Trib's got this behind its paywall, but I hit ctrl-A/ctrl-C/ctrl-V before I got locked out of the article and was able to capture this turd for you. Give it to me, Ed:
Quote:
Chicago viewers might have to get up to speed on what a multicast station is to watch Cubs games next year.
As the Cubs sort out what to do with the WGN-9 portion of their 70 to 75 television games in 2015, the team is considering an option that is highly unconventional, if not a bit out there: Launching a version of a Cubs network on a multicast station, according to sources familiar with the situation.
This takes some explaining.
A multicast outlet is a sub-channel for local over-the-air broadcast stations. They became more prevalent with cable and satellite providers converting to digital platforms in the last decade. On Comcast's channel guide, most of the multicast stations are bunched in the mid 300s. Currently, these stations mostly air classic TV shows such as "Bonanza" and "The Brady Bunch," or syndicated programming such as cooking shows.
The Cubs reportedly are eager to start their own network. They currently can't do it on cable because of terms of their deal with Comcast SportsNet, which runs through 2019.
However, the multicast stations aren't considered cable; they are broadcast because they are transmitted over-the-air. That would provide the Cubs the opportunity to start some sort of a team-branded channel. The Cubs would produce the telecasts and sell and keep all the advertising revenue.
Crane Kenney, Cubs president for business operations, and WGN officials declined comment on the multicast possibility. A Cubs source said the team still is considering many options and isn't close to making a final decision.
Why would the Cubs go the multicast route and leave a powerful and familiar station as WGN-9?
Last fall, the Cubs exercised an option to opt out of their deal with WGN, which ran through 2022. At a minimum, the team needed to sync up their TV contracts so they all conclude after 2019, enabling them to start a network with all their games in 2020 outside Major League Baseball's national deals.
WGN, which pays the Cubs in the neighborhood of $250,000 per game, reportedly is losing as much as $200,000 per telecast because of record low ratings in recent years. The station wants to continue its long relationship with the Cubs, but also is anxious to stem some of the financial bleeding. Sources say WGN has offered the Cubs a new deal that would include a small rights fee and a revenue sharing component. Fees would remain low for poor ratings during the rebuilding process, but they could be much higher if viewers return in droves for a contending team.
According to sources, Kenney isn't eager to sign a deal that would give the Cubs considerably less in guaranteed money, especially at a time when the Dodgers are doing a multi-billion dollar local TV contract.
One industry insider said it would be "tough for Crane to go back to WGN for less than what he had originally had."
That has forced Kenney to get creative and at least take a look at the multicast option. On the surface, it would seem to be complicated and highly questionable as to whether it would be more profitable for the Cubs.
The Cubs would incur production costs to air the games; probably in the $25,000-35,000 range per game plus studio shows. They also would have to pay a fee for time on a multicast outlet.
Unlike cable, it seems highly unlikely the Cubs would earn much in the way of subscriber fees for a multicast station from the cable and satellite companies, according to industry sources. That would leave advertising as their main source of income. If advertising revenue is down for WGN, why would it be any different for the Cubs on a multicast station?
Also, the Cubs would lose viewers because a multicast station doesn't have the reach of WGN. Currently, AT&T doesn't have multicast stations and DirecTV and Dish almost never carry them, according to industry sources. The Cubs also would have to negotiate deals one-by-one with providers outside of Chicago in Downstate Illinois, Iowa and Indiana, areas that are considered their local territory.
Plus in Chicago and elsewhere, the concept would require a considerable learning curve for viewers to find the games on the new and relatively unknown outlet.
Then there is the time element. It is nearing July, very late in the game with a TV contract expiring at the end of the year. If the Cubs are going to go the multicast route, they need to assemble an in-house production and sales team quickly, no small task.
The Cubs' options appear to be limited. The WGN games can't be shifted to CSN, because its menu is full, and the network reportedly isn't interested in using spillover outlets. There had been speculation Fox might become involved in some way, laying the foundation for a partnership in a new Cubs network in 2020. However, all appears to be quiet on that front.
What else is out there? Only Kenney knows for sure, and perhaps he is working on something else that is unconventional. The pressure is on him to deliver much-needed TV revenue to help Theo Epstein turn the Cubs into a winner.
The clock is ticking and there has to be a resolution soon. The easy answer would be for the Cubs to stay with WGN through 2019. However, just in case, Chicago sports viewers might want to learn where to find the multicast stations.
In short: Holy shit, what the fuck? Going from WGN to fucking
digital subchannels isn't just killing the golden goose that is a broadcast institution, it's...man, I don't know what it is. This makes SportsVision/ON-TV look good. This makes offloading Cubs games to CLTV/WCIU look good. This makes fucking Comcast Sportsnet Houston look good. To repeat:
Quote:
The Cubs would incur production costs to air the games; probably in the $25,000-35,000 range per game plus studio shows. They also would have to pay a fee for time on a multicast outlet.
HOLY BALLS, YOU'RE BROKERING YOUR TV TIME. Every team down to the goddamn San Diego Padres is getting a money truck to show baseball games and the buttfucking Cubs are talking about
buying time, actually paying to produce games, and then sticking them on Me-Too like some sketchy infomercial for getting rich with promissory notes. I guess that's fitting; the Cubs under Ricketts and his court Jews are like the ultimate promissory note.
So they've burned their bridges with WGN, Comcast SportsNet (40% owned by Jerry Reinsdorf) is like "no thanks we'd rather not show 90 more Cubs games," and won't even let them use CSN+ for them, either. Hey, come on: people
need the Comcast Info Channel. They might have to do this multicast bullshit, which means:
1) fewer viewers
2) paying for production costs out of pocket
3) paying for air time out of pocket
4) having to negotiate carriage with the owners of digital subchannels outside Chicago
So congratulations, Crane Kenney! You've fucked up the hallmark of the Chicago Cubs. Now you're going from a superstation to the same deal the Chicago Wolves have.
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Molly Lambert wrote:
The future holds the possibility to be great or terrible, and since it has not yet occurred it remains simultaneously both.