YouTube TV, Google's popular live-channel streaming service, is set to lose access to all the channels from Comcast's NBCUniversal late Thursday, unless the two sides can reach a carriage agreement before their current deal expires at 9 p.m. PT Thursday/midnight ET Friday. (NBCU's channels include a clutch of cable networks and its big broadcast network, which is the home to NFL Sunday Night Football.) But if the two sides fail to reach a pact and those channels disappear, YouTube TV will discount its customer's bills by $10 a month while the channels are missing.
YouTube TV usually costs $65 a month, but the company said in a blog post that it would discount subscribers' rates to $55 if NBC's channels go dark for the duration they remain unavailable.
Both companies noted to their customers that the channels' programming is also available to stream on Peacock, NBCUniversal's streaming service. Much of Peacock is free to watch with advertising, and higher-interest programming like live NFL games are available with either a $5- or $10-a-month paid subscription.
Carriage disputes between programmers and distributors are nothing new. For years, they've been a routine annoyance for customers of traditional cable and satellite TV. But up until about 2020, these kinds of service "blackouts" were one of the ways streaming set itself apart from the aggravations of television's past.
In the last year and a half, however, these battles have cropped up in the streaming realm too. The rollouts of new streaming services HBO Max and Peacock were marred by failure to launch on either Roku or Amazon Fire TV in 2020. More recently, YouTube TV has been in a continuing standoff with Roku. Since their their deal ended in April, YouTube TV has remained available to stream on Roku, but Roku removed the YouTube TV app from its channel store -- meaning only pre-existing subscribers who downloaded it before their faceoff can still stream YouTube TV in its dedicated app on Roku. New customers must watch it within the main YouTube app on Roku instead.
Interestingly, the latest standoff with NBCUniversal puts YouTube TV in the position of the hunkered down distributor, while it its faceoff with Roku, YouTube TV is the programming planting its feet against distributor Roku. Regardless of which side of the dynamic any of these streaming services and devices are on, these fights underscore how companies on are agitating to get the upper hand as the future of TV evolves rapidly toward streaming.
NBCUniversal's channels include its NBC broadcast network, USA, Telemundo, Universo, Bravo, E!, SyFy, Oxygen, CNBC and MSNBC.
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September 28, 2021 at 09:11PM
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YouTube TV on track to lose all NBC networks late Thursday -- or cost $10 less - CNET
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