Houston Chronicle Sunday

Cable TV is quickly going the way of the landline

- By Shira Ovide

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 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 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.

Olgeirson and other TV experts I have been speaking to did not single out one tipping point in cable TV’s big shrink. They said the downward trend was more like a series of creeping changes.

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 realizatio­n 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 would 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. Streaming is also a tough business. And including services 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.

I have always loved TV. I felt like a real grown-up when I first started to pay a mammoth TV bill. I had scaled back my cable package, but then a few months ago I was notified that my bill was going to increase by about $10 a month.

That was it. I’m a no-cable household now, too.

 ?? New York Times ?? Just a decade ago, 85 percent of American households paid for TV.
New York Times Just a decade ago, 85 percent of American households paid for TV.

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