FCC Sides With NFL Network In Comcast Dispute
October 11th, 2008 | 3 Comments | Email | Share | TweetThe Federal Communications Commission has sided with the National Football League in a long-running programming dispute with Comcast, ruling that Comcast should carry the league’s NFL Network on its popular digital cable package. In a decision released late Friday, the FCC ruled that Comcast discriminated against the NFL Network by agreeing to carry the channel only on a more expensive sports cable service. The NFL filed the complaint against Comcast in May. The FCC ruling now goes before an administrative law judge, who could force Comcast to carry the NFL programming at a certain price.
Comcast has argued that consumers will have to pay more for programming many may not want if the company is forced to include the NFL Network in its regular digital cable package. In a statement, the company said its “programming decisions are in the best interest of our consumers and consistent with the law,” adding that “forcing these networks onto our cable systems will cost consumers millions of dollars and cause cable prices to rise.”
I have been waiting for the NFL Network and have been pretty offended that Comcast actually wanted me to pay more money to have it. After just raising all their fees around $4 a month, those greedy Comcast executives will probably use this judgement to raise the bills another $4 a month.

I’m very disappointed with this ruling. I do not want to be forced to have such an expensive channel as part of my service. The FCC makes another anti-consumer decision.
See that’s what Comcast wants you to think – that its expensive. It’s not. Comcast just wants to be able to charge money for the NFL Network. DirecTV offers the NFL Network at no additional charge and their plans are cheaper compared to Comcast.
Actually, the NFL charges charges Comcast about 70 cents per subscriber. I propose a reasonable–about a dollar–surcharge for NFL Network. It’s not fair to transfer the cost to people who didn’t want the network in the first place. See the abstract of my article here: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1311891
Sports and Entertainment Law Society at Vermont Law: http://sba.vermontlaw.edu/groups/sels/about.html