​Revenue is up at the major networks, but that’s doing little to alleviate concerns about the rising costs of TV programming, The Hollywood Reporter wrote Wednesday.

According to the trade, it’s become more expensive than ever to attract viewers to the channels, and there’s no single culprit to blame.

For some of the networks, like CBS and NBC, you can chalk up the rise to costly NFL broadcasting deals. Fox, ESPN and TBS will also have to reach deeper into their pockets to pay for sports programming in the coming years as new deals with Major League Baseball kick in and the nets have to shoulder a 100 percent increase in payments.

21st Century Fox also saw it’s programming costs jump $50 million this past quarter thanks to the launch of two new cable channels, Fox Sports 1 and FXX.

CBS Corp. can thank bigger spending on summer programming like reality competition “Big Brother” and a marquee Floyd Mayweather Jr. boxing match on Showtime for its 3Q spending rise.

And across the board, everyone is having to pay for the boom in original content.

Read More: The Hollywood Reporter

Brief Take: Chalk rising programming costs up as one more battleground between the cable networks in an increasingly heated war for viewers and TV dominance.

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