Three Imaginary Girls

Seattle's Indie-Pop Press – Music Reviews, Film Reviews, and Big Fun

Finally – the nice guy plays hard ball!

I hope the Democrats take note of the recent balls Itunes has grown in dealing with mammoth NBC. When someone disrespects you, cut them off where it hurts asap and move on. Oh, and make it look like it's all "their" fault.

Here's the full scoop from MSNBC (also of interesting note… the webpage with this story features the quote: "MSNBC.com is a Microsoft – NBC Universal joint venture" — good to know that there's not a lot of bias on MSNBC.com's reporting from the AP feed):


iTunes to drop NBC shows before contract ends
Apple to stop selling news, sports, entertainment videos before fall season

Apple Inc. escalated a dispute with NBC Universal over the pricing of television shows by announcing Friday it would not sell any of NBC's programs for this fall season on iTunes.

Earlier, NBC had told Apple that it would no longer allow its programs to be sold via iTunes at the end of the year. NBC Universal-controlled television programming accounts for an estimated 40 percent of the video downloads on iTunes.

"We are disappointed to see NBC leave iTunes because we would not agree to their dramatic price increase," said Eddy Cue, Apple's vice president of iTunes. "We hope they will change their minds and offer their TV shows to the tens of millions of iTunes customers."

Rather than cut off NBC programs in the middle of the season, Apple decided to stop before the new fall episodes premiere next month, he said.

That would be a blow to fourth-place NBC, which could use the buzz provided by Internet sales for its programming — not to mention the money.

ABC, CBS, Fox and the CW, and 50 other cable networks, have deals in place to sell fall shows at iTunes' current price of $1.99 per episode, Apple said. NBC wanted Apple to pay more than double its wholesale price for the material, which would have resulted in the retail price increasing to $4.99, Apple said.

NBC had no immediate comment on Apple's move.

The company's contract to sell more than 1,500 hours of news, sports and entertainment programming on iTunes expires at the end of December. NBC fulfilled its requirement to inform Apple by Friday if the contract would not be renewed, said Amy Zelvin, spokeswoman for NBC Universal Digital.

The dispute illustrates unrest among content providers over Apple's pricing policies. Media companies want more say in pricing and, in NBC Universal's case, are eager to offer different packages by bundling programs at different prices. Similarly, record companies would like to see an increase in iTunes' sales price of 99 cents per song.

Availability of Web-popular programs like USA's "Psych," NBC's "30 Rock" and Sci Fi's "Battlestar Gallactica" would be affected by the non-renewal. It's not immediately clear when Apple intends to cut off sales of programs from NBC Universal's cable properties.

NBC Universal also wants iTunes to stiffen anti-piracy provisions so computer users would not have easy access to illegal downloads.