Time Warner Cable

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Time Warner Cable
Time Warner Cable logo
Type Subsidiary of Time Warner
Founded 1989
Headquarters Stamford, Conn.
Charlotte, N.C.
Houston, Tex.
Key people Glenn A. Britt, Chairman and CEO
Industry Communications
Products Digital Cable
Road Runner (ISP) High-Speed Internet
Digital Phone Telecommunications
Time Warner Cable Media Sales Cable Advertising
NY1 News Local News Station
RNews Local News Station
Capital News 9 Local News Station
News 10 Now Local News Station
News 14 Carolina Local News Stations
News 8 Austin
Local News Station
Metro Sports Local Sports Station
MetroWeather Local Weather Station
Revenue $9.498 Billion (2005)
Employees 84,900
Slogan The Power Of You
Website Time Warner Cable

Time Warner Cable is an American national cable television company that operates in 27 states and has 31 operating divisions. Its corporate headquarters are located in Stamford, Connecticut; Houston, Texas; and in Charlotte, North Carolina. It is a division of Time Warner Inc.

Contents

[edit] History

Time Warner Cable was formed in 1989 through the merger of Time Inc.'s cable television company, American Television and Communications Corp., and Warner Cable, a division of Warner Communications.

[edit] Acquisition of Adelphia

On July 31, 2006, Time Warner Cable and Comcast completed a deal to purchase practically all of Adelphia's assets for $17 billion [1]. Time Warner Cable will gain 3.3 million of Adelphia's subscribers, a 29 percent increase, while Comcast will gain 1.7 million subscribers. Time Warner Inc. is giving Adelphia stockholders 16% stock of Time Warner Cable, and Adelphia is required to sell at least one-third of the Time Warner Cable stock it received within three months of the offering.

As well as Adelphia's coverage being divided up, Time Warner Cable and Comcast have also agreed to exchange some of their own subscribers in order to consolidate key regions, an example of this is the Los Angeles market, which was mostly covered by Comcast and Adelphia, is now under Time Warner Cable. Philadelphia, which had Time Warner as a choice in certain sections of the City ,and the rest Comcast. Time Warner Subcribers will be Switched over to Comcast by December 2006. Houston area, which was under Time Warner, will be under Comcast [2]. The change in the Houston market, which is expected to take place at least by January 2007, will take place when federal regulators approve of the change.


On December 6th 2006, Time Warner Cable executives announced to employees that it will close the Coudersport, PA Advanced Products Customer Care center on February 5th 2007. The APCC was acquired in the Adelphia purchase . This decision, coming only weeks before Christmas, stunned the the 500 employees who will become jobless in the small rural community of Coudersport, PA.

Coudersport was the hometown of John Rigas of the Adelphia scandal fame, and the town was on a strong rebound from the Rigas scandal, prior to the news that the community's primary source of income, and jobs would soon be closed by Time Warner Cable.

[edit] Advance/Newhouse and Time Warner

Some of the regional cable system clusters operated by Time Warner Cable are owned by the Time Warner Entertainment - Advance/Newhouse Partnership (TWEAN). In 2002, Advance/Newhouse Communications, unhappy with some of the operating policies of Time Warner Cable in the AOL Time Warner era, forced a restructuring of the TWEAN partnership such that Advance/Newhouse would actively manage and operate a portion of the jointly owned cable systems equal to their percentage of equity. Under this arrangement, Advance/Newhouse enjoys the proceeds of their actively managed systems rather than simply a percentage of the partnerships total earnings. The majority of the affected systems are in the Tampa and Orlando markets under the Bright House Networks brand.

The value of this deal is that it allows Advance/Newhouse to more directly control their cable investments without having to completely unravel the TWEAN partnership, which does bring some benefits via Time Warner's development and purchasing clout.

[edit] Sprint Nextel Venture

In late 2005, TWC and several other cable companies formed a venture with Sprint Nextel. This caused TWC customers to receive a full suite of products, linking in-home and out-of-home entertainment, information, and communications services. All of this was included in the new "Quadruple Play", similar to the Triple Play but an addition of new services through Sprint Nextel.

[edit] Start Over

Start Over allows customers to jump to the beginning of a program in progress without any preplanning or in-home recording devices and is available to digital cable subscribers at no additional charge.

[edit] History

Start Over was first launched to customers in South Carolina in November 2005. Time Warner Cable announced Start Over will become available this summer to customers in Greensboro, North Carolina; Rochester, New York; and San Antonio, Texas. In South Carolina, Time Warner Cable has made the Start Over functionality available on select programming from 62 networks.

Beginning in June, Time Warner Cable will deploy Start Over to customers in San Antonio. Deployments will continue throughout the summer into Rochester, followed by Greensboro. The service will be systematically rolled out in each of these divisions, launching neighborhood by neighborhood until Start Over is available to all customers in the market. Time Warner Cable expects to launch Start Over to customers in another three to four divisions later this year.

[edit] About It

Start Over is enabled by a software upgrade to the existing video on demand (VOD) platform and to the installed base of digital set top boxes. The Start Over system instantaneously captures live television programming for immediate, on demand viewing.

When tuning to a Start Over-enabled show in progress, customers are alerted to the feature through an on-screen prompt. By pressing "Select" on the remote control, the program is restarted from the beginning. Commercials will appear in the same sequence of the show as they would have in the initial telecast. Start Over-enabled programs can be restarted within the shows' telecast window.

[edit] Statistics

Within six months Start Over has become one of the most popular advanced services launched by Time Warner Cable. Seventy percent of those able to use Start Over are doing so about seven times each month and more than two-thirds use Start Over three times per week.

[edit] Carriage controversies

  • When The CW (which is half-owned by Time Warner) launched on September 18, 2006, a number of TWC systems did not carry the digital subchannels that the CW uses as affiliates in some areas. Among the stations whose subchannels are not carried on TWC are WCBD (DT2), Charleston, South Carolina; KVIA (DT2), El Paso, Texas; WLIO (DT2), Lima, Ohio; and KESQ (DT2), Palm Springs, California.
  • On August 1, 2006, Time Warner Cable removed the NFL Network from its lineup in areas it gained from its deal with Comcast to jointly purchase bankrupt cable company Adelphia's assets and to swap certain areas it served with areas Comcast served. Adelphia had carried the National Football League's 24-hour network on a digital tier, however, Time Warner Cable claims that the NFL now insists on making it into a premium channel on its systems.[3] As a result, NFL Network lost millions of cable households just as it is beginning a new contract to air eight regular-season games a year. On August 3, 2006, the FCC ordered Time Warner Cable to reinstate the NFL Network on those systems from which it had removed the channel, upholding the complaint that they had failed to comply with the required 30 day notice period required to be given to customers, before removing a channel.[4] After considering its options, Time Warner Cable restored the channel at midnight on August 4, 2006, with an onscreen notice warning the viewers the channel would be removed in 30 days. Time Warner Cable issued a petition to the FCC in an attempt to reverse the decision citing "severe, immediate and irreparable harm" to Time Warner Cable and its customers, and threatening legal action if the FCC did not reach a decision by 10am on August 7, 2006. On that day, the FCC responded to Time Warner Cable's petition by upholding the Commission's initial ruling that the NFL Network remain on the air for the required period. After two extensions of the deadline, TWC finally pulled the plug on September 15, 2006. "We will continue to negotiate and remain hopeful that an agreement will be reached that is beneficial to all", the network said in a statement that flashed on the screen in place of NFL Network.
  • On May 12, 2000, ABC network owned and operated stations were unavailable to TWC subscribers for 19 hours. The pullout, in a middle of a "sweeps" period, came because TWC could not agree with ABC's parent company, the Walt Disney Company, on whether to carry some specialty channels, like ESPN Classic and SoapNet. Those tuning in to stations like WABC in New York City or KABC in Los Angeles instead saw this static message, "Disney is taking ABC away from you." Thousands of people bought antennas from Radio Shack and other stores to view ABC programs, and KABC-AM in L.A. carried the audio feed of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire, then the network's highest-rated program. Amidst huge public outcry, and threats of Congressional action, TWC and ABC reached a new deal to put the ABC stations back on the systems.
  • On November 1, 2006, Starz! On Demand became available to some TWC subscribers. This came as a result of settlement of a long running dispute over its carriage. Starz! required this to be free to their subscribers, however Time Warner Cable insisted on packaging all Premium On Demand channels in a separate tier which would require an additional monthly fee for Starz subscribers. Several key TWC markets (such as Albany, NY) still do not carry the Starz! On Demand channel.
  • In another on-demand development, TWC had to modify "Dodgers on Demand", a joint venture with the Los Angeles Dodgers, on its systems in the Los Angeles area. In September of 2006, Major League Baseball ordered TWC to remove the service, saying that MLB Advanced Media has rights to all interactive content taken from its games. TWC and the Dodgers responded by removing most highlights, excluding those from the team's 2006 Division Series loss to the New York Mets, which came from a newscast on KCBS.
  • On October 4, 2006, TWC reached a new carriage agreement with Fox Television Stations Group-owned stations KDFW and KDFI, respective affiliates of Fox and MyNetworkTV in the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex. Before that, a message was scrolling on a leased access channel saying, "Please be advised that pending progress of ongoing negotiations, Time Warner may be forced to discontinue carriage of KDFW and KDFI. While we remain hopeful that further negotiations are being made to keep KDFW and KDFI programming in the lineup, we're letting customers know in advance of this issue." Had the stations been pulled as threatened, most Dallas Cowboys games would have been unavailable to TWC subscribers. There is also a similiar problem with WSAZ in Huntington, West Virginia over its My Network TV digital subchannel, My Z. However, the dispute has yet to be resolved.

[edit] Channels

  • Free On Demand - free on demand programming.
  • Multichannel Premiums - 38 channels, includes HBO, Cinemax, Showtime, TMC, Starz, and Encore
  • Sports inDemand
    • NBA League Pass - sports (basketball) package.
    • MLB Extra Innings - sports (baseball) package. See up to 60 baseball matches.
    • NHL Center Ice - sports (hockey) package.
    • MLS Direct Kick - sports (soccer) package.
    • NASCAR In Car - sports (racing (NASCAR)) package.
    • ESPN Full Court - sports package
    • ESPN GamePlan - sports package
  • HDTV
    • HDXtra - HDTV package
  • International Programming - international channels
  • DTV en Español - DTV in Spanish

[edit] Cable Clusters

Info as of 12/31/05. More than 75% of the company's customers are in systems of 300,000 subscribers or more.

These numbers do not reflect the addition of 3.5 million Adelphia customers as of August 1, 2006.

[edit] Divisions

Time Warner Cable's 52 Divisions, from Time Warner's 2006 Corporate Profile and from official website.

  • Oceanic Time Warner Cable (Hawaii)
  • Time Warner Cable Alabama
  • Time Warner Cable Albany
  • Time Warner Cable Austin
  • Time Warner Cable Barstow
  • Time Warner Cable Binghamton
  • Time Warner Cable Border Corridor
  • Time Warner Cable Charlotte
  • Time Warner Cable Cincinnati +
  • Time Warner Cable Clarksburg
  • Time Warner Cable Dayton/Miami Valley +
  • Time Warner Cable Desert Cities
  • Time Warner Cable Eastern Carolina (Wilmington)
  • Time Warner Cable Erie
  • Time Warner Cable Fort Benning
  • Time Warner Cable Golden Triangle
  • Time Warner Cable Greensboro
  • Time Warner Cable Houma
  • Time Warner Cable Houston - Flagship Division
  • Time Warner Cable Hudson Valley
  • Time Warner Cable Jackson, MS/Monroe, LA
  • Time Warner Cable Kansas City
  • Time Warner Cable Kerrville
  • Time Warner Cable Lake City/Live Oak (Merging with Comcast)
  • Time Warner Cable Los Angeles
  • Time Warner Cable Mid-South (Memphis, TN, AR, and MS)
  • Time Warner Cable Mid-Ohio (Columbus)
  • Time Warner Cable Minnesota (Now Comcast)
  • Time Warner Cable Myrtle Beach
  • Time Warner Cable National (non-clustered systems)
  • Time Warner Cable Nebraska (Lincoln)
  • Time Warner Cable New England (Portland, ME and Berlin and Keene, NH)
  • Time Warner Cable New York and New Jersey
  • Time Warner Cable North Texas (Dallas) (Merging with Comcast)
  • Time Warner Cable Northeast Ohio (Akron)
  • Time Warner Cable Northeastern Wisconsin (Green Bay)
  • Time Warner Cable Raleigh
  • Time Warner Cable Rochester
  • Time Warner Cable San Antonio
  • Time Warner Cable San Diego
  • Time Warner Cable Shreveport (Merging with Comcast)
  • Time Warner Cable South Carolina (Columbia)
  • Time Warner Cable South Central
  • Time Warner Cable Southeastern Wisconsin (Milwaukee)
  • Time Warner Cable Southern California
  • Time Warner Cable Southern Tier New York
  • Time Warner Cable Southwest (Corpus Christi, Laredo, El Paso, Harlingen, etc.)
  • Time Warner Cable Southwest Florida
  • Time Warner Cable Southwest Ohio (Miami Valley & Cincinnati)
  • Time Warner Cable St. Augustine/Palatka
  • Time Warner Cable St. John
  • Time Warner Cable Syracuse
  • Time Warner Cable Terre Haute
  • Time Warner Cable Western New York (Buffalo)
  • Time Warner Cable Wichita Falls

+ In August 2006, Time Warner Cable merged Dayton & Cincinnati into "Southwest Ohio" and moved much of the former Dayton customers in Northwest Ohio north of a line running from Mercer & Auglaize counties to the Mid-Ohio (Columbus) division.

[edit] Statistics

As of August 1st, 2006, there were 14.5 million basic cable subscribers, 5.6 million Digital cable subscribers, 5.2 million Road Runner residential subscribers, 1.7 million DVR subscribers, and 1.4 million Digital Phone subscribers.

[edit] External links


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