May 20, 2009
“When hell freezes over.”
“When pigs fly.”
“Only if you were the last man on earth.”
“When the NFL and Comcast reach a TV deal”
Apparently the NFL and Comcast are capitalists and in the business of making money (Who knew?!?). After a prolonged 3-year battle between the two sides, it appears as if the unthinkable has happened; they’ve agreed on a deal to move the NFL network onto Comcasts digital basic tier.
NFL Network and Comcast have finalized a carriage deal that will add 10 million homes to NFL Net’s distribution. The deal will put the network on Comcast’s digital basic tier, the same tier that houses MLB Network. The NFL had been seeking a license fee of about $0.70 per subscriber per month, but eventually settled on a rate of $0.40-0.45 per sub. (Where previously, the NFL was in a market by itself, this new rate is now comparable to other networks like CNN and Fox News — Ed.) The agreement does not involve giving Comcast any equity in the network. The move from the sports tier to digital basic will be completed by August. The deal also includes VOD for Comcast digital customers and the ability of offer the RedZone Channel when it is created. As part of the agreement, the two sides will drop its pending legal actions in a New York state court and at the FCC.
First of all, let me give a hat tip to Sports Business Journal writer John Ourand. I first found out about this story from him via Twitter and when I questioned him about the licensing fee, his guess was right on,
I don’t know the exact number. But I would bet that it’s below 50 cents.
Sports Business Daily (subscription required) — So Happy Together
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