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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1995-02-26
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<text id=94TT1197>
<title>
Sep. 05, 1994: Telecommunications:Lights Camera Dial
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Sep. 05, 1994 Ready to Talk Now?:Castro
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
TELECOMMUNICATIONS, Page 56
Lights! Camera! Dial Tone!
</hdr>
<body>
<p> The Baby Bells turn to Hollywood in their race with cable companies
to wire America's homes for two-way TV
</p>
<p>By John Greenwald--Reported by David S. Jackson/San Francisco and Suneel Ratan/Washington
</p>
<p> Not since the breakup of AT&T 10 years ago has America's $250
billion telecommunications industry been so discombobulated.
First came the news last week that LDDS Communications, a Mississippi-based
long-distance company, had agreed to pay $2.5 billion for the
WilTel long-distance unit of the Williams Cos. Then came word
that a federal judge had cleared the way for AT&T to complete
its $12.6 billion acquisition of McCaw Cellular, the nation's
largest cellular-phone company.
</p>
<p> In its original intent, the AT&T bust-up opened up competition
in long-distance service and gave each of the seven new Baby
Bells control of the local market in its part of the country.
But the ultimate significance of the breakup, as has become
clear, is that it made inevitable the war of all-against-all
that today rages among telephone, cable and long-distance companies
for the nation's computers, phones and television screens.
</p>
<p> Until recently, many thought that cable operators had the advantage,
at least in the competition to wire the country for two-way
TV. But now, as Congress considers a sweeping deregulation bill
that would give cable and phone companies broad latitude to
invade each other's territory, it is obvious that the not-so
Baby Bells have no intention of letting the cable companies
win this war. No longer able to stay at home and reap monopoly
revenues that average $12 billion apiece, the once somnolent
siblings are turning on one another, bashing other rivals and
forming partnerships to provide home screens with everything
from movies-on-demand to video shopping malls.
</p>
<p> And why not? The Bells have phone lines running to virtually
every house and workplace in America, along with the high-speed
switches to route complex signals among millions of users and
keep track of the billing. Moreover, new technology has created
the ability to translate all audio and video information into
digital bits that can be sent over phone wires. Of course the
Bells, like their cable-TV rivals, must upgrade their lines
into combinations of fiber-optic and coaxial cable so they can
transport in two directions the volume of films and other fare
they hope to offer. And they must also play catch-up with cable
when it comes to providing the entertainment.
</p>
<p> That's why the Bells have been going Hollywood. Three weeks
ago, the Walt Disney Co., whose chairman, Michael Eisner, had
until recently seemed to disdain two-way TV, agreed to team
up with Ameritech, BellSouth and Southwestern Bell to develop
and distribute movies, games and other programs to home viewers.
Not to be outdone, Hollywood dealmeister Michael Ovitz, who
heads the powerful Creative Artists Agency, has reportedly been
meeting with nynex, Bell Atlantic and Pacific Telesis to discuss
the creation of a company of their own that would make and distribute
films.
</p>
<p> This drive for two-way TV also helps explain the Bells' growing
appetite for acquiring cable operations. In July, US West agreed
to pay $1.2 billion for two Atlanta cable systems over which
it plans to provide interactive-TV service. Among other deals,
Texas-based Southwestern Bell reached halfway across the country
last year to acquire a pair of cable systems outside Washington.
Not only is Southwestern Bell gearing up to provide two-way
viewing over those systems, but next year it intends to offer
telephone service over those same lines and thereby challenge
local phone giant Bell Atlantic on its home ground. (Bell Atlantic
is hardly snoozing; it is spending $11 billion for fiber-optic
cables and other equipment to bring the information highway
to 8 million homes by the year 2000.)
</p>
<p> For consumers, these developing rivalries could mean lower phone
and cable-TV bills. In the Washington area, Southwestern Bell
plans to offer discounts of as much as 20% below Bell Atlantic's
phone rates. In Britain, where US West and nynex joined with
British partners and have provided telephone service over cable-TV
wires since 1991, subscribers now save an average of 15% on
their monthly phone bills.
</p>
<p> Whatever benefits the telecommunications war yields consumers,
it is financially no-contest between the telephone and cable
combatants. Thanks to their local phone monopolies, each Baby
Bell rakes in more revenues in a year than does the entire cable-TV
industry. That, plus the phone companies' long experience with
two-way communications, has led some experts to predict that
cable firms will have to merge or form joint ventures with the
Bells, or with a giant like AT&T, to survive in the interactive
era. Cable leaders who have tried this include John Malone,
chairman of Tele-Communications Inc., the No. 1 U.S. cable company,
whose proposed merger with Bell Atlantic fizzled last February.
</p>
<p> Malone still sounds like a man looking for a telephone partner.
In an interview this summer in Wired magazine, he hinted that
he would love to offer cellular or long-distance phone service
to his cable-TV customers. "If I can do a deal with an MCI,
or AT&T or Sprint," the magazine quoted Malone as saying, "then
I have stronger brands to play with than the ((Bells)) do."
</p>
<p> Other cable companies are already venturing into the telephone
business. Among them: Time Warner, the media giant and No. 2
cable firm, which is building a two-way TV system in Orlando,
Florida. The company, which last year sold a 26% stake in its
cable and entertainment divisions to US West for $2.5 billion,
plans to offer local phone service to Time Warner cable customers
in Rochester, New York, in 1995. In preparation for that and
future phone moves, Time Warner joined TCI and other major cable
firms three weeks ago in unveiling plans to spend what could
amount to more than $2 billion for hardware and software that
would deliver phone service over cable lines. "They're getting
into the telephone business for the same reason Willie Sutton
robbed banks," said a cable-network executive. "That's where
the money is."
</p>
<p> All these companies are warily watching the telecommunications
bill now in Congress, which would sweep away 60 years of regulations
and create the legal framework for the industry in the 21st
century. The measure, which passed the House in June and won
Senate Commerce Committee approval three weeks ago, would permit
the Bells to offer cable-TV and long-distance services to all
their customers. But Bell lobbyists plan to attack any version
that delays the Bells' entry into the long-distance market until
after cable companies have first invaded the local phone business.
</p>
<p> Such disputes could doom the bill and throw the most contentious
issues back to regulators and the courts. But any talk of a
defeated bill alarms Reed Hundt, the chairman of the Federal
Communications Commission, who argues that the creaky regulations
now in effect threaten to delay the arrival of two-way TV. Says
he: "It would be a huge mistake to underestimate the current
barriers to competition."
</p>
<p> Regardless of the bill's fate, few experts are ready to bet
entirely on the Bells in the struggle to construct a profitable
information highway. For one thing, the phone companies have
virtually no experience in creating programs for the newly wired
homes. One of the Bells' biggest rivals in the information race
scoffs at the deal between Disney and three Baby Bells as "showboating"
and "premature." Concurs TCI senior vice president Bob Thomson:
"There's still a lot of hype going on amongst the Bells. There's
quite a bit of smoke flying around."
</p>
<p> Even if the phone companies manage to procure enough high-quality
programming, other handicaps could stall their drive toward
two-way TV. Although they lead in the race to lay fiber-optic
cable, much of it was originally installed to carry a high volume
of phone traffic into cities and therefore does not connect
to individual homes; instead, the fiber-optic trunk lines branch
into twisted pairs of copper wires, which carry far less information
directly to the customer. That means the companies must either
replace this so-called last mile with fiber-optic cable or find
a way to compress the data through the thin copper openings.
</p>
<p> That is at least in part why phone companies like Pacific Bell,
which has already laid 350,000 miles of fiber-optic cable, are
eagerly waiting to purchase a new generation of fast video "servers"
that squeeze movies and other programming down to the right
size and deliver them to customers virtually on demand. Hewlett-Packard
and other manufacturers are scrambling to roll out such servers
by next year at prices of up to $20 million.
</p>
<p> But in the turbulent world of telecommunications, what seems
to be opportunities can often turn into pratfalls. In early
August the fcc auctioned off licenses to provide two-way TV
over cellular systems. A total of 178 companies submitted winning
bids totaling $215 million. Yet nearly 30 of the winners soon
defaulted, and the government expects to collect only about
$130 million of the original amount.
</p>
<p> Such problems make executives like Steve Harris, Pacific Bell's
vice president for external affairs, sound uncharacteristically
diffident in an industry full of grand predictions. His sum-up:
"It's too early to call this race."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>