Etc.: Google Upgrades YouTube - Cable Growth Looms - Programming Impacts Adoption?
WebTV: Over the weekend
Google announced it would soon make some major upgrades to
YouTube and its plans for GoogleTV. Details at
the company blog. Soon after, reports suggested the company is in the middle of a $120M construction project for a new testing facility. Read about the "
Google Experience Center." ---
AllThingsD says
Amazon is recruiting execs to head up its original content arm: People's Production Company. According to posted job descriptions, the company wants help developing content for "
online and traditional distribution." Traditional? Hmmm...
Strategy: "As much as 10% growth in subscription fees over the next five years will be fueled by significant renewal increases at
ESPN,
Turner and
Discovery in 2013," says
MediaPost. Citing research from
Morgan Stanley analyst
Ben Swinburne, the pub says sports nets and retrans will account for almost 1/2 of all industry subscription fees in 2015 (up from 27% in 2000).
Read more. ---
Comcast opened a new Xfinity retail store in Houston and some say it looks like an
Apple store. Local reports from Texas
shed some light. --- In other news from the Lone Star state,
Suddenlink started notifying subscribers of looming broadband usage caps. Reports say customers will have to pay $10 for every 50-gigs over the limit.
M&A: U.S. regulators approved
Google's $12.5B bid for
Motorola Mobility just hours after the search giant won clearance in Europe. (Google still needs approval from China, Taiwan and Israel before the deal becomes complete.) ---
Insight Communications renewed its franchise agreement with the City of Louisville for $3.5M. The new contract would clear the way for its $3B sale to
Time Warner Cable sometime during the next couple months. Reports say TWC will have to negotiate its own franchise with the city, but Insight's deal was integral to completing the proposed sale and transfer of Insight systems. ---
Vodafone is said to be considering a potential bid for British fiber operator
Cable & Wireless World.
Bloomberg has more.
In Court:
Apple added a handful of new devices to its patent infringement claims against
Samsung. The company said despite its initial lawsuit, "Samsung continues to flood the market with copycat products."
Bloomberg has the story. --- According to
SEC documents,
Netflix paid $9M to settle a class-action lawsuit accusing the company of violating the federal Video Privacy Protection Act.
Details here.
Deals:
AT&T and
Starz Entertainment renewed their multiplatform U-verse TV affiliation agreement. The extension covers Starz Entertainment's premium channels, HD, on-demand, and authenticated online services. ---
AT&T Adworks signed a licensing agreement with
TiVo for the set-top maker to incorporate anonymous data from U-verse subs into its audience measurement and research services. The deal enables TiVo to factor non-DVR homes into its data for the first time.
Footprint:
Verizon launched FiOS TV in Medford, MA.
Sports:
NYP has an interesting story about how
President Richard Nixon told the
NFL that he would block any legislation that would have lifted regular-season game blackouts if the league would allow playoff games to be aired locally.
Read more.
Online:
Myspace says since launching its new music player, 1M new users have signed up for accounts... averaging 40K daily? --- Songs from
NBC's new series "Smash" are now available on iTunes.
Mobile:
Comcast added text messaging to its Xfinity mobile app for iOS and Android devices. ---
AT&T seems to have found a couple new ways to irk its customers this week. First came reports that the telco giant is employing data caps to its network's top data users (aka the dreaded 'throttling.') Read
that story here. Then, the company followed up that news with an "effective immediately"
doubling of handset upgrade charges. --- 2012 is going to be the year of location-based services... Or, mobile advertising stemming from such services, that is.
AdWeek has the story.
Programming: What does programming have to do with broadband adoption? More than you may think... especially if you're talking about 'public purpose content.' What's that?
Read more at
MMTC's
Broadband Social Justice. ---
Veria Living is debuting a new exercise program "BollyFit" mixing cardio workouts with Bollywood dance moves. ---
DIRECTV is celebrating Black History month with the premiere of "More Than A Dream," an original documentary about the civil rights movement and the life of
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. The documentary is narrated by
Martin Sheen and features
General Colin L. Powell, USA (Ret.), Congressman
John Lewis (D-GA) and sportscaster
James Brown. ---
Disney Junior ordered a 3rd season of "Jake and the Never Land Pirates."
Over, Up & Under: The
EU granted
Google unconditional regulatory approval of its planned $12.5B buy of
Motorola Mobility. --- Thanks to a late-season surge of sales, the number of
Freeview HD consoles in the U.K. has reached 4.4M. Research firm
Barb says more than 2M HHs are using the device regularly, and 90% of all connected TVs sold in the UK are Freeview HD sets. --- The Iranian gov't has started restricting internet access to its citizens including personal email accounts and search sites like el Google.
Read more. ---
Penthouse Digital Media expanded its HD footprint in Europe with the launch of
PenthouseHD on
Deutsche Telekom's IPTV platform Entertain.
Labor:
Time Warner Cable is said to be cutting as many as 155 jobs by May when it closes a call center in Albany, NY.
People: Veteran
NFL analyst
Pat Kirwan has joined
CBSSports.com.Events: The
Hollywood Radio and Television Society (HRTS) will present the
Cable Programming Summit (March 7) focusing on "current and future trends in cable programming." The event features
David Janollari, Head of Programming,
MTV;
Kate Juergens, EVP, Programming & Development,
ABC Family;
Joel Stillerman, EVP, Original Programming, Production and Digital Content,
AMC;
Michael Wright, EVP, Head of Programming,
TNT,
TBS,
TCM; and
Carmi Zlotnik, Managing Director,
Starz Media.
Billy Bush, Anchor of "Access Hollywood" and Co-Host of "Access Hollywood Live," will moderate. ---
SCTE Canadian Summit 2012 will be March 27-28 in Toronto, ON. This year’s event "examines the impact of integrating new technologies into existing cable infrastructures." Also, the
SCTE Wireless Symposium on (3/26) is a pre-conference event covering wireless topics such as LTE, WiFi 101, backhaul, Canadian regulatory environment, and wireline convergence.
Ha!: A new survey, as part of a promo for
NatGeo's new series "Doomsday Preppers" (Tuesday, 9pm ET), asked what would you most likely do if you thought the world would end tomorrow? Answer: 27% said they would "resolve feuds with loved ones." 24% said "have sex." --- And in true Valentine's Day fashion, a new
Asurion survey says 30% of Americans believe their cell phone "is more helpful to them than their significant other." Reasons given? Cell phones are "more entertaining," "have an 'off button'," and "never talk back."
Ooops!: In yesterday's
Evening BRIDGE we wrote about a
Cablevision promotion for subscribers in the New York area. An editing error cut out the fact that the promotion ran only through January (and, according to the folks at Cablevision the offer, available only to new subscribers, "is not likely to return."). Our sincere apologies!
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Catch today's media market news in The Evening BRIDGE. •