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If you’ve awakened this Saturday, the first of October, only to realize that you’ll be unable to watch a bunch of college football, your favorite Disney show, or a good handful of other channels on Sling TV, there’s a good reason for that. Sling TV’s contact with Disney has run out, and the two companies failed to reach an agreement in time for you to keep watching the things you’re paying to watch.
This isn’t unusual — we’ve seen it before with pretty much every streaming service, from YouTube TV to Hulu and, of course Sling TV.
As to where you should direct your ire? Sling says it’s Disney’s fault. “Our goal and priority is to reach an agreement with Disney that ensures you get the best possible value from Sling,” the company said on its “promise” page of its website. “We are working to bring your channels back as quickly as possible.” It went on to say that “We offered Disney a contract extension to keep working towards an agreement and avoid any interruption to your service. They refused this offer.”
This always comes down to money, but we have no idea whether Sling’s offer was reasonable, or of Disney’s ask was too high. But Sling did that that “Disney, like many other channel owners, use this contract renewal period to try and increase the amount of money companies pay for their programming. Disney hopes that by doing this, you will get upset and ultimately contact Sling to put pressure on us to accept their higher rates.”
On the flip side, Disney likely would say that Sling’s offer doesn’t meet the cost increases necessitated by the growing market across all sectors something something business something.
It’s a tired back-and-forth that ultimately affects subscribers more than anyone, and it will end one of two ways: Either the companies come to terms and the channels return, or they don’t. Sling, for its part, didn’t say anything about whether its monthly fees will be prorated while the nearly three dozen channels are gone.
It’s just a question of who blinks first.
Here are all the channels that have gone dark on Sling TV:
ABC News Live
ACC Network
ACC Network Extra
BabyTV
BabyTV
BabyTV Arabic
BabyTV French
BabyTV Latino
BabyTV Mandarin
BabyTV Portuguese
Disney Channel
Disney Jr
Disney XD
ESPN
ESPN 2
ESPN 3
ESPN Deportes
ESPN OnDemand
ESPNEWS
ESPNU
FX
FXM
FXX
Freeform
Jimmy Kimmel Live
Longhorn Network
Nat Geo
Nat Geo Mundo
Nat Geo Wild
Polish
SEC Network
SEC+
Sling TV is believed to be the third-largest live streaming service in the United States with about 2.2 million subscribers. It’s behind YouTube TV (more than 5 million subs) and Hulu With Live TV (4 million subs). Sling TV is available on every major streaming platform. It’s claim to fame is its $35-a-month plans that have fewer channels that you might be used to, but that you augment with optional “Extras” to build out your service. It’s not quite a la carte streaming, but it’s as close as we can get.
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