Ridgewood NJ, we know right now is an unprecedented time in history,since we all need a little extra love right now, the analysts at CableTV.com created a national report revealing each state’s favorite romantic comedy film. Which romantic comedy ie… rom-com classics does America enjoy the most?
As social distancing becomes the new normal, we want to see what rom-coms the world is watching.
What is worse than paying for an internet connection, which claims to be providing the fastest speed, but in reality offering low download speeds, poor buffering, and connectivity – something you never wish to sign up for! In this article, we are going to skim through the best internet providers in 2020. This list is generated through dozens of data-driven from the internet speed tests, the American Customer Satisfaction Index (ACSI), and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), to jot down the best available options for the US residents.
NEW YORK, Sept. 17 (UPI) — European telecom company Altice Group has agreed to buy New York-based Cablevision in a deal valued at $17.7 billion including debt.
Altice, controlled by French cable entrepreneur Patrick Drahi, will pay about $10 billion in cash, or $34.90 a share, for the Bethpage, N.Y.-based Cablevision, the leading cable operator in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. The deal creates the fourth largest cable operator in the United States.
The acquisition also includes Newsday Media Group, publisher of Newsday and amNewYork.
Record numbers of Americans are unplugging their subscriptions
When 24m US viewers tuned in to watch Donald Trump slug it out with his rivals for the Republican presidential nomination, Fox News made television history, recording record ratings for a non-sports cable broadcast.
However, those who followed the political jousting on social networks had a common complaint: despite partnering with Facebook to host the debate, Fox News had made it virtually impossible to watch the event online.
Twitter users traded links with illicit livestreams and lambasted the network’s failure to cater for “cord-cutters” or “cord-nevers” — people who have either ditched their pay-TV subscription or have never signed up for one.
The disconnect between the knockout ratings and the incredulity of young, media-savvy viewers appeared to support the central thesis of broadcasters and pay-TV providers: cord-cutting might be fashionable for trendy elites, but it has yet to make a dent in “real” America’s love affair with television.