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Time Warner Cable Helped Bankroll Pro-Cuomo Ads; $175,000 to Dems’ “Housekeeping” Fund

Phillip Dampier July 16, 2013 Consumer News, Public Policy & Gov't, Video 1 Comment
Time Warner Cable will get up to $4 million in tax breaks courtesy of New York taxpayers to create a new call center in Buffalo's now defunct Sheehan Hospital.

Time Warner Cable will get up to $4 million in tax breaks courtesy of New York taxpayers to create a new call center in Buffalo’s now defunct Sheehan Hospital.

Time Warner Cable donated $175,000 to the New York Democratic State Committee that aired a series of pro-Gov. Andrew Cuomo ads, including one touting the governor’s efforts to get corporate money out of politics.

The cable company donated the funds to the Committee’s “housekeeping” account, exempt from New York’s campaign finance laws which ordinarily limit the maximum amount a corporation can contribute to $5,000. The New York Democrats spent nearly $5.3 million to air the advertising on stations across the state this spring.

Asked how Cuomo could justify promoting campaign finance reform while exploiting various loopholes to accept unlimited corporate contributions, Cuomo told the Albany Times-Union, “It’s not a loophole — it’s the law.”

“You can only live within the system that exists,” Cuomo added. “As soon as the campaign finance system is changed — and I’ve worked very hard to change it, I’ll continue to work very hard to change it — no one will be more pleased than myself.”

[flv width=”640″ height=”380”]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/NY Dems Clean Up Albany Ad 5-8-13.flv[/flv]

Time Warner Cable, CBS, a giant teacher’s union and other large corporations helped pay to run this ad featuring New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo promising to cut the influence of money in politics. (1 minute)

Time Warner Cable was hardly alone. Other major donors were rooted out by the newspaper’s Capitol Confidential:

  • corporate-welfare-piggy-bank— $250,000 came from “Educators United,” an offshoot of the United Federation of Teachers.
  • — $200,000 arrived from the Hospitals Insurance Corporation.
  • — $750,000 from George Soros. His son, Jonathan, has been a vocal proponent of establishing a system of public campaign finance.
  • — Lucy Waletzky and Larry Rockefeller, children of Laurance Rockefeller and niece and nephew to Gov. Nelson A. and uber-banker David, each gave $25,000.
  • — Hedge funder James Simons, the founder of Renaissance Technologies, gave $1,000,000.
  • — $102,000 from “New Yorkers for Affordable Housing,” whatever the hell that is, an entity that shares an address with The Arker Companies’ Queens headquarters.
  • — $50,000 from SONY Pictures Entertainment, $25,000 from Paramount Pictures and $50,000 from CBS.
  • — $350,000 from Brookfield Properties, $200,000 from Tishman-Speyer and $100,000 from The Related Companies, all major New York City real estate firms.
  • — $150,000 from billionaire fertilizer tycoon Alexander Rovt.
  • — $200,000 from Leonard Litwin. Oh wait, I’m sorry: mega-donor Leonard Litwin’s name doesn’t appear in the filing. As is his wont, Litwin funneled his donations through various property-based LLCs he controls. New York’s glorious campaign finance laws treat an LLC like an individual.

Virtually all the donors have some business or regulatory dealings with the state government.

Last month, the governor’s office announced Time Warner Cable was being given taxpayer assistance to take over office space in the former Sheehan Hospital in Buffalo.

[flv width=”640″ height=”380″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WGRZ Buffalo Erie County IDA Approves Tax Breaks For Time Warner Cable 7-15-13.flv[/flv]

This week, the Erie County Industrial Agency approved $757,000 in additional tax abatements for Time Warner Cable. That does not include the $3.1 million in state and local tax breaks already granted the cable company in return for job creation at a new call center being opened in Buffalo. WGRZ-TV reports. (1 minute)

Frontier’s Latest Gambit: Frank the Buffalo Is Company’s First-Ever Mascot

Frontier's new mascot

Frontier’s new mascot

I’m sure more than a few readers work for a company with a marketing department that churns out advertising and imagery that leaves you shaking your head wondering what they were thinking.

There are some employees at Frontier Communications who are head-scratching this week as the company unleashes “Frontier’s First Ever Spokesman.”

His name is Francis Abraham Buffalo (his friends get to call him “Frank.”) He’s a… buffalo.

An internal memo obtained by Stop the Cap! informs employees Frank is prepared to bulldoze his way through “the clutter and get consumers buzzing.”

“Think of the Aflac duck and the Geico gecko,” a Frontier executive writes. “People have a truly positive association with them that translates into a positive feeling for those companies.”

But can a new mascot really change perceptions about a company more than the quality of the products or services a company provides (or doesn’t)?

For the record, your editor has never been particularly moved by either the duck or the gecko, and I, along with many other Americans, stopped watching television commercials years ago with the advent of the DVR. I have also never bought a product or service based on anything other than its merits and price. Frontier’s buffalo will not change that.

The mascot search involved a nationwide focus group of at least 800 customers and non-customers who were shown a series of “try-outs” involving lip-synched ducks, pigs, and various other creatures you may have last encountered as roadkill.

“Frank was the top choice, lifting our preference rating over the competition by 8 points and decreasing the competition by 3 points.  That’s a net 11 point increase for Frontier and solid support that we’re on the right path,” the company trumpets.

frontierOf course, their cable competitors can always suggest while Frontier is busy playing with animals, they are delivering far faster broadband service and a better package of phone, broadband, and television service that does not involve a third-party satellite dish stuck on your roof.

Even some Frontier employees were less than enthusiastic about the endeavor, already predicting the response ads from the competition.

“I thought the pig would’ve been a better choice,” writes one. “I can just see the competition running ads about not getting ‘Buffaloed’ by Frontier!”

Most of the excitement among employees seems to emanate from the office that envisioned the campaign and spent a lot of money to make it happen.

“A landmark decision in the continuing evolution of Frontier,” jokes a Frontier worker less than thrilled with the result.

Even Frontier executives admit that Frank might be a big, fat target:

“We have also heard some concerns from our employees that we are proactively addressing in the campaign so our competitors won’t take advantage of our new brand spokesperson.”

“Frank will be a boffo buffalo. A solid, truth-talking machine that doesn’t like fuss or tricks – and neither do we.   We play it straight — price guarantees and no contracts make it easy for consumers to understand our products and services.  So if anyone asks, Frank is not here to “buffalo” or trick anyone (call Cable if you want that!).  He doesn’t deal with BS or malarkey, and that means no hidden fees, no surprises.”

Phillip "It's actually an American bison" Dampier

Phillip “It’s actually an American bison” Dampier

Frontier is asking for advice on how to make Frank a better buffalo and offer any additional feedback. At Stop the Cap! we are always willing to help, so we publicly offer advice for our hometown phone company.

  1. The American buffalo is actually the American bison, but that probably sounds too French (it is actually Greek, but nobody wants to get too close to Greece these days). The bison’s story is remarkably similar to phone companies like Frontier. It once roamed across the American landscape in great herds but was targeted to near extinction. Just like your landline. It still maintains “near threatened” status, and is only gradually making a comeback with the help of conservation efforts. While our ancestors shared their lives with the bison, most people today will only meet one in a zoo or park. We are unsure why Frontier would want to associate itself with an animal best known in the past and unlikely to be seen today.
  2. Lip-synching animals (and babies) has become cliché. We were not too impressed with the voice talent Frontier decided to use for their animals either. Instead, check out Telus, western Canada’s biggest phone company. They turn animal wrangling into an art form, using various critters in their ads for phone, broadband, and wireless service. Telus compliments their animal friends with Canadian musicians to visually and musically deliver whatever message the company wants to share.
  3. While Frontier may have eliminated some of its old tricks like contract termination, equipment, service protection, and surcharge fees from customer bills, many of us have long memories of the surprise steep cancellation fees charged when dropping landline service that we kept for 20+ years. Others found Frontier’s inadequate DSL only slightly less annoying than the $100+ service termination fee thrown on the last bill. Some of those fees are still being charged to customers, including a particularly silly broadband account service order charge that still stings departing customers. It is hard to accept Frontier’s new marketing messages when the company is still baiting the traps.
  4. Frontier’s reputation problem does not come from poor advertising. It comes from a poor selection of products and services. Frontier until recently has simply refused to keep up with the reality of today’s broadband market. Sorry, basic DSL will no longer cut it, particularly when a competitor arrives. Cable can still out-class Frontier’s broadband products even after upgrades to ADSL2+ and VDSL. Frontier bills are still loaded with surprise surcharges and extras that raise the out-the-door price, sometimes even higher than what cable charges. The more important question to ask focus groups is why people do business with Frontier. Is it because they have to or they want to?

Frontier still does not evoke “cutting edge” anything. Frontier FiOS, inherited from Verizon, is the child nobody wants to talk about.

For years, Frontier only offered ADSL at speeds that stopped keeping up with cable a decade ago, even in large metro areas like Rochester, N.Y. When the company advertised “up to” in association with broadband speeds, it meant it: advertise up to 12Mbps but deliver service as slow as 3.1Mbps. With VDSL, 25Mbps might be doable, but cable already offers 30/5 or 50/5Mbps that is a sure thing.

Frontier’s landline service is generally reliable and works even with a power outage if you have a wired phone. But the company charges too much for a phone line many people are now jettisoning in favor of their cell phone and the company is still pushing long distance calling plan bundles that are now irrelevant. Does anyone under 35 know what a toll-call is?

Frontier’s “television” service for most customers is a third-party reseller agreement with a satellite provider with its own contract and conditions. Exciting? Not exactly.

There isn’t much to see here. AT&T and Verizon have spent money to earn money. The only major success story from AT&T’s landline business is its U-verse platform. Verizon FiOS delivers the most formidable competition cable operators like Time Warner Cable and Cablevision have seen. Even CenturyLink has invested in Prism, a fiber to the neighborhood system that can deliver a true triple-play package of services that give customers a reason to stay.

Frontier has Frank the Buffalo and some long-overdue technology upgrades that probably won’t win back a lot of customers.

So what are the strengths Frontier can sell?

  1. In most markets, Frontier has no hard limit on broadband usage. That is an attractive selling point where cable operators slap usage caps on customers. Usage caps can and do trigger customer defections;
  2. Frontier phone service is generally more reliable than cable or Voice over IP. Talk to customers in storm-struck areas who lost power and cable, but their phone line kept on working;
  3. Frontier ADSL2+ and VDSL can outperform rural cable operators who have either oversold their shared network or don’t offer higher DOCSIS 3 speeds yet;
  4. Frontier Wi-Fi, if vastly expanded, can be a useful free add-on and selling tool in areas served by cable operators that do not offer the service. But Frontier Wi-Fi hotpots have to be more commonly encountered to make a difference.

Above all, Frontier must keep upgrading its network to stay competitive. Once you lose customers, they can be extremely hard to get back. For many of us, establishing an account with the phone company meant significant installation fees and several days before a crew would turn up to connect service. Frontier knows perfectly well going back to the phone company after leaving is a high hurdle many never attempt.

The best mascot a company like Frontier can adopt are real customers and employees talking about their satisfaction with the changes Frontier is making. Without that, the customers that left will probably always think of Frontier as yesterday’s news. Using an American buffalo that neared extinction itself is probably not going to change that perception.

[flv width=”640″ height=”380″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/Frontier Animal Mascot Tryouts 4-13.flv[/flv]

Here are Frontier’s animal mascot tryouts. (1 minute)

Time Warner Renaming Local News Channels “Time Warner Cable News”

Phillip Dampier March 19, 2013 Competition, Consumer News Comments Off on Time Warner Renaming Local News Channels “Time Warner Cable News”

ynnIn a rebranding effort some Time Warner Cable employees and viewers are fuming about, all 17 of the cable company’s local news operations including YNN (Upstate NY), NY1 (NYC), and News 14 (the Carolinas) will be renamed “Time Warner Cable News” by the end of this year.

The new look will include a studio makeover, new theme music, and a more uniform presentation across all the news broadcasts.

The experiment in creating the cable company’s local news channel began in Rochester, N.Y. in 1990, even before Time Warner Cable as a brand existed. WGRC-TV was launched by Greater Rochester Cablevision that year with a handful of daily newscasts interspersed with off-network syndicated programming. In 1992, WGRC-TV left channel 5 for channel 9 and was rebranded “GRC9News.” When the newly named Time Warner Cable arrived in town, the channel was rebranded yet again as “R News.”

In August 2009, Time Warner changed the name to YNN (Your News Now) Rochester, just one of several YNN channels operating upstate in Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse, and Albany.

For YNN viewers, it is just one more name change for a news channel that has increasingly shed its veneer of independence from the cable company that lives under the same roof.

Ny1header-img

NY1 fans are far less sanguine about the change.

“It’s a boneheaded move that will punish a unique, standalone brand like NY1 — by reminding viewers just how corporate TV news has become,” wrote Don Kaplan, the New York Daily News television editor.

“This might be the stupidest media rebranding scheme I’ve ever heard of,” Seth Fletcher, a science writer who lives in Brooklyn, wrote in a Twitter post.

“Time Warner — rebranding NY1 into TWC News might be your dumbest move since merging with AOL,” wrote the band They Might Be Giants.

Time Warner said the change is intended to give the news operation a higher profile and more closely identify it as a cable-only service not available on their biggest competitors, Verizon FiOS and AT&T U-verse.

timewarner twcBut critics of the change note most of Time Warner’s local news channels have relentlessly pounded home the channel is only available on Time Warner Cable — never on FiOS, satellite, or U-verse — for years.

At least one observer privately noted the rebranding could be another attempt to cut costs by allowing the news channels to share anchors, reporters, and news content without viewers catching on it isn’t always produced locally. YNN’s network of news channels in upstate New York have already proved this, with certain content produced in Buffalo for viewers in Rochester, Syracuse, and Albany.

Time Warner Cable is also in the process of rebranding its various local and regional sports channels under their new name: Time Warner Cable Sports.

Updated: Time Warner Cable Experiencing Widespread Problems With Phone Service in Northeast

Phillip Dampier October 31, 2012 Consumer News 2 Comments

Time Warner Cable is experiencing problems with its “digital phone” service today in the northeastern United States. Callers as far west as Buffalo and east to the Atlantic are reporting they are unable to consistently complete certain calls, particularly to long distance or toll-free numbers. In Broome County, Binghamton, N.Y.’s 911 service is inaccessible from Time Warner Cable phone lines and calls are being routed to a lower priority call center where customers may find themselves on hold for extended periods.

Callers may hear messages indicating “all circuits are busy” when placing certain calls.

Time Warner Cable acknowledged the problem, but could not provide an estimate when service would be restored. Customers may sporadically experience difficulties making and receiving calls, getting a dial tone, accessing voicemail services, and may not be able to forward incoming calls or receive Caller ID information.

It was uncertain whether the outage was related to the impact of Sandy, the remnants of which are now over Lake Ontario heading into Canada.

Updated 3:15pm EDT: Time Warner Cable now reports these problems have been resolved.

Watch Time Warner Cable’s Tapdance Routine on Whether Cable Modem Fee is a “Rate Increase”

Phillip Dampier October 17, 2012 Consumer News, Data Caps, Video 9 Comments

[flv width=”480″ height=”288″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WGRZ Buffalo Time Warner To Add New Fee For Internet Users 10-16-12.flv[/flv]

Time Warner Cable continues tapdancing around whether its new $3.95 monthly modem rental fee is a hidden rate increase. WGRZ in Buffalo presses a spokeswoman on whether this is just another cable company money grab.   (2 minutes)

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