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View Full Version : CBS, NBC to Offer TV Shows for 99 Cents



Krell
November 8th, 2005, 03:12 PM
NEW YORK (AP) - CBS and NBC have announced deals to offer replays of prime-time programs for 99 cents per episode, shifting television toward a sales model that gained popularity with downloaded music.

CBS is teaming up with Comcast Corp. (CMCSA (http://finance.myway.com/jsp/qt/short.jsp?symbol_search_text=CMCSA)) and NBC with satellite operator DirecTV to offer the on-demand replays.

NBC Universal will offer commercial-free episodes of "Law & Order: SVU" and other shows to subscribers of DirecTV Group Inc. who use the satellite company's new digital video recorder.

Comcast's on-demand customers in some markets will be able to view "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation,""NCIS,""Survivor" and "The Amazing Race" at their convenience.

Terms of the deals, which were announced Monday, were not disclosed.

"This is an incredibly exciting evolution for CBS and network television - video on demand is the next frontier for our industry," CBS Chairman Leslie Moonves said of the deal with Philadelphia-based Comcast, the nation's largest cable systems operator. CBS, which is owned by Viacom Inc. (VIAB (http://finance.myway.com/jsp/qt/short.jsp?symbol_search_text=VIAB)), announced last week it would stream episodes of its show "Threshold" over CBS.com.

The Walt Disney Co.'s ABC network offers downloads of several programs, including "Desperate Housewives" and "Lost," for $1.99 each via iTunes software from Apple Computer Inc. (AAPL (http://finance.myway.com/jsp/qt/short.jsp?symbol_search_text=AAPL))

Less than three years ago, Apple helped spur the explosion of legally downloaded music with its iTunes Music Store and iPod portable players - the latest versions of which now play video.

Comcast's service will be available starting in January to customers in markets with a CBS owned-and-operated television station, which includes the nation's seven largest media markets. The episodes will be available as early as midnight following a broadcast and will include commercials.

The DirecTV agreement includes shows that air on NBC, USA, Bravo and the Sci-Fi Channel, including "The Office" and "Monk." Episodes of the shows will remain available for one week after their broadcast. NBC Universal is a unit of General Electric Co. (GE (http://finance.myway.com/jsp/qt/short.jsp?symbol_search_text=GE))
DirecTV, which is based in El Segundo, Calif., and controlled by the media conglomerate News Corp. (NWSA (http://finance.myway.com/jsp/qt/short.jsp?symbol_search_text=NWSA)), began shipping its new DVR this week. The device uses interactive software from NDS Group Ltd., another News Corp. unit, and is designed to transition the company from dependence on similar devices made by TiVo Inc. (TIVO (http://finance.myway.com/jsp/qt/short.jsp?symbol_search_text=TIVO))

"We are talking to the other networks and hope to reach similar agreements soon," DirecTV spokesman Robert Marsocci said Monday.
The new DirecTV DVR comes with a hard drive that holds 160 hours of programming. One hundred hours are available for subscribers to record and store programs. The remaining 60 hours will be used by DirecTV to download programs that can be viewed on demand for an extra fee.


http://apnews.myway.com/article/20051108/D8DO98PO0.html




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moneoa
November 8th, 2005, 03:25 PM
*pauses downloading simpsons and family guy*
LMAO
*resume download*

Krell
November 8th, 2005, 03:28 PM
*pauses downloading simpsons and family guy*
LMAO
*resume download*


Thank you for shopping P2P - you saved .50 cents today, thank you, come again.





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Auggie2k
November 8th, 2005, 03:29 PM
*pauses downloading simpsons and family guy*
LMAO
*resume download*
Oh god... LMFAO!

Betamax
November 8th, 2005, 03:30 PM
With or without ads? I'm now so accustomed to TV without ads that going back will be difficult.

moneoa
November 8th, 2005, 03:32 PM
I find it funny that in the early days they sold VCR's because you could record the show and watch it later maybe lend to a friend, now that it is done so much easier they start to accuse US of piracy?

Hypocracy.....assholes

This bullshit is only because they try to sell those over priced boxed sets.

For example, simsons price for an average season 40 bucks
for hot properties like Star trek it is 140 per season.


With or without ads? I'm now so accustomed to TV without ads that going back will be difficult.
*laughing even harder*
Thats the best part, your paying for the brainwashing too.
Don't seriously expect them to be ad free.

Pathtek24
November 8th, 2005, 04:03 PM
The news today made it sound like this was something totally new?..
Maybe they never heard of a bittorrent!

shawners
November 8th, 2005, 04:05 PM
Im wondering what format to use, they cant use DIVX or xvid since they need DRM.. And windows media player would have the episodes in a huge file and terrible quality since when encoding, it loses quality more then compression. Divx can expand a 700 meg file to over 3.8 gigs.