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The Fandango at Home Forums are designed to help viewers get the most out of their Fandango at Home experience. Here, Fandango at Home customers may post information, questions, ideas, etc. on the subject of Fandango at Home and Fandango at Home -related issues (home theater, entertainment, etc). Although the primary purpose of these forums is to help Fandango at Home customers with questions and/or problems with their Fandango at Home service, there are also off-topic areas available within the Fandango at Home Forums for users to chat with like-minded people, subject to the limitations below.

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Cord Cutters:

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  • tsken02
    replied
    Re: Cord Cutters:

    Originally posted by Speedaddict81 View Post
    This explains a lot! Are you familiar with a 'Mr. Green Jeans'?
    I'm familiar.

    Leave a comment:


  • Walter-S_North_Carolina
    replied
    Re: Cord Cutters:

    There have been a few reports on subscriptions for MSO and Satellite providers. 2013 Q1 & Q2 saw subscriptions down. Unambiguously. Cord cutters are to blame, according to tWSJ.

    Leave a comment:


  • nyunole
    replied
    Re: Cord Cutters:

    Originally posted by LuzRinggold View Post
    That may change as more and more people cut the cord and they begin to loose revenue. I didn't know anyone still watched baseball.
    I wish! Unfortunately, things seem to be heading the other direction: tying the ability to stream sports to a cable subscription. We've already seen that with the Olympics (Comast), and ESPN, but it also is the rule for regional sports networks (Pac-12, Big 10, etc.).

    Leave a comment:


  • LuzRinggold
    replied
    Re: Cord Cutters:

    Originally posted by Petro49er View Post
    I'd love to cut the cord. I keep my DirecTV for one reason and one reason only. It's to get my SF Giants games throughout the year. If it wasn't for the damn MLB blackout rules, I'd be able to get MLB.tv, but we are in their local market so I can't pay MLB to watch their games due to the blackout restrictions. Maybe someday.
    That may change as more and more people cut the cord and they begin to loose revenue. I didn't know anyone still watched baseball.

    Leave a comment:


  • Petro49er
    replied
    Re: Cord Cutters:

    I'd love to cut the cord. I keep my DirecTV for one reason and one reason only. It's to get my SF Giants games throughout the year. If it wasn't for the damn MLB blackout rules, I'd be able to get MLB.tv, but we are in their local market so I can't pay MLB to watch their games due to the blackout restrictions. Maybe someday.

    Leave a comment:


  • Walter-S_North_Carolina
    replied
    Re: Cord Cutters:

    Originally posted by LuzRinggold View Post
    We keep satellite because my husband can't live without college football and I watch two Spanish channels. We are hoping that ESPN3 will partner with Roku to get a channel added and we're hoping that the new SEC sports channel being created will be available on Roku.

    I would think that if we wanted to subscribe to ONLY the ESPN channels that it would be pretty cheap. Roku (and other streaming devices) could help with this by offering single channel subscriptions and not making us pay for 100 channels that we don't want.

    So if you are way into live sporting events and watching them in your home vs. at a sports bar, then you need the raw content power an MSO or satellite provider brings into your home.

    That is not me. I enjoy watching the Masters and the US Open golf. Also the Superbowl and Olympics opening/closing ceremonies. For these few marquee events I do not need be held hostage to the tune of $100.00+ per month for perpetuity. Those all come free over the air by just being subject to commercials.

    In between these, we are enjoying our commercial free content in staggering quantities for a fraction of the cost.

    Plus, as others have mentioned, the number of streaming content providers seems to be on a steady up-tick. PBS joined the ranks a few months back. Zero cost for on-demand content. Pretty sweat deal.

    Leave a comment:


  • LuzRinggold
    replied
    Re: Cord Cutters:

    Originally posted by quackman View Post
    I would like to cut the cord, but I am a sports fanatic. I would miss way too many sports events without cable or satellite. We don't watch a lot of network TV, just a little. Sports and movies are probably 90% of the viewing going on in my family. Hopefully someday ALL sports will be available online and I too can "cut the cord."
    We keep satellite because my husband can't live without college football and I watch two Spanish channels. We are hoping that ESPN3 will partner with Roku to get a channel added and we're hoping that the new SEC sports channel being created will be available on Roku.

    I would think that if we wanted to subscribe to ONLY the ESPN channels that it would be pretty cheap. Roku (and other streaming devices) could help with this by offering single channel subscriptions and not making us pay for 100 channels that we don't want.

    BTW - Roku did announce that they will soon have a channel for M-GO!

    Leave a comment:


  • BlakkMajik3000
    replied
    Re: Cord Cutters:

    This December will make 3 years since I stopped paying Cox $100+/mo. to watch a handful of channels. In the end, it was about the numbers. We just didn't watch enough content to justify the bill.

    I'm a basketball fan, so losing both TNT and ESPN was the biggest adjustment for me. Other than that though, I can honestly say I haven't really missed having cable.

    I hooked up a low-profile indoor (no chance I'm getting on the roof) antenna in the living room, which is pretty much only used to watch the local news and network shows like Big Bang Theory, Modern Family, 2 Broke Girls, etc.

    In an ironic twist, we actually started watching MORE content after cutting the cord. I think this is because since we weren't always tuned in to the same set of channels, we just started looking up shows that people were watching. I doubt we would have ever paid any attention to either Weeds or Mad Men if we still had cable.

    Leave a comment:


  • quackman
    replied
    Re: Cord Cutters:

    I would like to cut the cord, but I am a sports fanatic. I would miss way too many sports events without cable or satellite. We don't watch a lot of network TV, just a little. Sports and movies are probably 90% of the viewing going on in my family. Hopefully someday ALL sports will be available online and I too can "cut the cord."

    Leave a comment:


  • mike568
    replied
    Re: Cord Cutters:

    My family cut the cord around 2009 or so when Directv kept raising pricing and picture would go out sometimes for no reason so we dropped another coaxial line from the attic so we could watch tv over the air with an outdoor antenna that was in the attic. We had dail-up was the only option where we used to live unless you wanted to pay $200 month plus $200 installation for a 1mb connection with a 50GB data cap for full speed. Then U-Verse came to our neighborhood but there was group of 3 houses that couldn't it yet their was no reason for it. There was houses farther away from main U-Verse box that had it available. When I got my ATT iPhone 4 with unlimited data I signed up for Netflix and watched tv shows on my iPhone 4 until Apple released the HDMI output of the iPad that worked on the iPhone 4. The 3G signal was good in that area so I didn't get that bad of pixilation watching on the tv. Then I also used my iPhone 4 as hotspot with its unlimited data until AT&T threated to put me on a tired data plan so I stopped. A month before we listed the house on market I called AT&T President's Office and asked why we couldn't get U-Verse so they sent a tech out to our area and activated U-Verse for the group of 3 homes that couldn't get U-Verse. We moved to the city (for an unrelated reason) we choose to get Charter HSI 30mb down and 5mb up and a basic tv (over air tv) for $45 a month for a year after that the bill went to $75 with taxes. I have down the math and it would be around $1 cheaper a month to drop the tv part of the bundle. Charter makes you have a cable box but at least I get some the local channels On Demand for free don't worry I would never order any PPV On Demand since Vudu has a better picture quality and cheaper.

    I only watch local sports teams play on tv so most games are on local channels that I get. If there is a game a want to watch I will go to BBQ restaurant that shows the games if I don't get the channel it is on.

    Leave a comment:


  • Walter-S_North_Carolina
    replied
    Re: Cord Cutters:

    Originally posted by Speedaddict81 View Post
    This explains a lot! Are you familiar with a 'Mr. Green Jeans'?
    No, not quite that far back.

    Originally posted by vanton619 View Post
    Yeah I've taken the leap with cord cutting for the past couple months, and I can say that it has been worthwhile for my family. My TV has a built-in HD antenna, so I still get my basic channels that covers a good chunk of our viewing. For shows that we don't catch and can't DVR from those channels, we have Hulu+. We have Netflix primarily for re-runs of Sesame Street (for the kids) and a handful of other TV shows we like to re-watch. Then, we have access to HBO GO from a friend to cover GoT and BWE. Vudu covers the remaining premium shows. There are a few things I'm missing, like Falling Skies, but otherwise it's stuff that I don't mind falling off my radar. The sports thing sucks, but I get all the Sunday football games I would with cable and then major events are still on the basic cable channels. Also, I have a B-Dubs down the street to catch any other games I want to watch.
    For us, our NetFlix Queue, Amazon Prime Watch-List do not get dented into much. They are still both about 100+ titles waiting to be viewed. Vudu gets used heavily.

    The conclusion I have come to is there is simply an overwhelming amount of entertainment content available for a fraction of the cost of traditional MSO service. If it takes a small viewing habit change to save the cost, for us it is well worth it. To get the few things like you mention simply costs more then it is worth to us.

    I understand everyone is different, but it appears there are more folks coming to this same conclusion as of late.

    Leave a comment:


  • vanton619
    replied
    Re: Cord Cutters:

    Yeah I've taken the leap with cord cutting for the past couple months, and I can say that it has been worthwhile for my family. My TV has a built-in HD antenna, so I still get my basic channels that covers a good chunk of our viewing. For shows that we don't catch and can't DVR from those channels, we have Hulu+. We have Netflix primarily for re-runs of Sesame Street (for the kids) and a handful of other TV shows we like to re-watch. Then, we have access to HBO GO from a friend to cover GoT and BWE. Vudu covers the remaining premium shows. There are a few things I'm missing, like Falling Skies, but otherwise it's stuff that I don't mind falling off my radar. The sports thing sucks, but I get all the Sunday football games I would with cable and then major events are still on the basic cable channels. Also, I have a B-Dubs down the street to catch any other games I want to watch.

    Leave a comment:


  • Speedaddict81
    replied
    Re: Cord Cutters:

    Originally posted by Walter-S_North_Carolina View Post
    When I was growing up, I was entertained by acting school dropouts with sock puppets on PBS.
    This explains a lot! Are you familiar with a 'Mr. Green Jeans'?

    I, too, have basically cut the cable cord (aside from the fact that they are the only HSI provider in my area). I would love to see the full gamut of programs and channels available online without such a subscription, as both my wife and I enjoy content from SyFy, Science channel, TLC, and the like, which are increasingly hard to find legally online for free (Hulu Plus now requires a cable subscription for our favorite SyFy shows). We have both Netflix streaming and Hulu Plus, and even with a Blu-Ray Netflix subscription together the cost is nowhere near that of Cable.

    I also appreciate that I am not lured into watching hours of generally pointless content...once, I watched the DIY network for 6 hours straight, just waiting for them to actually teach me how to do something myself. Turns out the station should be called, "watch how a professional helps someone else 'Do-it-themself' without actually walking you through the steps".

    Leave a comment:


  • Walter-S_North_Carolina
    replied
    Re: Cord Cutters:

    Originally posted by woodrowjr View Post
    My wife and I have just decided to cut the cord. I will miss some of the sports mainly the Detroit Tigers game. I might have to resort to getting a proxy or using a slingbox (this device is awesome!).

    It is not worth paying 80-100 dollars a month for how much we watch TV, when mostly we watch network television anyway. With Breaking Bad and Dexter ending it made it even easier.

    Plus with the money we are saving it is easier to buy series such as The Walking Dead.

    The decision came about for us when we realized there was simply no way we were ever going to watch all the content available to us. Both my wife and I work. My eldest son is on a year round swim team. Our youngest son is in Boy Scouts. Plus, both boys are busy with school work.

    We simply do not have enough free time to watch everything. The $100+ monthly bill disappearing did not even register as a loss in entertainment.

    My youngest son has forgotten about commercials. He hasn't seen one in over a year except for when he goes to his friends' houses or to his grandparent's.

    Instead, he has $100,000,000 - $400,000,000 full length major motion pictures, plus the smorgasbord SVoD providers offer all at his fingertips piped into the plasma flat screen on demand.

    When I was growing up, I was entertained by acting school dropouts with sock puppets on PBS.

    Leave a comment:


  • echopulse
    replied
    Re: Cord Cutters:

    Yes, I haven't been a cable subscriber in many years. I currently get expanded basic through my apartment, but I don't pay for it. I would cut it if I could, but since it's free, I use it, but only for Fox news, For shows, I use Netflix, Hulu, or torrents.

    Leave a comment:

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