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On October 30, YouTube TV’s 10 million subscribers lost Disney channels, ABC, ESPN, FX, among others. A tug-of-war battle between the two media giants comes to a close. Nearly two weeks later, the platforms finally struck a deal, bringing a sigh of relief to fans. As the college football season inches slowly towards the final lap, no better time for the lengthy dispute to end. 

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On November 14, analyst Joe Pompliano tweeted, “BREAKING: YouTube TV and Disney have reached an agreement. All Disney channels, including ABC and ESPN, will be back on YouTube TV shortly.” The curtain falls on the YouTube TV-Disney blackout: a new contract brings back ABC and ESPN, with YouTube TV emphasizing that the deal “preserves the value of our service” for viewers.

“We’re happy to share that we’ve reached a deal with Disney to bring their content back to YouTube TV. Subscribers should see channels including ABC, ESPN, and FX returning to their service over the course of the day. Thanks for your patience and for being a valued member,” YouTube TV released a statement.

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Fans can now tune into their channels, including ABC, ESPN, and FX, that were previously in their Library. YouTube TV’s Disney blackout left fans in the lurch. The SEC and ACC Network went dark, and the NFL’s Monday Night Football vanished, too. It affected broadcasts, such as the Dallas-Arizona game in Week 9 and the Green Bay-Philadelphia game in Week 10. Additionally, several games fell victim to the YouTube TV-Disney fallout.

The Texas Longhorns’ season, beyond the FOX opener against Ohio State, has been broadcast on ABC, ESPN, or the SEC Network. The YouTube TV blackout left fans unable to watch key matchups like Vanderbilt-Texas (November 1, ABC), Oklahoma-Tennessee (7:30 p.m., ABC), and Cincinnati-Utah (10:15 p.m., ESPN).

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Disney’s quarterly earnings call on Thursday, November 13, acted as a soft deadline to push the stalled negotiations forward. While discussions over lesser-watched channels, such as Freeform and National Geographic, continued, the deal was finalized to keep all Disney networks on YouTube TV, restoring full access for subscribers. This decision was a consequence of the $18 billion loss Disney incurred.

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Disney’s decision fell heavily on their pockets

Notably, YouTube TV is gaining traction as a cable-style streaming service, now boasting 10 million subscribers. They are just shy of Spectrum and Comcast’s 12 million. Industry analysts believe it has the potential to overtake the cable giants before the decade is out. Launched in 2017 at $35 a month, YouTube TV has mainly grown on the back of live sports, making ESPN and its networks a crucial partner in keeping fans tuned in.

However, the conflict persisted over carriage fees. Disney said, “With a $3 trillion market cap, Google is using its market dominance to eliminate competition and undercut the industry-standard terms we’ve successfully negotiated with every other distributor.” However, Disney faced bitter consequences.

As Reddit CFB tweeted, “Disney has lost $18B in market cap today, after significantly missing earnings, and fears about a prolonged dispute with YouTube.” In the fourth quarter of 2025, ESPN’s domestic revenue rose 2% to $3.58 billion, though operating income dipped 3% amid higher marketing and programming costs. Disney’s quarterly revenue reached $22.46 billion, but tightening cable margins and an $18 billion drop in market capitalization are adding pressure. 

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Disney channels are live again on YouTube TV, ESPN confirmed. Moreover, Georgia Bulldogs head coach Kirby Smart might be the happiest. “I worry more about it when I get home, and I can’t watch it, so I have to find ways around it,” Smart said. “But that’s what most people will have to do, I guess, until they figure it out.”

Fans can finally tune in to “College GameDay” from Pittsburgh for the Pitt-Notre Dame clash, as well as Oklahoma vs. Alabama, now available on YouTube TV.

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