Voltaire — To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Obama's economy: 6.9 million homes ditch cable TV
It started with homes, then cars, and now penny-pinching Americans, especially minorities, are giving up cable TV because they just can't afford it in the lingering recession. Instead, they are switching back to free TV, improved with the recent switch to digital broadcast which requires a special antenna but eliminates the $70-$100 monthly cable, satellite or broadband service fee. Industry officials had worried that Americans would begin "cord-cutting" in a shift to Internet TV, but the recession is more to blame. "It's not so much cord-cutting as cost-cutting that's motivating this. There's possibly recessionary issues here," said Dennis Wharton, spokesman for the National Association of Broadcasters. An ownership survey conducted by GfK Media found that about 6.9 million homes abandoned pay TV in 2011, a shocking number that industry sources chalk up to the sagging economy. What's more, the survey found that the number of Americans watching only free-TV surged from 46 million to 54 million. GfK said that means about 18% of all homes with TVs, or 21 million, watch only free-TV, a jump from about 14% just five years ago. "When asked why they cancelled TV service, the overwhelming majority, over 70%, cited cost-cutting; cord-cutting because of online options was cited by less than 20%," said Dave Tice senior vice president of GfK. Younger Americans, minorities and low-income homes, socked by unemployment and the economy have jumped the cable ship in the highest numbers. The GfK poll found that minorities make up 44% of all broadcast-only homes.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
Were it not for it being our sole internet access(albeit a very good one as far as we're concerned), we wouldn't have cable either. There is nothing on, TV is just getting more and more noxious to watch, and the news channels simply aren't credible anymore. That isn't necessarily the cable company's fault, but they get to deal with the fallout all the same.
Were it not for it being our sole internet access(albeit a very good one as far as we're concerned), we wouldn't have cable either
Who is your Internet provider? Can't you get Internet service without cable television?
Post a Comment