Time Warner Cable and CBS said early Tuesday morning that
they will shrug off their self-imposed midnight Tuesday deadline and continue
to negotiate on a new retransmission contract, according to USAToday.
In a strange sequence of brinkmanship, their decision to
pull back at the last minute from a possible blackout in key U.S. markets
was announced merely 30 minutes after they separately told reporters at around
midnight that they had walked away from their talks and allowed the network's
signals to go dark.
If the blackout had been carried out as threatened, about 3
million TWC customers in eight markets - primarily in New
York City , Dallas and Los Angeles , which have
CBS-owned station - would have seen the No.1 network station disappear from
their TV lineup.
TWC spokeswoman Maureen Huff said the signals were being
removed when CBS asked to stop the process. "They were dark in some but
not all areas," she said. "At the request of CBS, we have halted
going dark on their channels."
The parties will continue to negotiate with no established
deadline, Huff said.
Their retransmission contract - which dictates how much CBS
gets paid by TWC for its broadcast signals - expired at the end of June.
Their negotiation involves only the 13 CBS-owned TV stations
in eight markets that are served by TWC. Showtime, TMC, Flix and Smithsonian -
all fully or partly owned by CBS - are also included in the contract.
CBS-affiliate stations in other markets, even if they're in
TWC service areas, are not affected by the negotiations.
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