James joins two other area attorneys general in sending the letter to Altice CEO Dennis Mathew expressing frustration with ...
Altice, which counts key cable systems in New York as part of its Optimum service, is also in a carriage dispute with MSG Networks, led by James L. Dolan, whose family used to operate Cablevision, ...
Three weeks after being removed from Optimum TV, the network is wiling to settle the dispute in binding arbitration via neutral third party.
The cabler is now in the midst of yet another carriage dispute, this time with the local TV station owner Nexstar. The dispute has caused dozens of local affiliates of ABC, CBS, Fox, and NBC to go ...
New York sports fans are being put in the penalty box, forced to shell out their hard-earned money for television channels ...
The carriage dispute between MSG Networks and Altice-owned Optimum has been messy. The broadcast home of the New York Knicks, New York Rangers, New York Islanders, and New Jersey Devils is now ...
Last week, 63 Nexstar Media Group local stations and cable network NewsNation went dark due to the carriage dispute. Like other pay-TV operators, Altice has struggled with cord-cutting and has ...
Both sides on Friday continued to trade blame in the so-called carriage dispute, signaling that the blackout may not end anytime soon. Fans will continue to be real the losers in the game ...
New York Attorney General Letitia James pressed MSG Networks and Altice — the parent company of Optimum — to settle the ongoing dispute that has left Knicks, Rangers, Islanders and Devils fans ...
The CEO of Altice USA has suggested the company's carriage dispute with MSG Networks might go on longer than anticipated.