Chet Kanojia |
Lower advertising revenue from cable and pressure from
lawmakers will make it difficult to put the switch into practice, Kanojia said
in an interview yesterday.
CBS and News Corp. have both threatened to take their
broadcast signals off the air if Aereo, backed by billionaire Barry Diller, is
allowed to continue reselling network programming over the Internet without
paying a retransmission fee. The two networks would be sacrificing billions of
dollars in ad revenue by making the switch, Kanojia said.
“The reality is, they want to get paid twice, and Aereo is
just an excuse to articulate that business strategy,” Kanojia said. “Good luck
to them.”
Broadcast and cable networks have two main sources of
revenue: advertising sales and fees from pay-TV such as DirecTV (DTV) and Time
Warner Cable Inc. (TWC) that carry their programming.
While broadcast advertising trumps cable advertising because
the audiences are much bigger, CBS and Fox say they must be compensated for
their programming. CBS could go off the air if courts don’t stop Aereo, Leslie
Moonves, the New York-based network’s CEO, said this week.
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