Disney, YouTube and TV Blackout
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Good and bad news, YouTube TV subscribers. YouTube is adding nine new channels to its live TV service. But it's also raising prices. Previously priced at $39.99 a month, YouTube TV now costs $49.99 a month. Those billed through Apple, meanwhile, will be ...
Comic Book Resources on MSN
Disney's Controversial Stalemate After Price Hikes Hit With More Bad NewsIt may take more than a wish upon a star for YouTube TV and Disney to hammer out their contentious streaming deal. On Friday, Nov. 7, Disney higher-ups confirmed that they had yet to reach an agreement about returning their channels, including ABC and ESPN, to YouTube TV after they were removed from the streaming service on Oct. 30.
Some YouTube TV users have noticed an offer for a credit off their subscription − a deal that equates to $10 a month over six months, or $60 in total.
YouTube TV and ESPN have failed to come to an agreement which leaves streaming subscribers without Disney products.
Sportsnaut on MSN
YouTube TV and Disney Dispute Update: Latest on Negotiations, When ESPN and ABC May ReturnDisney has been off YouTube TV for a week now, with the absence of ESPN and ABC on the streaming television platform resulting in millions of dollars in
After a year of culture wars, price hikes, and now the fury of sports fans amid the YouTube TV dispute, Disney is in its villain era.
YouTube TV users lost over 20 Disney-owned channels — including ESPN, ABC, and FX — after contract talks between Google and Disney collapsed without a deal.
For the time being, millions of YouTube TV subscribers are no longer able to access Disney-owned channels, including ESPN, ESPN2, ABC, National Geographic, FX, and a whole bunch more.
Though YouTube TV viewers can’t watch ESPN, ABC, or other Disney channels in the middle of the latest (but probably not final) dispute, the streaming service is giving certain subscribers a $10 per month discount for an extended period of time. Here’s what you need to know about that monthly discount and what got us here in the first place.
YouTube TV and NBCUniversal’s tussle over what seems like regular carriage issues did not take the sharp turn pushed by big internet-based bundles of live, linear TV networks. YouTube TV wanted not only a big piece of financial streaming from that pie ...