![]() | jeneralee: @SeanMichaelLong We don't have HBO either (or cable!) & just started season 2 of The Wire. It's really good but I liked Deadwood better. about 37 seconds ago |
![]() | laurabhere: no cable or internet. Virgin media fail. about 6 minutes ago |
| Mooshy114: @miss_peg lol do have cable? check with the company or something.....or buy a new TV..lol about 20 minutes ago |
| lusuito: Not even ESPN. (Anymore, cuz they did) or CMD (that peruvian cable channel, cuz they also did) Some years ago I could pick in between 3 about 32 minutes ago |
![]() | amzstore: Cables To Go Velocity Series 40315 HDMI Cable (Blue, 2 meters) You saved $23 or discount 76.69%: Wholesale!Chri.. link about 34 minutes ago |
| By Steve Jagler Special to OnMilwaukee.com E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Steve Jagler |
| Published Nov. 28, 2007 at 8:22 a.m. |
|
My wife often accuses me, my sons, local television stations, local radio stations, the local daily newspaper and the entire state of Wisconsin in general of losing proper perspective when it comes to our beloved Green Bay Packers.
As a proud, Colby-eating, beer-drinking Cheesehead, I plead guilty as charged. I swear, if you cut me on a Sunday afternoon, I'll bleed green and gold.
That's why we need voices of reason to remind us of what's really important sometimes.
You might expect those voices of reason to come from our elected officials. But alas, it would appear that U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) has become afflicted with the same myopic malady that consumes most of us here in Packerland.
Ryan wrote a letter to Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairman Kevin Martin this week, voicing the concerns of his constituents who will not be able to watch this Thursday's showdown between the Packers and the Dallas Cowboys or several upcoming University of Wisconsin basketball games, due to disputes between cable television providers and the NFL Network and the Big Ten Network.
"There is something fundamentally wrong with the cable market when millions of Wisconsin residents are denied the choice to watch their local teams on television," Ryan wrote to Martin. "I would urge the FCC to consider changing its rules to facilitate appointment of an arbitrator in disputes like the ones involving the NFL Network and the Big Ten Network, so they can be resolved more quickly (preferably through negotiation between the parties) and with consumers' interests foremost in mind."
Now, I'd be willing to bet that Paul, being a native of Janesville, which will be in the blackout territory come Thursday, has been getting his share of phone calls from angry constituents.
But asking the FCC to appoint a mediator to resolve a dispute between a good old American greedy cable company and two networks that also are trying to monetize their properties?
Paul, as a free-market Republican, should know better. These disputes are best-resolved in the private sector by the private sector. There are no jobs at stake here. There is no environmental impact here. No one's civil liberties are being jeopardized. Heck, this isn't even a threat to national security, and no one needs to be sent to war over this flap.
As a taxpaying citizen, I am certain that there are plenty of other more important and urgent issues that the FCC should be focusing its resources upon ... things like preserving or creating true competition among television programming, cell phone networks and wireless Internet providers. Or how about the issue of limiting the number of radio stations one company can own in a market? And don't get me started on the issue of privacy!
Yes, if I lived in the Packers' blackout territory, I would be upset. I probably would take corrective action and travel to a place where I could see the game. And yes, it's a shame if Bucky Badger is blacked out because the cable company and the Big Ten Network can't come to terms.
But here's a prediction: Leave them alone. They'll work it out. The cable company needs the NFL and the Big Ten. The Big Ten and the NFL need the cable company's subscribers. Ultimately, they will come to their senses, they'll negotiate a price point and the deal will get done. And we'll all live happily ever after, even if our cable prices are jacked up again. And if those rates continue to rise far faster than the rate of inflation, then more people will consider alternatives to cable.
That's a free market. This flap need not be a federal issue.
|
4 comments about this article. Post a comment / write a review. |
Posted by danno on Nov. 28, 2007 at 1:03 p.m. (report)
Why don't we just get government out of the business of regulating entertainment. They did a great job of holding Zenith's digital HD technology off by 20 years and ruining the US electronics business. LG now employs all those creative engineers. US Gov't 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 / Individual 4
| Rate this: |
Posted by arks00 on Nov. 28, 2007 at 12:05 p.m. (report)
LMAO @ ryno's reply, priceless. people... Its T-V. the government should have nothing to do with this; if they get involved, you'll never get your channels, it will take 30 years dvided by 2, plus the 5 forms that need to be filled out, and this surcharge and this tax...then it would have to be reviewed in congress, then get vetoed... and on and on... again and again...
| Rate this: |
Posted by Ryno77 on Nov. 28, 2007 at 9:17 a.m. (report)
Finally! Someone is willing to take a stand on some REAL issues! So what if 9 million children in the US don't have health care? Badgers. Packers. Brewers. Bucks. Your son's and daughters peewee socccer/baseball/football/jousting league. This is what this country is about. Stand up and be counted my fellow Americans! It doesn't matter that education budgets are cut--as long as high school and college sports aren't touched. Band, art, english? Please, the books from 1962 still work just fine. Thank you Mr. Ryan for making a difference.
| Rate this: |
Posted by T15 on Nov. 28, 2007 at 8:35 a.m. (report)
I am all for the lassie faire approach to these matters but hats off to Paul Ryan for trying to get something to happen. This is ridiculous. I don't care if I get the Big Ten Network on cable, I just want to see some Badger basketball before the season is over.
| Rate this: |
|
Oct. 02, 2009 Chicago will not host the 2016 Olympic Games. The International Olympic Committee today ... |
|
Mercury Marine workers approve contract offer Sept. 04, 2009 Voting of the third time, members of International Association of Machinists and Aerospace ... |
|
July 31, 2009 We've been told on talk radio for years that Wisconsin is a terrible place to do business. ... |
|
July 13, 2009 While attending a conference recently, a couple of friends from Louisiana gave me some ... |
|
April 17, 2009 To Tweet or not to Tweet? That is the question. Perhaps more generally, the question every ... |
| Top Clicks | Top Searches | Most Talkbacks |