I think there is some of that going on, but as streaming devices get better, a la carte tv series may become more commonplace.
They won’t. The content providers refuse to “unbundle” their non-profitable channels from their profitable ones.
Example: ESPN forced everyone to take and distribute ESPN2 last year in negotiations with carriers. Those who only wanted ESPN main, no dice.
The content providers are in control now and you MUST take the six extra channels they cram all day Informercials into most of their “broadcast day” so they can tell their customers that they showed the ad X number of times.
It’s totally screwed right now. And will get worse. Every contract renegotiation is a fight.
And you have idiot content owners like we have in Denver. A long time “four team” (we don’t count soccer but ok five) pro team city.
Altitude and AT&T SportsNet are owned by old ass cable people. They have yet to make ANY streaming deals. Even AT&T owning DirectTV Now, no AT&T SportsNet available on streaming.
You literally can’t watch NHL or MLB streaming on ANY platform in Denver. It’s OTA (less games) or cable or a satellite company. That’s IT.
The morons that own both networks don’t even know what streaming is.
People in areas where their MLB or NHL are on a major regional sports network are lucky. Those are usually picked up by streaming operators.
We get... zilch. Can’t watch them at all.