People who say they hate paying for cable TV often say they only want to pay for the networks they want to watch — not the bundles of networks pay TV providers require them to buy. Bundles aren’t going away anytime soon, since they’re the core of the pay TV business. But they are morphing a bit, because the pay TV guys are worried that people might really cut the cord — or, more likely, just never sign up for pay TV at all.
Here’s the latest: An offer from Verizon that lets its Fios TV customers buy a “skinny bundle” of TV channels, and then augment it with a variety of “channel packs” — groups of networks with similar themes, like a sports pack that includes ESPN and Fox Sports — that they can swap out each month. They can also buy extra ones for $10 each.
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In theory, this gives customers much more flexibility than traditional pay TV bundles.
We’ve seen other skinny bundles, both from traditional pay TV providers like Comcast* and new digital entrants like Dish’s Sling TV, which offers more than a dozen channels over the Web for $20 a month. Apple wants to launch something similar this fall.
But Verizon’s mix-and-match offer is the first to offer this kind of flexibility. And in theory, it could appeal to someone who, say, wanted to watch football in the fall, then swap out a sports package for something else in the spring.
People who say they hate paying for cable TV often say they only want to pay for the networks they want to watch — not the bundles of networks pay TV providers require them to buy.
Bundles aren’t going away anytime soon, since they’re the core of the pay TV business. But they are morphing a bit, because the pay TV guys are worried that people might really cut the cord — or, more likely, just never sign up for pay TV at all.
Here’s the latest: An offer from Verizon that lets its Fios TV customers buy a “skinny bundle” of TV channels, and then augment it with a variety of “channel packs” — groups of networks with similar themes, like a sports pack that includes ESPN and Fox Sports — that they can swap out each month. They can also buy extra ones for $10 each.
In theory, this gives customers much more flexibility than traditional pay TV bundles.
We’ve seen other skinny bundles, both from traditional pay TV providers like Comcast* and new digital entrants like Dish’s Sling TV, which offers more than a dozen channels over the Web for $20 a month. Apple wants to launch something similar this fall.
But Verizon’s mix-and-match offer is the first to offer this kind of flexibility. And in theory, it could appeal to someone who, say, wanted to watch football in the fall, then swap out a sports package for something else in the spring.
Peter Kafka









