This thread should be pulled for copyright reasons. There's no link to the original website hosting the article, no attribution, and the original post has it copied verbatim rather than fair use excerpts with additional commentary or analysis.
Edit: I'm assuming that whitewolf isn't the original author of the piece.
thank you.Howard Bloom's SBN
Sports Business News
MLB's blackout problem keeps sport in dark ages
Submitted by SBN on Fri, 06/22/2012 - 22:00
Major League Baseball did not grow into an $8 billion business over the last two decades without burying some bodies along the way...(more)
Here's how the regional sports network (RSN) system operates. Exclusive content, such as live baseball, makes them must-carry channels for cable companies. RSNs approach them, demand to be included on their basic-cable tier and reap huge subscriber fees when the companies accede. In areas where it makes no sense to carry a particular RSN, the fans are out of luck even if they buy the Extra Innings or MLB.tv packages. Baseball will black out those games.
Why would Charlotte, N.C., where the Cincinnati Reds are for some reason blacked out, ever carry Fox Sports Ohio? It wouldn't, of course. Certainly Buffalo has no interest in Root Sports Pittsburgh. Canada's distribution of Rogers Sportsnet has been a mess historically – especially considering the Blue Jays own the entire country's rights – and Hawaii, which is thousands of miles from a major league stadium, splits its territory among the A's, Angels, Dodgers, Giants, Mariners and Padres.
No TV provider in Hawaii carries Seattle Mariners games. (AP)No TV provider in Hawaii carries Mariners or Padres games. Oceanic Time Warner, the dominant cable company on the islands, doesn't subscribe to the Giants or A's RSNs. When Sen. Daniel Inouye wrote MLB to voice his displeasure over the blackouts to his constituents, he received a letter from Chris Tully, the league's vice president of broadcasting. In the correspondence, obtained by Yahoo! Sports, Tully doesn't placate Inouye as much as turn into a salesman for the Bay Area teams' RSNs.
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