The issue of a la carte is worth thinking about in terms of economics in
general. We seem to have warped the idea of Capitalism into a la carte
funding of everything in society with the notion of every part only being
valuable if it is valuable in isolation. This is part of the current debate
over health care and so much more.
We also see this in "broadband" based on the notion that each wire should be
self-funding.
There's the converse problem of trying to create a blizzard of fees, tools
and other nuisance charges to fund the commons by telling stories. Here too
we see it playing out in broadband by saying that we could auction off all
the spectrum in order to fund the wires that should make "spectrum"
worthless. But why worry, it's just a story . isn't it?
I'm glossing over the question of how we decide what the commons is - with a
la carte textbooks are we going to simple teach people what the most local
community believes in without challenging it?
Responding more narrowly to the question of "cable":
I agree that with the both the "demise" of cable since NBP is simply Cable
V2 (with the fixation on highs speed for video) and the dangers of a la
carte. It's the same as the newspaper problem. Fox News [sic] is
entertainment and all-the-more important because it is profitable even if
twisted.
As I understand it Discovery et al are viable as part of a package but not
on their own. And I'm willing to accept ESPN in the bundle if it gives me
Discovery, History etc. But even then we already see it with so much of
History about ghosts and supernatural stuff. PBS has Nova but also a lot of
questionable content too.
Perhaps this is the problem with Hulu -- it moves us towards a la carte.
Maybe HBOGo is a better example of content as a part of whole rather than
parts purely a la carte. We saw a similar situation in video games years ago
when the market collapsed due to abundance. Things might be different now to
the extent that high production costs have become an effective barrier to
entry.
This is a complex and fluid topic - for now it is important to be aware of
the problems with the a-la-carte model as well as the issues with bundling.
Re: Cabletv Days are Almost over
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