ESPN, ABC blacked out on YouTube TV
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YouTube TV subscribers may not get access to "Monday Night Football" in Week 9 thanks to a contract dispute with Disney.
YouTube TV made a promise to its customers before a 'Monday Night Football' game between Green Bay and Philadelphia.
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YouTube TV, Disney dispute set to impact Week 11 of college football, can agreement be reached?
The ongoing dispute between YouTube TV and Disney is set to carry over into Week 11 of college football. News broke last week that ESPN, ABC and other Disney networks were going dark on Google’s YouTube TV.
During perhaps one of the best seasons for watching sports on television, ESPN channels were removed from the YouTube TV streaming platform. However, there are way subscribers can watch football and more sports this weekend with some help from other streaming services.
Sports fans are growing angry with the ongoing dispute between Disney and one of the biggest streaming platforms in the world as another busy college football and NFL weekend awaits. RELATED: ESPN NFL insider has hectic moment on-air in the middle of trade deadline day However,
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Report: NFL allows ESPN to simulcast Monday Night Football on ABC amid YouTube TV, Disney dispute
As the YouTube TV-Disney dispute continues, the NFL is allowing ESPN to bring Monday Night Football to more viewers. The league is letting ESPN simulcast MNF on ABC in Week 10 and Week 11, Front Office Sports’ Michael McCarthy reported.
The contract dispute resulted in the live streaming service pulling ESPN, ABC and other Disney networks on Friday.
YouTube TV carriage fight drags on, Disney Entertainment Co-Chairs Dana Walden and Alan Bergman joined with ESPN Chairman Jimmy Pitaro to thank employees for “staying focused” during the disruption. “Another sports-packed weekend” headlined by college football on Saturday is likely to be dark for YouTube TV’s 10 million subscribers,
When the Disney nets were first pulled from YouTube TV, the internet company said that if the channels were unavailable for "an extended period of time," it would offer subscribers a $20 credit — and now those credits are about to arrive.