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GE Pushing Forward With Deal to Sell NBC to Comcast

Variety reports that General Electric is going to buy 20% of NBC Universal. The 20% stake is currently owned by French media company Vivendi SA. After that purchase is completed, GE will then turn around and sell 51% of NBC Universal to Comcast, the U.S.' biggest cable company.
An agreement was supposed to have been announced weeks ago, but GE's talks with Vivendi have been taking longer than expected. Vivendi knew it had a strong hand -- GE wants to sell part of NBC Universal to raise money after suffering losses in its GE Capital unit. Meanwhile, Comcast wants to beef up its programming assets with a marquee name at a price it could handle -- around $5 to $7 billion cash plus contribution of its cable networks to a joint venture that would house the new NBC Universal.

Vivendi also could use the money. Two weeks ago, it invested $4.2 billion to take control of Brazilian telecom operator GVT. However, a Vivendi executive had said the company might decide not to exercise its annual window -- which ends Dec. 10 -- to sell its stake in NBC Universal. Vivendi hoped to get more than $6 billion for its NBC Universal holdings but $6 billion was GE's ceiling, the person said. The Wall Street Journal has reported that GE would pay $5.8 billion for the stake.

Comcast's agreement with GE is set and won't be affected by whatever price GE ends up paying Vivendi. Comcast wants NBC Universal largely for its lucrative cable channels. NBC Universal spans the NBC and Telemundo broadcast networks; cable channels such as Bravo and CNBC; the Universal Pictures movie studio and Universal theme parks.
Comcast has said it will make lots of changes at NBC, including charging people to watch shows on Hulu.com. That is going to make a lot of tv viewers very angry.

Posted on November 30, 2009
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YouTube Inks New Programming Deals

YouTube just inked deals with Sony, Lionsgate, BBC, Starz, Discovery and National Geographic in a bid to increase its premium content offerings. YouTube will offer full length-movies and television shows for free on its site to compete with Hulu. But, unlike Hulu, users won't actually watch the movies on YouTube. Instead, they get sent somewhere else.
Pact isn't considered a traditional content licensing deal because in order to watch the videos, users will be directed to separate destinations operated by the partners. For example, Sony will offer a selection of movies to YouTube. But when users click on the pics, they’ll be sent to Crackle.com, the studio's branded destination for movies and TV shows, which are free to view. Site makes its money from selling ads.

Sony has 60 movies currently on Crackle but will provide YouTube with only a dozen pics. "It's all about driving traffic to Crackle," said a source close to the deal. Content from other partners will similarly send viewers to their owners' proprietary websites.
We don't see how this competes with Hulu.com, which is a great site we use all the time. Why go to YouTube at all, when you can just go straight to Crackle?

Posted on April 16, 2009
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