Two weeks have passed since TV5 served ABS-CBN with a formal termination notice.
Since then, more has been said to the public than to the partner waiting across the table.
No formal settlement plan has been announced by TV5 — only broad statements released through the media.
In the vacuum created by this lack of direct communication, the public has filled in the blanks — concluding, debating motives, and even speculating on which network ABS-CBN should approach next. Beyond the noise, however, lies a more straightforward truth: partnerships are sustained by clarity, and at the moment, clarity is precisely what is missing.
The heart of the issue is the non-payment or non-remittance of the revenue sharing between the two networks, Nosy Tarsee learned.
Payments were very likely made in the past — perhaps even substantial ones.
In a revenue-share environment, however, what matters less is the size of any single remittance, and more is the consistency of the entire stream.
When those remittances become irregular, late, or incomplete, the host network bears the immediate weight.
For TV5, already navigating years of thin margins and long-standing financial losses, unpredictability means inconvenience and destabilization.
This is why the absence of a clear settlement roadmap feels increasingly out of place when compared with ABS-CBN’s recent nine-month financial report, which showed improved advertising revenues and a more positive trajectory.
That progress is good news for the industry. ABS-CBN deserves credit for rebuilding its commercial strength under challenging circumstances, an industry pundit tells Nosy Tarsee.
Precisely because numbers show momentum, the lingering lack of clarity toward TV5 becomes harder to reconcile. If revenues are improving, why not present a firm plan that reflects that capacity?
The impact of this stalemate extends beyond the two networks. Revenue-sharing deals are built on trust, and the broader media ecosystem watches how these relationships hold, especially in challenging moments.
Producers, smaller networks, and potential partners look for signals that commitments are honored, communication is direct, and settlements are not left to hang indefinitely.
When obligations remain unresolved, it naturally discourages groups that might otherwise be open to collaborations.
And while digital platforms and streaming apps have become essential parts of today’s viewing landscape, they still do not generate the level of advertising revenue needed to support large-scale broadcast content.
TV5’s decision to end the arrangement was not made in anger. It was a protective measure from a network that has spent years operating in the red, managing its finances tightly, and trying to stay afloat in a tough broadcast market. For a company in that position, uncertainty is costly.
Honoring revenue-share commitments — fully, regularly, and through a clear settlement plan — will be essential to strengthening confidence not only in its partnerships but also in its ability to deliver on commitments. Still, in the entire ecosystem, it aims to lead again, according to an industry insider.
The bottom line is that partnerships succeed not merely on creativity and ambition, but on reliability. And reliability begins with clarity — spoken plainly, delivered promptly, and backed by action.