Wednesday, July 18, 2012

The Television Programmers versus Distributors Cat Fight


DirecTV subscribers currently do not have Viacom channels, some of them good, as part of their subscriptions. Dish network’s subscribers currently do not have AMC channels, home to the mesmerizing and Albuquerque located Breaking Bad, as part of their subscriptions. The programming providers want more money for their product. Seemingly nothing wrong with that, except that product is bundled as part of larger packages distributed to customers and that more money will come from increased prices for those customers which might lead to canceled subscriptions, resulting in lower revenues to distributors. Both sides have launched cheesy campaigns worthy of a slimy political contest in attempts to blame the other side for their joint issues and distract the consumer from their ever growing monthly television bill. This cat fight is one in which the observer hopes both sides lose leading to a revamped home television entertainment model, one in which consumers can choose the programming they want. Currently, customers only have the choice of packages determined by distributors who have to include packages sold to them by programmers. It’s an outdated and doomed model; the only question is when the transition will take place. The sooner, the better.

The Most Inane Comparison in the World


Apparently July is the emptiest of all months in the sporting universe. As proof, the only proof necessary, is the kerfuffle over the supposed theoretical victor in an altogether impossible basketball game between the original Olympic dream team of 1992 and today’s of 2012. This idiotic episode was prompted by a question posed a few weeks back to Kobe Bryant pondering who would win. Kobe, often regarded as a legendarily competitive athlete, answered in the somewhat hesitant affirmative. There are almost endless reasons why there is absolutely no way to know which team would win in this theoretical matchup, the first being the absence of time travel (required for resolution). Unfortunately, this unconditional fact was no deterrent whatsoever to many commentators determined to opine; leading to many unlistenable sports radio shows and unreadable sports news websites for almost a week. Recently, the argument mercifully jumped the shark with President Obama jumping on board to declare his support for the 1992 team, the conventional (yet still completely subjective and unprovable) answer given by most. This whole episode might seem to be innocuous and it could have been but the indignation displayed by some commentators with regard to a question without an answer, completely based on subjective feelings, was so stupid, inane and annoying that it begs for scorn. It wouldn’t prove anything but maybe Michael Jordan, who appears to have taken to retirement donut in hand, will lead the 1992 team back onto the court one more time in an attempt to end this national nightmare.

Monday, July 09, 2012

More "Fair" Claptrap


In silly, over-the-top, disconnected from reality overtly political statements for the day the President of the United States of America makes his pitch for raising tax rates on families with incomes more than $250,000 per year:


Taking the President’s words as literal, in his apparent understanding, Americans are supposed to think that because he supports raising taxes on a minority segment of the population, that those who do not think that raising anyone’s tax rates is economically sound are taking the rest of the population hostage because he will not support legislation maintaining all current tax rates. Seems a bit like projection.

The much derided “Bush” tax cuts of the early 2000’s are, as they have during President Obama’s entire misguided presidency, the object of much deranged scrutiny. Never mind that they have been the tax rates for nearly 10 years, actually resulted in increases in revenue collected year to year and maintained a progressive rate of taxation by income level (higher rates on higher income), these tax rates haunt political discussion like some kind of chupacabra of the fevered liberal mind.

The President was once asked if he would seek these kinds of increases even if they led to decreased revenue generation and he answered in the affirmative, under the auspices of “fairness”. Fairness being a word whose definition has been twisted to the point of being basically meaningless because it seems to mean anything to anyone. The plea to the majority is further discouraging because it illustrates a problem with direct democracy, don’t the minority of taxpayers deserve some kind of protection from confiscatory tax rates enabled by a majority? To some, there is no tax rate too high on and no problem that cannot be solved with other people’s money. How it is considered “fair” for one erstwhile “free” citizen to pay so much more, as a percentage of their lawfully earned gains, of the government’s activities than others is going to be a determining factor in this year’s election. Those who can conceive this as “fair” should not be surprised as the population of chupacabras shrinks; one wonders who or what they’ll blame next.

Thursday, May 31, 2012

The Paying College Athletes Issue


University of South Carolina football coach Steve Spurrier is advocating paying studentathletes a stipend of $3,500 to $4,000 per year. It sounds pleasant enough but, no matter the good intentions behind the concept, just won’t work. It may be true that the SEC can afford such payments but it isn’t likely that it can work for every other division 1 school. Football makes a lot of money and from a purely free market perspective it does not seem fair that the athletes playing don’t get a taste of that cash. However, these are student athletes and they are provided scholarships for up to five years that cover almost every expense. Because they are students as well as athletes (I know, I know but this isn’t a discussion comparing the ratio between student and athlete, however important), the money made from college football is effectively incidental. That money can be used to support other sports and sporting initiatives providing many other students with opportunities they wouldn’t otherwise have.

The most important reason though, is relative economics. UNM’s (36,322 students) University Stadium holds 40,094, with an average attendance in 2010 of 21,338. The most expensive individual tickets are $27. The University of Michigan’s (42,716 students) Michigan Stadium holds 109,901 and it costs $100 to get on a list to “beeligible to be offered individual game tickets” (in English this means one pays $100 to be able to purchase tickets if they are available), which I think answers the average attendance question. Notice a difference? The UNM football program doesn’t make enough to support paying its players; no doubt it’s not the only division 1 football team in the country in this situation.

And what of the loss of completion stemming from football teams unable to compete under this change and is it fair to not offer the same arrangement to other sports? Paying college athletes is a contentious argument and there are serious arguments in support of it. However, on balance it would be detrimental to college sports and unnecessarily blur the line between amateur and professional.

The Dogmatic Corporate Speech Police...


George Will’s latest column in the Washington Post examines the Montana Supreme Court’s decision to uphold a state ban of corporate political campaign contributions in defiance of the US Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens United decision. Because of US Supreme Court precedence and the absence of any changes to the first amendment of the United States Constitution the Montana decision is unconstitutional and will be struck down on appeal. Will’s column is interesting in that it introduces Montana's issue to many who wouldn’t otherwise know about it. More interesting is the comments on the article. There are many people unhappy with the Citizens United decision and the biggest reason is that some claim that corporations do not have a right to free speech because corporations are not people and that the right to free speech in the first amendment is an individual and not collective right. This line of thought is a distinction without a foundation. The first amendment of the constitution reads in its entirety:


There is nothing there about individual or collective rights, simply that congress shall (a legally binding word) make no law abridging the freedom of speech. Besides that, what is a corporation other than a group of people? If there is a desire to change the first amendment to divide rights between individuals and groups then those opposed to corporate personhood can try it (good luck with that), otherwise they have no validity. Just because they don’t like corporate speech doesn’t change that it’s speech.