Beating the Game — Ditching Pay TV

If you enjoy adrenaline-filled racing, bone-crushing tackles, mind-blowing saves, and earth-shattering home runs, chances are pretty good that you have a satellite or cable subscription. This is reality: sports lovers can’t ditch their expensive television providers — not if they want to continue to enjoy the sports they love. Or can they? Let’s get the obvious out of the way — big media doesn’t like change. Big media would prefer that consumers pay for those expensive cable or satellite subscriptions for an incredibly long time. Big media wants suck people’s wallets dry while hammering them with enough advertisements to make their heads explode. More importantly, big media, to the chagrin of most consumers, wants to keep to the status quo. Just like an expansion team with few hopes of winning anytime soon, the new ways of consuming content are eagerly dismissed in the eyes of big media. Maybe they simply don’t care. Then again, maybe they fear these new methods of content consumption, in hopes that their ignorance will postpone the inevitable. Either way, they don’t want to give their broad consumer base even the slightest hint that there are other, better, and cheaper ways to enjoy premium video content. Still, something had to give. Now, consumers are no longer settling for the status quo — declining subscriptions for the television industry is evidence alone. People prefer to watch content on their own terms, with the likes of video-on-demand, DVR, and Internet streaming. In fact, it is now a basic expectation. Slowly, people have been given this freedom to control what they watch and when the watch it, with much reluctance by big media. Unfortunately, a new line has been drawn.
The Low Blow
Just as consumers begin to see the bright light at the end of the tunnel, big media is constantly threatening to derail it all. They intend to merge with competition, force production companies to give preference to their ways, and manipulate public opinion. This isn’t shocking nor unexpected. It’s just getting a bit old. Big media has to find a way to keep people paying. One way they do it is with a glorified sports package. Pay a few bucks per month, get a few dozen sports channels. Pay a few more, get a few dozen more sports channels. Spend a few hundred, and most of the games from most major sports leagues become available. It’s a sports lover’s dream.
Knock-out Punch
Many people still don’t know this, but the NFL, NBA, NHL, MLS, and MLB offer online streaming services that bring live action to the consumer via broadband (oh how wonderful the Internet is). It’s the real deal, and it is the better deal. It’s not as expensive as some might think. At $350 per season, the NFL’s online option is the most expensive sport to keep up with, courtesy of DirecTV’s exclusive distribution rights. NFL aside, less than a hundred dollars can give a person an entire season’s worth of game content from the various sports organizations. Still, when lumping all of these sports streaming services together, the combined cost is potentially a fraction of what people might pay for a year’s worth of cable or satellite access. Pretty cool, right? Yet it’s far from perfect. Consumers face potential blackouts for local team markets, which some people still face with pay TV. They’ll probably miss out on some of the big games throughout the year. And there might be some other quirks along the way that could prevent the hardcore sports fan from seeing that one game that they just have to see. Sports organizations need to mature a bit more, as many still don’t realize the benefits of giving consumers what they want, when they want it, and how they want it. NCAA (college) sports are missing; the NCAA does not offer any method to watch games online for free or pay, which is a huge mistake. Auto sports are slow to cross the finish line; particularly international auto sports. Boxing and mixed martial arts are also knocked out. There are surely numerous other examples to be listed as well.Unanimous Victory

@anonymous
Actually, I did mention it:
“Consumers face potential blackouts for local team markets, which some people still face with pay TV.”
In terms of sports, this article fails to mention that with those sport packages online, if you live in the market of your favorite team, you won’t see them on those out of market packages. So if you live in SF and love the hometown Niners (and can’t use antenna for whatever reason), you need cable/sat or you won’t be seeing the Niners as the NFLST online only package will black out the Niners for this person.
If you live in SF and even can have an antenna, forget about seeing the hometown SJ Sharks NHL team. They are only on cable on CSN-California. And the NHL Gamecenter will black out Sharks games.
So yes if you love pro sports and want to cut the cord, you’d better not live in the market as the teams you love or else you can’t do it.
Tell that to hockey fans in the south…. where no bar even THINKS about carrying the NHL.
I watch more TV on my computer than I do on my TV, to the point where watching TV on TV is a rarity … actually, I play more console video games on my TV than I watch TV on my TV, and that’s not all that time consuming either … might be time to drop the service …