Dennis wrote:Sorry Bob, I wouldn't really call truTV a major network and I also don't consider it FREE tv since it is a cable channel. NBC, CBS, ABC and FOX are free TV channels available over the air. I hope it happens though as it gives boxing fans more viewing options and boxers more opportunities to be seen on TV.
i just heard that almost one in 5 households don't have cable or dish anymore, which means
a hell of a lot of people have dumped pay tv in the last 10 years, when i could swear not
that long ago over 90% had pay tv. the thing is, that still means the vast majority still
watch "free tv" over cable or dish. even if the rate of people dumping pay tv increases
rapidly, which i think it probably will, i'm not so sure that the comeback of rooftop aerials
is the future. i think all this non-premium channel boxing sounds great, especially in the
short term, but how many people on the planet don't have wifi at home by now?
i have to think like 99% of north american, european, pacifica, and vast majority of asian
and latin homes have high speed wifi. a lot of young folks don't watch tv at all anymore.
they all have tablets and we are close to the point where unlimited 4G wireless broadband
will mean you will be able to stream anything you want from anywhere, and i don't see tv
even being relevant at that point. why wouldn't GB or TR or any promoter just charge
a few bucks to stream directly to subscribers worldwide and take all the sponsor money
themselves and cut the cable and dish and tv networks out of the deal entirely? i honestly
believe if, for some reason, the tv networks just disappeared for a few weeks as a result of
some weird technical difficulties, people would all adapt to streaming everything almost
immediately without missing a beat and tv would never be able to come back. it's just
there as a legacy media and people are creatures of habit but the platform isn't really
necessary anymore. it's just more middlemen between the content producers and customers