geert lovink on Fri, 30 Nov 2001 03:42:01 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] new media is so last year... (chenoweth on the direcTV deal) |
The article below deals with the consequences of Rupert Murdoch's lost bid to gain control over DirecTV, the US-American satellite broadcasting company. Neil Chenoweth, author of 'Virtual Murdoch' (London: Secker & Warburg, 2001), journalist with the Australian Financial Review and Murdoch specialist, points out the long ranging consequences of the DirecTV battles. Chenoweth predict a tidal wave of direct US-programming outside of the USA, downloadable via broadband. This in turn will fragment audiences of the free-to-air audiences. /geert (posted with permission of the author) from: [email protected] Sent: Monday, November 12, 2001 7:55 PM Subject: Re: posting of AFR article The men who would grab Rupert Murdoch's mantle Is Rupert Murdoch's reign over? He's lost his bid for DirecTV, and access to the lucrative US pay-TV market and put his rivals in the box seat just as a new era of broadcasting is beginning. Byline: Neil Chenoweth Last weekend, a curious mixture of motives in a New York boardroom triggered an extraordinary realignment of world media power. Such moments pass with little fanfare. What attention they attract is usually devoted to the intense inter-personal tensions that drive them. But this is a turning point in the future of the world media business. Its aftershocks will be felt around the world. We will certainly be rocked by them in Australia, though it is doubtful that many will realise where these waves are coming from. Instead, we will merely be asking, perplexed, in five to 10 years' time, whether Channel Nine and Channel Seven have a viable business model ... whether the television industry in Australia as we know it will continue to exist. This all seems rather remote from the decision by the General Motors board last Sunday night to sell its subsidiary Hughes Electronics, with its DirecTV satellite broadcasting arm, to rival EchoStar Communications for $US25.8 billion ($50.76 billion). There are two reasons this will affect Australia. First, after the crash of the technology stock boom and the demise of new media, this deal will produce the next wave of communications giants. It ushers in the era of big media, where the future will be determined by three powerful figures: Steve Case at AOL Time Warner, Charlie Ergen at EchoStar, and whoever Michael Armstrong at AT&T sells his AT&T Broadband cable operation to. For the past two decades, the mantra of the world's media industry has been that content is king; that good programming will always be the key to making money in media. But that is about to change. Despite all the hype about the communications revolution, the future belongs to the US distribution networks and this has serious implications for Australian television and culture. The other reason this latest deal affects everybody is that it is all about Rupert Murdoch. How does Murdoch inspire such fear and loathing in US boardrooms? In Australia or Britain you could understand it. Anywhere beyond the 12-mile limit on the US coast, Murdoch is the most powerful media baron in the world. Ask any politician. But in the US, after three decades of striving, Murdoch is a second-ranking media figure. He's not even in the top three. Yet time and again, Murdoch emerges as the bogeyman of US media. By general consensus he is the Man Who Must Be Stopped. While everywhere else in the world Murdoch changes history by winning, Murdoch has spent the last decade in the US dictating the course of the media industry by being beaten. In 1997, Murdoch's plan to merge his nascent US satellite business with Ergen's EchoStar produced such panic and opposition among US cable companies and television networks that within weeks, Murdoch had been forced to back down, to dump Ergen and agree to the terms for a humiliating surrender to the cable companies. That defeat produced a series of stock rises on Wall Street worth more than $US200 billion, and was a factor in triggering the technology stock boom. In 1998, Murdoch's alternative satellite plan, to join with the cable companies, was blocked by the US Justice Department. That setback put the whole cable/satellite industry in play again. The same year, worried TV executives, looking over their shoulder at what Murdoch might be doing, bid up the rights for North American football by $US8 billion over eight years. It crippled Disney. As NBC's president, Bob Wright, put it during a 1996 discussion about the future of communication, ``That's not the question! The question is, where's Rupert?'' The Murdoch factor surfaced again last weekend, when the General Motors board decided to dump 18 months of torrid negotiations to sell Hughes to Murdoch, and instead chose Ergen, the rank outsider. Ergen has a deadpan delivery and a lethal Tennessee charm, and he was offering an attractive deal, if it passes the regulators. But the GM directors' decision at the end was probably not so much pro-Ergen as it was anti-Murdoch. To understand why this deal is so important, you have to appreciate how much Wall Street is over the tech boom. New media is so last year. That doesn't mean the technology race will stop. It is just that the new kids who looked so invincible two years go aren't going to be the ones that get to play with the high-tech toys. For Australian television, lurking over the horizon is the threat that some time in the next five to 10 years, television programming will be carried over broadband internet, and their geographical monopoly will break down. Australian consumers will be free to download TV programs directly and immediately from US programmers, rather than wait for them to appear on Australian television. At the very least, this tidal wave of direct US programming will fragment the audience for Nine, Seven and Ten. At worst, they will be reduced to replaying US reruns, and local production. With advertising revenue slashed, make that very cheap local production. Think mid-'90s Channel Ten. The most valuable piece of television real estate could well be the ABC, with its huge local production library. If so, expect Nine to make a move to assist the ABC's online strategy. A US media consultancy, the Yankee Group, is predicting that in four years the US will have 31.5 million homes with broadband internet access. The slow train is coming, but it's not here yet. Other studies have shown that people are spending less time exploring the internet. The novelty value is over. They know the sites they like, and that's where they hang out. Perversely, as consumers surf the net less, in the US they are surfing television channels more, flicking back and forth across the dial. This does dire things for the fragmenting audience numbers of the free-to-air television networks and their advertising revenues. After the tech crash, and in the middle of the one of the worst advertising downturns in recent history, US investors have decided that the future lies with pay-TV. Consumers don't really want to spend their evenings on the net; they just want to watch the tube. Pay-TV offers far more choice, and a business model far less directly dependent on advertising, than anything else. This has given the biggest half-dozen US cable companies time to consolidate their move to digital, and slowly introduce interactive services and video on demand. Whatever happens, they will be in the box seat. In fact, what happens next is that they are going to grow a lot bigger. This is why last weekend's deal is so critical Ergen's combined EchoStar-DirecTV operation will have 16.7 million subscribers. The two satellite companies are adding 3 million subscribers a year (compared with 400,000 new cable subscribers), which means by the time this deal settles, Ergen will have 20 million subscribers ... more than the population of Australia. Ergen will have more than 1,000 channels to juggle. And hardware? As a Nine Network executive eloquently put it in the early 1990s, when Kerry Packer was big in the space race: ``We've got satellites coming out of our arse.'' Earlier this year, Murdoch was saying he could push DirecTV alone to 30 million subscribers. A combined operation under Ergen with no satellite competitor must at least be able to match that. On this logic, Ergen will end up the most powerful man in world media, with 40 million-plus subscribers, and half the US pay-TV market. But before this happens, his cable rivals will make their presence felt. They will use Ergen's every advance to argue that they should grow bigger. It's already under way. Michael Armstrong is selling his cable network, AT&T Broadband, with its 15.1 million subscribers, probably to Cox Communications, with 6.2 million subscribers, or Comcast, with 8.3 million. That will leave AOL Time Warner, with only 12.7 million subscribers, scrambling for a dance partner. When the music stops, you're likely to see the US pay-TV industry reduced just to two cable companies and a satellite company, each with about 30 million subscribers. EchoStar's legal counsel, David Moskowitz, says the argument that cable will have to merge to keep up with satellite is nonsense. ``If you argue they have to merge to compete with us, I think this is silly,'' he says. ``Do I think they will ultimately merge [for other reasons]? I think that's quite likely.'' In 1996, when Murdoch launched Fox News, his biggest problem was getting a coalition of cable operators to agree to carry it. Murdoch's business model was that any new channel needs at least 20 million subscribers to be viable (ultimately it needs far more, but that's the base). The three emerging giants of pay-TV, who will each have far more than 20 million subscribers, will be able to produce their own programming and know that it will be viable from day one. That changes the whole balance of power in the media business, between content and distribution. Access is everything. Murdoch used to own what was the world's most popular internet gaming site, Kesmai. Then in 1996, AOL dumped Kesmai from its home page, and replaced it with its own gaming site. Overnight, Kesmai lost 95 per cent of its traffic. It never recovered. Ergen has never been interested in content, but what happens when the other pay-TV giants do the same thing with cable channels? Whichever way this pans out and Ergen has an uphill fight to get the Hughes deal approved by the Justice Department in five years or so a tidal wave of US content is going to hit Australia. We had better know who our new gatekeepers will be. ------------------------------ Publication: Australian Financial Review Publication date: 3-11-2001 Edition: Late Page no: 22 Section: Perspective Length: 1500 ------------------------------ _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list [email protected] http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold