Jul 17 Podcast #1261: What If Cable & Satellite Providers Exit Traditional Linear TV Business
On this week’s show we take a hypothetical look at Cable and Satellite TV’s future. We also read your emails and take a look at the week’s news!
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News:
- Netflix Is Exploring Live TV and Bundles as It Struggles to Keep Viewers Hooked
- Scripps, DirecTV End Blackout, Ink New Retrans Deal
- RGB LED TVs Set For Market Growth In Coming Years
Other:
- HT Guys Amazon Lists
- HT Guys Music Playlist on Apple Music
- HT Guys Music Playlist on Amazon Music
- HT Guys Music Playlist on Spotify
- Ara's Woodworking
What If Cable & Satellite Providers Exit Traditional Linear TV Business
On this week’s show we take a hypothetical look at Cable and Satellite TV’s future. We have said that we see TV being delivered via the Internet vs the traditional means of OTA, Cable, or Satellite. What would this world look like and who are the winners and losers?
Scenario Setup
Major providers — Comcast/Xfinity, Charter/Spectrum, DirecTV, Dish Network, Altice, and smaller cable operators — face accelerating cord-cutting. Traditional pay-TV subscribers have already dropped to ~34% of U.S. households. Revenue from linear TV (cable channels + satellite) is shrinking fast due to high programming costs, declining ad revenue, and competition from streamers. In this scenario, the industry collectively decides to abandon legacy linear TV (bundled channel packages) and pivots hard to two main businesses:
- High-speed broadband/data which is their most profitable product.
- IPTV / Streaming aggregation with their own apps or virtual third party MVPD services like YouTube TV-style offerings.
They sunset traditional cable TV boxes, satellite dishes, and legacy contracts over 2–3 years.
What Happens Next
For the Providers it's mostly upside. Broadband becomes ~70–80% of revenue. Margins on data are much higher than on video because there are no expensive content carriage fees. Companies like Comcast and Charter already make most of their profit from data.
Huge reduction in programming fees paid to Disney, NBCU, Warner, etc. No more maintaining old coaxial/satellite infrastructure for TV. All of which greatly cuts costs.
New Growth Areas:
- Sell/partner on IPTV services (e.g., Xfinity Stream becomes the main offering, or they white-label streaming bundles).
- Mobile + home internet bundles (5G fixed wireless + fiber expansion).
- Advertising on their own streaming platforms.
The biggest hurdles are massive customer service transition, potential loss of some rural satellite customers, and potential regulatory scrutiny over broadband monopolies.
For Consumers the benefits include: Lower base bills, faster innovation in home internet which results in more fiber, better speeds, and lower latency, and IPTV options could be cheaper/better than old cable (cloud DVR, multi-device streaming).
Of course there is a downside. Sports fans and older viewers lose easy “flip channels” experience. Live sports become fragmented across streamers which could end up costing more if you want everything.
There will be Market & Industry Ripple Effects
- Streaming Wars Accelerate: YouTube TV, Hulu + Live TV, Sling, Fubo, and new entrants gain millions of former cable customers. Netflix, Amazon, etc., may expand live offerings.
- Content Owners Adapt: Networks like ESPN, CNN, TBS shift to direct-to-consumer or wholesale deals with IPTV platforms. Some channels may disappear or go streaming-only.
- Competition & Consolidation: Telecoms (AT&T, Verizon) and tech giants (Google Fiber, Amazon, Starlink) push harder into broadband. We could see more mergers.
- Advertising: Shift from traditional cable ads to targeted streaming ads and broadband data insights.
The reality is that it’s already happening gradually. Cable companies have been de-emphasizing video for years, pushing broadband bundles, and launching their own streaming apps. Satellite providers are in steeper decline. The full pivot described here would simply formalize and accelerate a trend that’s well underway.


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