• Welcome to Milwaukee HDTV User Group.
 

News:

If your having any issues logging in, please email admin@milwaukeehdtv.org with your user name, and we'll get you fixed up!

Main Menu

Bye Bye Voom

Started by sp44again, Friday Apr 08, 2005, 09:11:34 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

sp44again

BY HARRY BERKOWITZ
STAFF WRITER

April 7, 2005, 10:08 PM EDT

The Cablevision board of directors agreed Thursday night to end chairman Charles Dolan's titanic struggle to rescue the Voom nationwide satellite TV service, a source close to the company said.

The 15-member board, including Dolan, voted unanimously to adopt a timetable to shut the service, whose uncertain fate had torn the board and Dolan's family, including his chief executive son James, who opposed Voom against his father's wishes.

In another major development affecting Cablevision, Adelphia Communications Thursday presented a bankruptcy judge with a handshake deal to accept a $17.6-billion joint bid for the company from Time Warner and Comcast Corp. Cablevision had stepped in with a $16.5-billion counterbid, but apparently to no avail.

Cablevision's stock price jumped 3.7 percent, or 99 cents a share, to $27.84 Thursday, although it was not clear if that was in anticipation of the Voom and Adelphia developments, which Cablevision investors have been hoping for.

Despite speculation that the bid and Voom's fate were somehow intertwined, the source close to the company said they were completely separate.

A Cablevision spokesman, Charles Schuler, declined to comment.

Thursday night's meeting came one week after the board's deadline passed for Dolan to reach a deal that would allow him to take Voom off the company's hands. No such deal was reached, leaving the board little choice but to set a timetable for a shutdown after having agreed on March 7 to extend Voom's life to March 31, the source said.

Charles Dolan, 79, had repeatedly pulled rabbits out of his hat to keep Voom going, despite tremendous pressure to close it. Voom had $661 million in losses last year, and has only attracted 40,000 subscribers, company officials have said.

The original HDTV channels created for Voom will remain a part of the company's Rainbow Media programming unit, which also includes channels such as AMC. They'll also be offered to other cable and satellite TV companies.

Dolan had tried to block Cablevision's $200 million deal to sell Voom's sole satellite to EchoStar Communications by telling the Federal Communications Commission last week the sale would cut competition and hurt consumers. But in its own FCC filing, the company disavowed Dolan's actions, which also included pledging $400 million to buy the satellite and rescue Voom.

The company has refused to say whether Dolan was continuing to help fund Voom temporarily after his pledge of $10 million to help see it through the end of last month ran out.

Dolan has ousted three board members who opposed him on Voom, naming five new directors, and plans to cut another three April 18. Cablevision is also suing to block a Jets stadium for the West Side after having its own bid for a residential complex on the site rejected by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.

If Cablevision were to beat the Time Warner-Comcast bid, it would likely sell off or swap many of the Adelphia systems, seeking to be left only with strong clusters in big media markets.

Fulcrum Global Partners analyst Richard Grenfield questioned, however, whether bondholders of Adelphia, which is in bankruptcy proceedings, would trust a Cablevision bid, "given the nearly unbelievable gyrations within the Dolan family and ... board of directors."

In a note to investors, Grenfield also questioned the strategy of adding cable systems with less appealing demographics than those in the New York area, which spends heavily on cable and high-speed Internet.

"While we have high regard for Tom Rutledge and his operating team, demos are quite different than those in Buffalo, Coudersport, rural New England, Ohio, etc." he said.

Analysts say Time Warner and Comcast could more easily swap Adelphia systems to create major clusters. In the Los Angeles area, for instance, five cable companies including Adelphia, Time Warner and Comcast, split the cable market of 3.5 million subscribers.

Analysts have speculated Dolan might try to provide that HD programming to Adelphia's more than 5 million subscriberstretching from Los Angeles to Buffalo if it won the bidding.

The Adelphia bid was "a unique opportunity" for Cablevision, which has 3 million subscribers, all in the New York metro area, to expand, a source familiar with the strategy said. The private equity firms Kohlberg Kravis & Roberts and Providence Equity Partners, which bid $15 billion for Adelphia, had tried to bring Cablevision into their bid.

Without confirming the Adelphia bid, Cablevision chief operating officer Tom Rutledge said last week the company could use its managerial expertise to improve cable systems elsewhere and raise their value.
Copyright 2005 Newsday Inc.

kevbeck122

#1
They will officially stop service on April 30.

Quote from: sp44againThe original HDTV channels created for Voom will remain a part of the company's Rainbow Media programming unit, which also includes channels such as AMC. They'll also be offered to other cable and satellite TV companies.

Does this mean we'll get more channels through TWC?

gparris

Please do not hold your breath on that question...you'll pass out, but nice try. :D

Sorry to see Voom pass if it looks for real this time..too bad...hope TWC doesn't think HD channels are a passing fad or something...just bad management/timing at Voom (or something), not anything else.  :(

Maybe you meant:
TWC: Once D* has local HD channels up an running with its HD DVRs, you'll  be rushing to add more HD channels...too bad we subs have to wait longer for you to wake up...maybe that is what you meant.:D

kevbeck122

Just hoping for the best outcome for us TWC subscribers :)

Actually I'm pretty content with what we have now since I've only had HD for a month or so.  There have only been a couple times so far where I've been forced to watch something SD digital or even analog when there's nothing on the HD side.

RLJSlick

Quote from: kevbeck122Just hoping for the best outcome for us TWC subscribers :)

Actually I'm pretty content with what we have now since I've only had HD for a month or so.  There have only been a couple times so far where I've been forced to watch something SD digital or even analog when there's nothing on the HD side.


Yeah I agree with you. Too bad for Voom, but I think it may have been introduced too early into the HDTV game.  I think a few years from now, when more TVs are HD, would have been much better.
Ricky
http://rljslick.smugmug.com/
Samsung HL-T61176S DLP Projection
Toshiba 30HFX84 30"
Denon AVR-1804/884 6.1 Surround
Samsung BD-P1400 Blu-Ray
Toshiba HD-A20KU HD-DVD
Polk RM6700/PSW303 Sound System

gb4fan92

Quote from: kevbeck122Actually I'm pretty content with what we have now since I've only had HD for a month or so.

Well I'm not content!  We have really slowed down as far as new HD channels being introduced on TWC. September was the last new channel (ESPN-HD). I'm really hoping some of the Voom programming makes it to cable. Monster HD would be great!

StarvingForHDTV

Quote from: sp44againThe original HDTV channels created for Voom will remain a part of the company's Rainbow Media programming unit, which also includes channels such as AMC. They'll also be offered to other cable and satellite TV companies.

So I guess it wasn't a complete waste of money.  I think other programming providers will add some of the HDTV channels that VOOM created to their offerings.  In my opinion, HDTV will have a long life.  

VOOM rest in peace.

mhz40

It was all bad marketing.  If you have to give three receivers away and provide 1-cent installs, there can't be much core demand for the product.  In a few weeks, Voom will Va-va-vaninsh.  Too bad...  RIP
 :hug:

MHz40

gparris

#8
You're right, there was bad marketing and in an age of Tivos and DVRs from both cable and dish fronts, nothing occurred, only promises that were never fulfilled.

Voom bashers came from all backrounds, including Voom subs about bad installs, installers not showing up, equipment problems and the like...that did not help, either.

Finally, the fact the other two dish providers were so well established and reliable hindered the influx of new customers.
Maybe when half of all homes have HDTVs will such a plan be sucessful, but with a different business model next time. :D

I really think it is time for more HD channels on TWC, though, and that is not about time...it IS time, thanks in advance! :)

AndrewP

There are many, many reasons.
But the main reason is money. Chuck Dolan tried to establish this service relying on Cablevision investments while it lasted. Then he was asked to put his own money and just decided not to take any risks and quit. How you can blame him, he is 79, has big family.
It is OK, thanks Voom for what you did for us.

gparris

Maybe Directv, DishNetwork or TWC will get to add some of those Voom channels to their package lineups as a result.  :)

Many "Voomers" liked them and I know we would all like some of them, too. :D

AndrewP

Quote from: gparrisMaybe Directv, DishNetwork or TWC will get to add some of those Voom channels to their package lineups as a result.  :)

Many "Voomers" liked them and I know we would all like some of them, too. :D

Beleive me, ALL of them.  :)
But it is very unlikely it will happen soon. :(

gparris

#12
Quote from: AndrewPBeleive me, ALL of them.  :)
But it is very unlikely it will happen soon. :(

Seems pretty sad HD sets are so popular as of late and nothing has been added since the fall of 2004, why I can't begin to guess unless something is coming and TWC just can't say anything (yet).  :(

Some of those HD channels Voom had, along the the movie channels, Universal HD and ESPNHD2 (that Voom never got) would be great, even if there was a second HD tier added, like they do with the movie DigiPics tiers...I'd buy them. ;)