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Time Warner & CBS Reach Content Carriage Agreement (New York, Dallas, LA)
HurricaneHowieWood:
Just moments ago CBS & Time Warner Reached a deal...
By 6PM ET Tonight CBS will be back on the affected Time Warner Systems...
CBS Corporation And Time Warner Cable Reach Content Carriage Agreement
Deal Includes Retransmission Consent for CBS Owned Stations and Carriage of Showtime, CBS Sports Network and Smithsonian Channel
Programming to Resume by 6 PM ET Today
NEW YORK, Sept. 2, 2013 /PRNewswire/ -- CBS Corporation (NYSE:CBS.A and CBS) and Time Warner Cable and Bright House Networks have reached an agreement for carriage of CBS owned stations on Time Warner Cable systems across the country, as well as Showtime Networks, CBS Sports Network and Smithsonian Channel, it was announced today by representatives for the companies. Programming on all networks will resume at 6:00 PM ET today. Though specific terms of the deal are not being disclosed, the agreement includes retransmission consent, as well as Showtime Anytime and VOD, for CBS stations on Time Warner Cable systems in New York (WCBS and WLYW), Los Angeles (KCBS and KCAL) and Dallas (KTVT and KTXA.)
http://ca.finance.yahoo.com/news/cbs-corporation-time-warner-cable-210700588.html
HurricaneHowieWood:
Time Warner & CBS End Standoff, Reach Content Carriage Agreement
By THE DEADLINE TEAM | Monday September 2, 2013 @ 2:15pm PDT
BREAKING: Time Warner Cable and CBS have settled the ongoing cable war that began August 2 and led to a network blackout of CBS and Showtime channels for TWC subscribers. With the NFL season and U.S. Open semis/finals looming a resolution seemed to be on the horizon as recently as Friday:
NEW YORK- September 2, 2013 – CBS Corporation (NYSE: CBS.A and CBS) and Time Warner Cable and Bright House Networks have reached an agreement for carriage of CBS owned stations on Time Warner Cable systems across the country, as well as Showtime Networks, CBS Sports Network and Smithsonian Channel, it was announced today by representatives for the companies. Programming on all networks will resume at 6:00 PM, ET today. Though specific terms of the deal are not being disclosed, the agreement includes retransmission consent, as well as Showtime Anytime and VOD, for CBS stations on Time Warner Cable systems in New York (WCBS and WLYW), Los Angeles (KCBS and KCAL) and Dallas (KTVT and KTXA.)
http://www.deadline.com/2013/09/time-warner-cbs-end-standoff-reach-content-carriage-agreement/
HurricaneHowieWood:
Blackout Over! CBS and Time Warner Cable Strike Deal
The WrapBy Tim Kenneally | The Wrap – 17 minutes ago
CBS and Showtime are headed back to Time Warner Cable.
The networks and the cable giant ended their acrimonious standoff Sunday after nearly a month of darkness in major markets including New York City, Los Angeles and Dallas. Service should be back by 3 p.m Sunday, the two sides said in a news release.
The agreement is good news for fans of the NFL. CBS is set to begin its pro football broadcasts next weekend. Neither side said as much in the announcement, but it's certain the onset of the enormously popular season was a motivating factor in the deal.
The blackout went into effect Friday Aug. 2 at 5 p.m. ET -- the first time CBS and Showtime allowed their signal to go dark during a retransmission dispute. It affected 3.5 million homes -- nearly a third of Time Warner Cable's subscribers.
The sides had grappled over a handful of issues, and at one point had hammered out agreeable terms on fees -- but negotiations got hung up in CBS' apparent refusal to make its digital assets free to TWC customers. TWC then proposed offering CBS on an "a la carte" basis to cable customers; the network scoffed at the idea.
TMC, FLIX and Smithsonian also went down in the failed negotiations that began after a 2009 agreement expired at the end of June. The deadline was originally July 24, was pushed several times.
The sides exchanged a flurry of barbed press releases as the deadline flew past and beyond, with TWC accusing CBS of refusing to engage in "productive discussion" and "not willing to come to reasonable terms."
CBS maintained that it was vastly underpaid for the bulk of viewers it brings.
"What CBS seeks, and what we always have sought from the beginning, is fair compensation for the most-watched television network with the most popular content in the world. We will not accept less."
Other affected included Boston, Tampa, Minneapolis, Pittsburgh, Raleigh-Durham, Charlotte, San Diego, Columbus, Cincinnati, Kansas City, Milwaukee, San Antonio, Austin and Detroit, among many others.
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