One year without Current TV

Original Current TV Logo

Current TV would definitely be discussed in the classes that I teach.

The original format of Current TV is my all time favorite concept for a cable network.  Its 4-5 years on air were something special.  It is heartbreaking, at least to me that it is no longer on the air.

The network, which launched in 2005, was owned by Al Gore (who you all know) and a guy named Joel Hyatt (who you probably don’t know).  Instead of traditional programming, it showed what they liked to call “pods”.  They were short news documentary pieces produced by not only their in house staff, but also by viewers.  If a viewer got their video on the network, they were paid a minimum of $500.

Like many cable networks, especially those not owned by a big media company with a lot of other channels to its name, it had trouble getting distribution.  Cablevision never carried it.  (I even created a “Get Current TV on Cablevision” group on Facebook, since I was so passionate about it).

In 2009, Current changed its format to more of a traditional news channel, anchored by Keith Olbermann.  It was the beginning of the end.  Olbermann didn’t last a year.

Current was eventually sold to Al Jazeera, using its assets to start Al Jazeera America.  Part of that is an online network called AJ+, based out of Current’s former San Francisco office.

The original format of Current TV was brilliant.  I was surprised that it never was duplicated.

Slingbox is legal but Aereo isn’t?

Aereo doesn't work anymore...
Aereo doesn’t work anymore…

The Supreme Court ruled that Aereo is illegal, and violated copyright laws.  The winning argument was that Aereo was rebroadcasting broadcast TV over the Internet without the permission of those stations.

However, since Slingbox, which has been around for a decade is legal, and Aereo is not, I am confused.

Slingbox is a device that plugs into a cable box (and or TV antenna) and broadband router, and lets people watch that broadcast content over the Internet.

Theoretically, one could rent an apartment or hotel, pay for Internet access and a TV antenna, plug it into a router, and never actually live there, yet have live broadcast TV over the Internet.  Essentially, that’s how Aereo was run.

However, since such a service was designed to serve many customers, the Supreme Court classified Aereo in the same level as a cable provider, and would have to pay cable companies fees that they successfully negotiate with each other (not a sure thing), if they want to continue to exist.

So, Aereo-like services are now only legal (for now), if they are private.  I guess I need a device like Simple TV if I want to stream broadcast TV to my Roku and mobile devices…