Disney
and
DirecTV
are
back
in
business
with
each
other
after
a
carriage
dispute
that
has
kept
ESPN,
ABC,
and
other
Disney-owned
networks
off
of
the
cable
provider
since
the
beginning
of
September.
ESPN
and
other
channels
Disney
had
blocked
have
been
restored,
giving
DirecTV
subscribers
access,
once
again,
to
Monday
Night
Football,
college
football
games,
and
other
programming
from
Disney’s
channels.
As
part
of
the
deal,
DirecTV
will
offer
packages
that
include
Disney
Plus,
Hulu,
and
ESPN
Plus
as
bundles
or
a
la
carte
options.
It’ll
also
include
“Disney’s
upcoming
ESPN
flagship
direct-to-consumer
service”
when
it
launches,
for
no
extra
cost.
And
DirecTV
will
be
able
to
“offer
multiple
genre-specific
options
—
sports,
entertainment,
kids
&
family”
to
customers.
The
companies
issued
a
joint
statement
on
the
deal:
“Through
this
first-of-its-kind
collaboration,
DIRECTV
and
Disney
are
giving
customers
the
ability
to
tailor
their
video
experience
through
more
flexible
options.
DIRECTV
and
Disney
have
a
long-standing
history
of
connecting
consumers
to the
best
entertainment,
and
this
agreement
furthers
that
commitment
by
recognizing
both
the
tremendous
value
of
Disney’s
content
and
the
evolving
preferences
of
DIRECTV’s
customers.
We’d
like
to
thank
all
affected
viewers
for
their
patience
and
are
pleased
to
restore
Disney’s
entire
portfolio
of
networks
in
time
for
college
football
and
the
Emmy
Awards
this
weekend.”
Disney
and
DirecTV’s
spat
began
on
September
1st,
when
negotiations
between
the
two
for
a
new
carriage
deal
broke
down,
and
Disney
pulled
all
of
its
programming.
Disney
had
a
similar,
12-day
dispute
with
Charter
this
time
last
year,
blocking
its
channels
for
Spectrum
subscribers
in
the
middle
of
the
US
Open.
(Originally posted by Wes Davis)
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