• News
  • Politics
  • National
  • Business
  • World
  • Science
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
    • Movie Explainers
    • TV Explainers
  • Health
  • Travel
Wednesday, December 31, 2025
WorldWide Online News Portal
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    Rashmika Mandanna reveals what she is most proud of after 9 years in the industry

    Rashmika Mandanna reveals what she is most proud of after 9 years in the industry

    Shanaya Kapoor gives a sneak peek into her ‘yearbook’, calls it ‘an unforgettable 365’

    Shanaya Kapoor gives a sneak peek into her ‘yearbook’, calls it ‘an unforgettable 365’

    Shaheen Afridi ruled out of BBL 15 with a knee injury, to fly to Lahore for rehab

    Shaheen Afridi ruled out of BBL 15 with a knee injury, to fly to Lahore for rehab

    As New Year dawns, hope of snow in Himachal brings cheers

    As New Year dawns, hope of snow in Himachal brings cheers

    Balochistan Liberation Front kills 10 Pakistani soldiers in series of attacks

    Balochistan Liberation Front kills 10 Pakistani soldiers in series of attacks

    Dhruv-NG is not just a helicopter, it’s statement of India’s engineering muscle: HAL CMD

    Dhruv-NG is not just a helicopter, it’s statement of India’s engineering muscle: HAL CMD

    Trending Tags

    • Commentary
    • Featured
    • Event
    • Editorial
  • Politics
  • National
  • Business
  • World
  • Science
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
    • Movie Explainers
    • TV Explainers
  • Health
  • Travel
  • News
    Rashmika Mandanna reveals what she is most proud of after 9 years in the industry

    Rashmika Mandanna reveals what she is most proud of after 9 years in the industry

    Shanaya Kapoor gives a sneak peek into her ‘yearbook’, calls it ‘an unforgettable 365’

    Shanaya Kapoor gives a sneak peek into her ‘yearbook’, calls it ‘an unforgettable 365’

    Shaheen Afridi ruled out of BBL 15 with a knee injury, to fly to Lahore for rehab

    Shaheen Afridi ruled out of BBL 15 with a knee injury, to fly to Lahore for rehab

    As New Year dawns, hope of snow in Himachal brings cheers

    As New Year dawns, hope of snow in Himachal brings cheers

    Balochistan Liberation Front kills 10 Pakistani soldiers in series of attacks

    Balochistan Liberation Front kills 10 Pakistani soldiers in series of attacks

    Dhruv-NG is not just a helicopter, it’s statement of India’s engineering muscle: HAL CMD

    Dhruv-NG is not just a helicopter, it’s statement of India’s engineering muscle: HAL CMD

    Trending Tags

    • Commentary
    • Featured
    • Event
    • Editorial
  • Politics
  • National
  • Business
  • World
  • Science
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
    • Movie Explainers
    • TV Explainers
  • Health
  • Travel
No Result
View All Result
Latest Online News
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Will cable TV go the way of landlines globally?

newsedgechd by newsedgechd
January 17, 2022
in News, Tech
0
Will cable TV go the way of landlines globally?
0
SHARES
40
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
ADVERTISEMENT

Will cable TV go the way of landlines globally?

Now, the share of American homes that pay for conventional TV service is closing in on 50 percent, according to recent assessments from the investment analyst Craig Moffett and S&P Global Market Intelligence’s Kagan research group.

READ ALSO

Rashmika Mandanna reveals what she is most proud of after 9 years in the industry

Shanaya Kapoor gives a sneak peek into her ‘yearbook’, calls it ‘an unforgettable 365’

People have been predicting the death of cable TV for a long time, but this really might be it. As recently as a decade ago, nearly all Americans — more than 85 percent of U.S. households — paid for packages of TV channels from cable or satellite companies. That started to decline haltingly at first and then far more quickly in the past few years.

Now, the share of American homes that pay for conventional TV service is closing in on 50 percent, according to recent assessments from the investment analyst Craig Moffett and S&P Global Market Intelligence’s Kagan research group.

ADVERTISEMENT

For comparison, cellphones were around for decades before the percentage of Americans who didn’t have a landline telephone at home reached 50 percent, around 2017. (In the most recent government figures, about one-third of American adults have a landline.)

Maybe it seems inevitable and predictable that cable TV would go the way of the landline. I promise you that it was not necessarily obvious, even once Netflix started to take off. Old habits die hard. Old industries that make a lot of people rich die even harder.

And don’t forget that some new technology habits catch on fast but don’t stick. Remember Myspace? Or predictions that electric scooters or Segways would become go-to forms of transportation for urbanites? What may be a terminal decline of America’s cable TV industrial complex is a big deal. It shows that technology can change entrenched ways of doing things slowly, and then suddenly, with profound ripple effects.

Ian Olgeirson, a research director at Kagan who has been following America’s TV market for about 20 years, told me that he was caught off guard by how quickly the monthly cable bill went from being standard to obsolete for many Americans. (Protocol had more on this in a recent newsletter.)

ADVERTISEMENT

Olgeirson and other TV experts I’ve been speaking to didn’t single out one tipping point in cable TV’s big shrink. They said the downward trend was more like a series of creeping changes that piled up.

Netflix offered us sofa sitters a happy alternative to paying for 500 TV channels that we mostly didn’t watch. In the TV industry, there was also a slow realisation that clinging to the old ways might be fatal. Cable TV companies stopped fighting so hard to keep people from defecting and were happy to instead sell you zippy internet service for streaming binges.

Once the cable TV edifice started to crumble, entertainment companies like Disney decided that they couldn’t go-all out to prop up the system that had sustained them for decades. They’d prefer to become their own Netflix. Old TV still has some life left. For now, Americans spend a majority of their TV time watching conventional television rather than streaming video. Streaming is also a tough business. And including the quasi-cable-TV services from online companies like YouTube and Hulu, about two-thirds of U.S. households pay for some old-school TV channels. An optimist would say that it’s stunning that cable TV has stayed this resilient.

But it’s clear that the cable TV system that for decades brought joy and headaches to tens of millions of Americans is petering out. The wild card, as Moffett, the investment analyst, wrote in a private report to his clients this week, is whether Americans keep turning away from cable and satellite TV relatively slowly, or whether it will “abruptly collapse, like a Jenga tower.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Now, the share of American homes that pay for conventional TV service is closing in on 50 percent, according to recent assessments from the investment analyst Craig Moffett and S&P Global Market Intelligence’s Kagan research group.

People have been predicting the death of cable TV for a long time, but this really might be it. As recently as a decade ago, nearly all Americans — more than 85 percent of U.S. households — paid for packages of TV channels from cable or satellite companies. That started to decline haltingly at first and then far more quickly in the past few years.

Now, the share of American homes that pay for conventional TV service is closing in on 50 percent, according to recent assessments from the investment analyst Craig Moffett and S&P Global Market Intelligence’s Kagan research group.

For comparison, cellphones were around for decades before the percentage of Americans who didn’t have a landline telephone at home reached 50 percent, around 2017. (In the most recent government figures, about one-third of American adults have a landline.)

Maybe it seems inevitable and predictable that cable TV would go the way of the landline. I promise you that it was not necessarily obvious, even once Netflix started to take off. Old habits die hard. Old industries that make a lot of people rich die even harder.

And don’t forget that some new technology habits catch on fast but don’t stick. Remember Myspace? Or predictions that electric scooters or Segways would become go-to forms of transportation for urbanites? What may be a terminal decline of America’s cable TV industrial complex is a big deal. It shows that technology can change entrenched ways of doing things slowly, and then suddenly, with profound ripple effects.

Ian Olgeirson, a research director at Kagan who has been following America’s TV market for about 20 years, told me that he was caught off guard by how quickly the monthly cable bill went from being standard to obsolete for many Americans. (Protocol had more on this in a recent newsletter.)

Olgeirson and other TV experts I’ve been speaking to didn’t single out one tipping point in cable TV’s big shrink. They said the downward trend was more like a series of creeping changes that piled up.

Netflix offered us sofa sitters a happy alternative to paying for 500 TV channels that we mostly didn’t watch. In the TV industry, there was also a slow realisation that clinging to the old ways might be fatal. Cable TV companies stopped fighting so hard to keep people from defecting and were happy to instead sell you zippy internet service for streaming binges.

Once the cable TV edifice started to crumble, entertainment companies like Disney decided that they couldn’t go-all out to prop up the system that had sustained them for decades. They’d prefer to become their own Netflix. Old TV still has some life left. For now, Americans spend a majority of their TV time watching conventional television rather than streaming video. Streaming is also a tough business. And including the quasi-cable-TV services from online companies like YouTube and Hulu, about two-thirds of U.S. households pay for some old-school TV channels. An optimist would say that it’s stunning that cable TV has stayed this resilient.

But it’s clear that the cable TV system that for decades brought joy and headaches to tens of millions of Americans is petering out. The wild card, as Moffett, the investment analyst, wrote in a private report to his clients this week, is whether Americans keep turning away from cable and satellite TV relatively slowly, or whether it will “abruptly collapse, like a Jenga tower.”

Tags: Will cable TV go the way of landlines globally?
ADVERTISEMENT

Related Posts

Rashmika Mandanna reveals what she is most proud of after 9 years in the industry
Entertainment

Rashmika Mandanna reveals what she is most proud of after 9 years in the industry

December 30, 2025
Shanaya Kapoor gives a sneak peek into her ‘yearbook’, calls it ‘an unforgettable 365’
Entertainment

Shanaya Kapoor gives a sneak peek into her ‘yearbook’, calls it ‘an unforgettable 365’

December 30, 2025
Shaheen Afridi ruled out of BBL 15 with a knee injury, to fly to Lahore for rehab
Featured

Shaheen Afridi ruled out of BBL 15 with a knee injury, to fly to Lahore for rehab

December 30, 2025
As New Year dawns, hope of snow in Himachal brings cheers
Featured

As New Year dawns, hope of snow in Himachal brings cheers

December 30, 2025
Balochistan Liberation Front kills 10 Pakistani soldiers in series of attacks
Featured

Balochistan Liberation Front kills 10 Pakistani soldiers in series of attacks

December 30, 2025
Dhruv-NG is not just a helicopter, it’s statement of India’s engineering muscle: HAL CMD
Business

Dhruv-NG is not just a helicopter, it’s statement of India’s engineering muscle: HAL CMD

December 30, 2025

POPULAR NEWS

After criticism, AMU extends tenure of sacked doctors

Jacqueline poses topless to thank fans on garnering 46mn Insta followers

October 26, 2020
Car used by Waze was parked outside Sena MLA’s office: Rane

Urvashi Rautela to make her debut in Tamil with Legend

March 19, 2021
Modi to visit Varanasi for ‘Dev Deepawali’

Rashami Desai sizzles in hot pink bikini photoshoot

November 30, 2020
Models shed clothes for annual Bodypainting Day in NYC

Models shed clothes for annual Bodypainting Day in NYC

July 29, 2021
'Bigg Boss OTT' winner Divya Agarwal to host curtain-raiser

‘Bigg Boss OTT’ winner Divya Agarwal to host curtain-raiser

October 3, 2021

EDITOR'S PICK

25 dead, 39 injured in 24 hours in Bihar lightning strikes

25 dead, 39 injured in 24 hours in Bihar lightning strikes

July 13, 2024
One dead, 22 fall sick after consuming 'local alcohol' in Andhra

One dead, 22 fall sick after consuming ‘local alcohol’ in Andhra

September 19, 2020
Outcome of state election results hints at continued uprun in market

Outcome of state election results hints at continued uprun in market

December 4, 2023
Facebook brings BlueJeans, Webex, Zoom to its Portal devices

Facebook brings BlueJeans, Webex, Zoom to its Portal devices

August 20, 2020
ADVERTISEMENT

About

We bring you the best Premium WordPress Themes that perfect for news, magazine, personal blog, etc. Check our landing page for details.

Follow us

Categories

  • Business
  • Crime
  • Entertainment
  • Fashion
  • Featured
  • Food
  • Gaming
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Movie Explainers
  • National
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Travel
  • TV Explainers
  • Uncategorized
  • World

Recent Posts

  • Rashmika Mandanna reveals what she is most proud of after 9 years in the industry
  • Shanaya Kapoor gives a sneak peek into her ‘yearbook’, calls it ‘an unforgettable 365’
  • Anshula Kapoor steps into ‘next chapter with gratitude and cake’ post 35th birthday
  • Shaheen Afridi ruled out of BBL 15 with a knee injury, to fly to Lahore for rehab
  • Contribute
  • About Us
  • Contcat Us

© 2022 newsedge360 - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by CP Grafix.

No Result
View All Result
  • Homepages
    • Home Page 1
    • Home Page 2
  • News
  • Politics
  • National
  • Business
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Fashion
  • Food
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Opinion
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Travel

© 2022 newsedge360 - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by CP Grafix.