The YouTube TV NBCUniversal Debacle Feels Like a Harbinger

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If youâre a YouTube TV user and like Sunday Night Football, chances are youâve spent the past few days wondering whether youâll be able to stream this weekendâs game.
In case youâre not the kind of person who follows business negotiations between multinational corporations (why would you be? I only follow them because itâs literally my job), here's a primer: Earlier this week it came to light that the contract YouTube TV had to offer some 14+ channels from NBCUniversalâ"NBC, Telemundo, MSNBC, Golf, etc.â"was set to expire on Thursday. Negotiations were reportedly at an impasse, and if the companies couldnât reach a deal, all those NBCU channels would disappear from YouTube TV streams. NBCU, it seemed, wanted YouTube parent company Google to bundle its own streaming service, Peacock, with YouTube TV. The streaming service, meanwhile, wanted âthe same rates that services of a similar size get from NBCU so we can continue offering YouTube TV to members at a fair price,â according to a blog post. On Thursday, the companies agreed to a âshortâ extension to keep the NBCU channels on YouTube TV.
The outcome of this dustup notwithstanding, it was a harbinger of the fact that navigating the streaming wars doesnât really feel that different from navigating cable. Or, as our colleagues over at Ars Technica put it, âThe dispute is a reminder that the bundling practices common to cable and satellite TV may not be eliminated by the rise of streaming services.â Streaming was supposed to help users cut the cord; more and more, it seems like itâs just out to replace the rope.
Yes, we at WIRED have said some version of this before. Earlier this year, I argued that as media companies consolidated, consumers would ultimately end up with another Big Threeâ" that CBS, ABC, and NBC would ultimately lose territory to, say, Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, and Disney+. That still seems fairly likely. But the new battleground the YouTube TV and NBCU fracas opens up is one centered on carriers. The whole promise of streaming was that content providers could go direct-to-consumer. You want everything Disney has? Get Disney+. Love nature shows and home makeovers? Get Discovery+. But now there are so many services that viewers and companies are desperate to find ways to, in the parlance of the industry, bundle themâ"something that might feel like deja vu to anyone who ever tried to make the hard decisions involved in choosing between basic or premium cable packages.
Take, for example, Hulu. The service has become something of a stalwart of the streaming game for a while now. But folks forget that it started as an effort by the parent companies of NBC, ABC, and Fox to offer those channels on a Netflix-like service. It was meant to be a way for legacy networks to get in on the streaming action. In 2019, after Disney closed its $71 billion acquisition of Fox, it gained control of Hulu in a separate arrangement with NBCUniversalâs parent company Comcast. Now, consumers can get Hulu in a bundle with Disney+ and ESPN+, since, of course, ESPN is also a Disney property. Thereâs also now FX on Hulu, which gives Hulu subscribers access to a lot of premium Fox content. A Disney channel, ESPN, and FX? If that doesnât feel like one of the cable packages of yore, nothing does.
This is where things get hairy, though. As part of Disneyâs deal for control of Hulu, Comcast agreed to continue to license NBCUniversal content to Hulu until 2024, but NBCU retained the rights to pull back some of its programming that was exclusively licensed to Hulu. With the launch of Peacock last year, it stood to reason that NBCU would eventually want a lot of its programming on that service to bolster its appeal to consumers.
Which leads us back to YouTube TV. The beauty of Googleâs service is that it offers dozens of channelsâ"including news, live sports, and premium contentâ"and perks like DVR storage without BS like annual contracts or cable box rental fees. It's a cord-cutterâs dream. But now, as this weekâs scuffle with NBCU shows, YouTube, and services like it, could be facing some tough battles to keep all of the channels theyâre offeringâ"and may end up bundling other services in with their own to stay in the game. YouTube TV is OK for now, but this era of the streaming wars is only just beginning.
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