Here’s how to get the $20 credit offered by YouTube TV in Disney dispute
One November stalemate has movement, another does not, and neither is appetizing to American consumers.
The $20 credit, however, is only with one and it takes some effort to get it.
Posturing of Republicans and Democrats while the federal government is without a spending plan since Oct. 1 dominates the conversations, and arguably rightly so amid food and education concerns for millions. Another with widespread attention is the nation’s dominant television streamer that is No. 4 behind traditional pay-TV providers Comcast, Charter and DirecTV and poised to go to No. 1 ahead of them in early 2026.
YouTube TV and Disney locked horns a month after the government on Oct. 30, unable to agree to terms on carriage fees. All Disney channels, including ABC, are off, along with popular sports platforms connected to Bristol, Conn.-headquartered ESPN and a number of other less watched Disney-owned channels such as A&E, Disney Junior and the Disney Channel.
Public relations efforts are watched, and consumers of YouTube TV can get a $20 credit on their bill for the missing product. The catch is the requirement to go into the billing information of the account and activate it – in other words, it is not automatic.
The Center Square helps with a here’s how. First, enter the YouTube TV platform account and toggle to “manage your Google account.” From the menu, select “payments & subscriptions.” Then, click “manage subscriptions,” and choose “YouTube TV.” At the bottom choice of the next menu available is “updates,” and when clicked, yield’s a button to click to claim the $20 credit.
The largest roar of fans has been from NFL viewers missing Monday Night Football, and college fans of football and basketball – where ESPN is the main source to watch college football for roughly 6 in 10 fans, and for 5 in 10 for college basketball.
Observers of the industry are forecasting a breaking point this week. An earnings call for Disney is scheduled Thursday.
According to industry expert Nielsen as of September, 45.2% of the nation streams to watch TV, 22.3% uses broadcast, and 22.3% is via cable. Of that 45.2%, the leader at 12.6% is YouTube TV, followed by Netflix (8.3%), Disney (4.5%) and PrimeVideo (3.9%).
Nielsen bills itself as the “global leader in audience measurement, data and analytics.”
Latest News Stories
Will County Accepts $140,000 Developer Donation for Road Improvements
State Legislative Session Wrap-Up Shows Mixed Results
Will County expands safety initiatives across facilities
Leglislative Committee Meeting Briefs
Speed Limits Reduced on Two Township Roads
Will County Finance Committee Approves Juvenile Detention Center Upgrades
Major Grade Separation Projects Advance with Engineering Contracts
County Authorizes Condemnation for Francis Road Project
Solar Farm Access Approved for Manhattan-Arsenal Road
Will County Finance Committee Meeting Briefs
Public Works Committee Briefs
Capital Improvements & IT Committee Briefs