridiculously passionate about news,” Iger told senior company leaders. “It’s important to this company. We need to figure out how it makes the transition into streaming. And I happen to believe we will endure. It’s too good, it’s too important, and it’s really fun.”

Disney, for its part, poured cold water Thursday evening on any notion that a deal has been inked “at this time.” But the statement issued by the media giant once again affirmed that it is “open to considering a variety of strategic options for our linear businesses.” That’s a big hint of what’s to come.

As one television executive put it, “Once, they were Iger’s jewel in the crown. Their $20 million+ anchors were trotted out for board meetings and glitzy dinners in NYC. Now, they’re on the chopping block.”

But, the executive added, “Iger is unsentimental and cold-blooded. He will do what is best and necessary for Disney. He will not hesitate to cut off well-paid anchor friends, cast out beloved networks, or sell the jewels in the crown.”
 
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-news/freeform-disney-charter-hulu-1235589827/

What’s Next for Freeform After Being Dropped by Charter

Disney's deal with the pay TV giant suggests that, in an accelerated cord-cutting era, no channel is truly safe.

By Alex Weprin, Lesley Goldberg
September 14, 2023 1:52pm PDT

In a carriage battle about pay TV’s future, one of the original cable channels became an unexpected flashpoint.

Freeform, the Disney-owned cable channel that caters to younger women, was dropped from Spectrum channel lineups as part of Disney’s landmark deal with Charter Communications. It was no small decision, with Freeform in some 74 million homes at the end of last year, and with Charter’s nearly 15 million cable TV households no longer having access.

“When we looked across the portfolio to try to identify where the greatest value in this deal was to us, we definitely made some trade-offs,” Disney Entertainment co-chairman Dana Walden told The Hollywood Reporter after the Spectrum deal was announced. She noted that channels like Freeform already served as a pipeline of programming for streaming services like Hulu.

And while the deal saw a number of other channels were dropped in the deal, the dropping of Freeform suggests that, as the repercussions of the deal are felt across the pay TV ecosystem, no channel is truly safe.

Freeform has a long and winding history that traces back to the earliest days of cable TV.

Founded in 1977 by the evangelist Pat Robertson as a spinoff of his Christian Broadcasting Network local TV stations, the channel effectively became “the first satellite basic cable network in America,” Robertson recalled to the Archive of American Television in an interview. HBO was founded a half decade earlier as a premium cable service, and Ted Turner put WTCG’s signal on cable and satellite beginning in 1976, but Robertson’s CBN service was the original basic cable channel.

It was programmed with Christian talk shows and sermons, but mixed in classic TV shows. Robertson told the Archive that old Westerns were among the major draws.

“They bought the biggest ratings all week long. I mean big ratings, beat the other stations, because we just stacked them from 12 or one o’clock on Saturday all day long, one after the other,” he recalled. “We had Bonanza, we had Gunsmoke, you name it, they were all there.”

But the channel that would become Freeform would be bought and sold many times over in the enduing decades, with many brand iterations to boot. In the late 1980s, the channel left Robertson’s ministry and became for-profit, rebranding itself as The Family Channel (the deal was financed, in part, by the cable TV mogul John Malone, who, in a twist of fate, is also the largest outside shareholder in Charter Communications).

In 1997, the channel was sold for $1.9 billion to Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. and a company controlled by media mogul Haim Saban, and it was rebranded as the Fox Family Channel. Just a few years later, with Saban seeking an exit, the companies agreed to sell Fox Family to The Walt Disney Co. for $2.9 billion plus the assumption of its debt.

Fox Family was renamed ABC Family, with the company trying out a number of brands, identities and target audiences before settling on Freeform and its current target audience in 2016.

Despite its many names and iterations over the years, Freeform still has one critical connection to its founding: It still runs The 700 Club, the religious show hosted by Robertson for most of its run, a term of that original sale decades ago that still holds to this day.

After months of focus groups and research, former ABC Family president Tom Ascheim oversaw the rebranding of the network in 2016 to Freeform. The intention was to focus on what he dubbed “becomers,” that group of adults 18-34 who are experiencing firsts in their lives like love and work as they become adults. Ascheim, the former Nickelodeon GM and CEO of Newsweek, took over the network in 2013 from Michael Riley, who brought The Fosters to the network under Disney’s Anne Sweeney. Riley joined the then-ABC Family in 2010 when he took over for Paul Lee, who was promoted to run ABC’s entertainment programming after six years at the helm of the younger-skewing cabler.

Lee, Riley and Ascheim all pushed Freeform deeper into scripted originals as the network carved out a brand identity with shows including Kyle XY, Greek, The Secret Life of the American Teenager and network-defining hit Pretty Little Liars (all developed under Lee’s team). The 2010s delivered a string of hits including Switched at Birth, the beloved Bunheads, Baby Daddy and The Fosters, with the latter’s spinoff, Good Trouble, remaining part of Freeform’s lineup today.

The 2020s has seen Freeform’s roster of original significantly paired down to a mere handful of shows — the final season of Black-ish spinoff Grown-ish (originally developed for ABC but considered too young-skewing to work on broadcast), Cruel Summer and the animated Praise Petey with dramedy While You Were Breeding pushed to 2024.

In what could be considered a sign of where Freeform ranks within Disney’s internal priorities, the network now no longer has one executive whose job is entirely to focus on the network. After Ascheim departed in April 2020, Freeform recruited Tara Duncan to serve as its first president who was actually in the network’s demographic. Duncan, a rising star within Disney, was tapped a year later to also oversee Onyx Collective, a studio that focuses on underrepresented creatives whose content (The Other Black Girl, Reasonable Doubt) streams exclusively on Hulu.

After Dana Walden was promoted to co-chair of entertainment at Disney earlier this year, shifted Duncan (whom she hired for Freeform) to focus exclusively on Oynx and gave oversight of Freeform to ABC’s Simran Sethi. This is Sethi’s second turn at Freeform after the executive, who serves as exec vp programming for ABC, previously served as senior vp scripted under Ascheim’s head of originals, Karey Burke. (Burke famously leapfrogged Ascheim to run ABC and is now president of Disney’s 20th Television studio and recruited longtime colleague and friend Sethi back to Disney.)

As fallout from the strikes, Freeform is in a state of pause. The network is currently ramping up for its most-watched programming blocks of the year with its annual month-long celebrations tied to Halloween and Christmas, with a Disney-themed one sandwiched between them.

As for the future of the network, sources say Sethi remains committed to scripted originals with classic young adult fare that targets middle-aged women akin to The O.C. The network remains profitable — the themed programming blocks remain a favorite for Freeform’s ad sales team — as Disney insiders are said to not be worried about losing Charter’s 15 million homes.

Freeform now becomes the latest network to focus on its brand like another Disney-owned network, FX. While the bulk of FX originals, for example, debuts exclusively on Hulu and not on the linear network, the majority of Freeform’s viewership comes from its content streaming on Hulu the day after it airs on the cabler.

As part of Disney and Charter’s new carriage deal, Disney+ will be included in Spectrum’s main TV packages at no extra charge.

Freeform’s content remains available on Hulu — where sources say signature shows including Good Trouble and former hits Secret Life and The Fosters have seen an uptick in viewing. Looking ahead, there will be a Hulu tab coming to Disney+ in 2024, which means Charter customers who subscribe to Disney+ will still technically have access to Freeform fare.
 

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/disney-charter-feud-portends-carnage-in-cable-tv/ar-AA1gFMsv

Disney-Charter Feud Portends Carnage in Cable TV. ‘The Market’s Been Warned.’

Bundles will come with streaming, but networks from Disney Junior to Syfy are in jeopardy

By Robbie Whelan and Isabella Simonetti
Sept. 13, 2023 2:30 pm ET

Disney’s high-stakes feud with Charter Communications sent up warning flares across the entertainment industry: The transition from TV to streaming is about to get even tougher.

Disney averted disaster by reaching a deal with the cable giant this week to restore ESPN and many of its other channels in 15 million U.S. households, after a weeklong standoff.

As part of the deal, Disney agreed to sacrifice eight cable networks that will no longer be offered in Charter’s bundle. They include Freeform, home to teen and young adult fare like “Switched at Birth” and “Grown-ish”; Disney Junior, known for “Doc McStuffins” and “Mickey Mouse Clubhouse”; BabyTV and others.

In return, Disney will get paid for its streaming app Disney+, which Charter will offer to the majority of its customers.

Allowing cable-TV channels to disappear from the bundle is risky. They supply the profits for Disney and its peers to invest in streaming services that are growing but losing lots of money. Sacrificing channels is a trade-off that all media companies will need to consider, as they make the tricky pivot from TV to streaming, media executives and analysts said.

“This accelerates the slow death of some of the longer-tail networks that consumers don’t really want and hastens the transition to streaming,” said Tim Nollen, a media analyst with Macquarie.

The shedding of the less-popular Disney networks essentially puts them on deathwatch, say media executives and people familiar with Disney’s business, because other large cable distributors are likely to eventually remove them from their own bundles.

Cable providers pay to carry cable channels, and every few years the two sides negotiate renewal deals. The number of channels exploded as time went on, serving up big profits to TV companies and higher cable bills to consumers.

Distributors have been pushing back, and media companies scaled back some fringe channels in recent years, but until now there hadn’t been an all-out brawl. Charter’s hard line in the Disney fight shows that a lot more channels may now be fighting to survive in the bundle, from Warner Bros. Discovery’s TruTV to NBCUniversal’s E! and Syfy to Paramount’s Pop.

“The market’s been warned,” said Doug Arthur, an analyst at Huber Research.

The Disney-Charter deal presents a template for how the video industry might look in the future, some media executives say. Streaming services may increasingly be offered as part of a cable or satellite TV package and will come with content from channels that are culled from those packages. Disney+, for example, offers streaming versions of most of the children’s and family programming that airs on Disney Junior and Freeform.

“This deal has helped us rationalize how pay TV is going to evolve,” said Rob Thun, chief content officer of DirecTV.

From Disney’s standpoint, giving up on those eight channels, which analysts estimate could account for anywhere from 8% to 11% of its cable-subscription revenue, was painful, but worth it for the other perks baked into the deal. Under Monday’s agreement, the carriage fees paid by Charter for the remaining Disney networks in its bundle will go up, with Charter expected to pay Disney about $2.2 billion this year for those carriage rights.

And more importantly, Disney will get a lot more customers for the ad-supported tier of Disney+, which Charter will offer to 9.5 million subscribers with select plans. Those same subscribers will also get ESPN+ at no additional cost, although Hulu, Disney’s popular general entertainment streaming platform, isn’t on offer in the Charter deal.

Analysts estimated Disney will receive a wholesale rate somewhere between 40% and 70% of the $7.99-a-month retail price it charges for Disney+ with ads.

Disney declined to comment on the financial terms of the deal. “We knew there would be trade-offs,” a company spokesperson said, adding that the company is happy with the economics of the pact. “We defended the primary entertainment networks that are the most important ones to us.”

Charter will continue to carry ABC, ESPN channels, the Disney Channel, FX and Nat Geo. Needham analyst Laura Martin wrote in a client note Tuesday that she expects the Charter deal to add about $420 million to Disney’s revenues in 2024 between increased cable-TV fees and the fees that Charter subscribers will pay for Disney+. Disney declined to comment on the estimate.

The key variable no one knows: how many people will cut the cable cord in coming years. The more households who cancel service, the greater the pressure will be on Disney and other companies’ revenue. Cord-cutting has been accelerating. “Cable networks are not a good business, and it’s only going to get worse and worse,” said Tony Vinciquerra, chairman and CEO of Sony Pictures Entertainment at an investor conference Wednesday. “That is a melting ice cube for sure.”

Disney Chief Executive Bob Iger said in July that the company’s legacy TV networks “may not be core” to the company’s future. Disney is exploring options including spinning them off or selling them, according to people familiar with the matter. The company is also looking for strategic partners for ESPN.

Each large cable carrier that drops Disney-owned networks makes Disney’s portfolio of channels less valuable, these people said. Disney has said the deal isn’t necessarily a precedent for what other cable operators might do.

Arthur, of Huber Research, said other media companies know what to expect when distribution contracts must be renewed with Charter or others.

“For any traditional linear player that also has a big bet on streaming you would think the same issues will come up in that negotiation that came up here,” he said.

DirecTV’s Thun said children’s content will likely increasingly move out of the bundle and into streaming, as happened in the Charter-Disney deal.

“Kids have been trained to watch content a lot differently than Gen Xers and above, so an app-based delivery and a streaming service tied to a pay-TV service is frankly a better way of getting that content to kids than a channel lineup,” he said.

Write to Robbie Whelan at robbie.whelan@wsj.com and Isabella Simonetti at isabella.simonetti@wsj.com
 

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/byron-allen-makes-10-billion-015324609.html

Disney Talks on ABC Sale Heat Up as Byron Allen Makes Offer​


Christopher Palmeri
Fri, September 15, 2023 at 7:31 AM PDT

(Bloomberg) -- Walt Disney Co. has now fielded at least one offer for its ABC TV network, local stations and some cable channels, and more may come as the company seeks to shed what it considers non-core assets and focus on streaming.

Media mogul Byron Allen offered $10 billion, albeit tentatively, for Disney’s flagship broadcast network as well as the FX and National Geographic cable channels, according to a person familiar with his proposal. Separately, Disney has held exploratory talks about ABC and its eight local TV stations with Nexstar Media Group Inc., people familiar with those discussions said. All of the people asked not to be named disclosing information that’s not public.

In a statement Thursday, Disney said that while it’s considering strategic options for its traditional TV networks, no decisions about a sale have been made. Nexstar declined to comment.

The negotiations could help establish the value of television assets that investors have increasingly seen as dead weight. Chief Executive Officer Bob Iger has come under pressure to sell assets amid a rapid decline of cable-TV subscribers and steep losses in its streaming business. He suggested in an interview with CNBC in July that the linear TV assets may not be central to Disney and that he was open to divesting them.
It’s been a tough couple of weeks for Disney. The company engaged in a bruising battle with Charter Communications Inc. over prices for Disney channels in pay-TV bundles and on Thursday gave a sharply lower forecast for subscribers to its Disney+ streaming service. The shares were up 1.7% Friday morning in New York after reports of a potential sale.

A stand-up comic who branched into producing TV shows, Allen has spent more than $1.3 billion in recent years to acquire assets such as the Weather Channel and a string of local stations from Honolulu to Tucson. He has unsuccessfully thrown his hat in the ring other times to purchase media properties and his name has been associated recently with proposed acquisitions of TV station owner Tegna Inc. and the BET cable network.

Allen’s offer for Disney’s assets is preliminary and could change, the person familiar with the discussions said. The offer is based on the assumption that the properties generated $1.25 billion in earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization over the past 12 months. If that number is lower or higher, Allen would change his proposed price, which is based on a multiple of eight times Ebitda.

Allen would work with banks and private equity firms to finance an acquisition, the person said. He may sell the local TV stations he already owns that aren’t affiliated with ABC, so there wouldn’t be friction with other networks like CBS and NBC.
His closely held Allen Media LLC already carries a lot of debt, however.

As for Nexstar, former President Tom Carter, who is now an adviser to the CEO and board, told investors at a Bank of America Securities conference Wednesday that the company is interested in acquiring assets from legacy media owners like Disney that are looking to restructure. Nexstar could acquire the ABC outlets with possibly only a few divestitures to stay within limits on broadcast station ownership, he said.

Carter added that there are some complications to a sale. ESPN, Disney’s sports network, shares many of its telecasts with ABC, for instance.

Analysts, too saw the news of a potential sale of the linear assets as not a straightforward solution.

Rosenblatt Securities said a deal with Nexstar would be “great for the breakup value argument for Disney’s equity,” but wouldn’t be without risks, “adding substantial debt at a time of rising concerns for pay TV.”

Evan Young, an analyst at KeyBanc Securities, said selling the ABC network could be valued at $4 billion or more and would likely be done on a highly dilutive basis.
What’s more, “a sale of ABC tells us that Disney’s view on pay-TV is that it will soon implode, which to us means applying meaningful discount rates to all linear cash flows,” Young wrote in a note to investors.

--With assistance from Thomas Buckley and Ryan Vlastelica.
 
This is turning into a fire sale. Kind of sad.
What part of anything reported constitutes a firesale is happening? The nets are still churning profit and Disney doesn't really need to sell them. They could just milk them forever and then sunset them when no longer profitable So, why would they firesale them? If a good offer comes in then maybe they accept.

A lot of noise out there to sift through. I would ignore the numbers part of the reports and just realize that talks are happening.
 
What part of anything reported constitutes a firesale is happening? The nets are still churning profit and Disney doesn't really need to sell them. They could just milk them forever and then sunset them when no longer profitable So, why would they firesale them? If a good offer comes in then maybe they accept.

A lot of noise out there to sift through. I would ignore the numbers part of the reports and just realize that talks are happening.

I think they willprobably sell SOME of it, but not ALL of it. They may sell those local affiliates, but retain the ABC network. They can certainly consolidate some assets too - like do they really need Disney Channel, Disney Jr. and Disney XD? They show a lot of the Dis. Jr. stuff on Disney Channel in the mornings anyway. FX, FXX, FXM? It could be any combination of things that they do.
 

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