You’re blowing it, Stan.

The Broncos can’t stop bouncing between story arcs from “Game of Thrones” and “Better Call Saul.” The Rockies somehow spent themselves into having to shop the best third baseman of his generation.

This town wants — desperately wants — to watch a winner. A winner that has its act together. And here you are, sitting on two of them, young rosters on the climb, dominating in darkness.

If the Stanley Cup Playoffs started Thursday, the Avalanche would’ve been the No. 3 seed in the Western Conference. The Nuggets would’ve been the No. 2 seed in the NBA’s Western bracket.

Meanwhile, the Front Range Broadcasting Cold War — Kroenke Sports & Entertainment and Altitude Sports in one corner, Comcast and Dish Networks in the other — is on its fifth month now. And there’s no signs of any serious thaw.

“Yeah, I’ve had a lot of people say (things) to me,” said Avs defenseman Ryan Graves, who’s had the best season of his young career — the kid was leading the NHL in plus-minus (+30) as of Friday morning — trapped in television limbo.

“I mean, my neighbor, for example, (Thursday), he says, ‘Like, that TV thing (stinks), eh?’”

You’re blowing it, Stan.

This isn’t about you.

This isn’t about KSE.

This isn’t about the principle of the hard bargain, whatever the heck that means.

This is about neighbors. Ryan’s. Yours.

This is about kids.

The ones who should be watching Mikko Rantanen thread needles from their living rooms. The ones who chat up their pals at school the next morning about some moves on Fortnite instead of the ones just rocked by Michael Porter Jr. The ones who have to skirt the law to get their fix.

When Connor McDavid takes the ice in Edmonton, the locals chant “M-V-P! M-V-P!”

When Nathan MacKinnon takes the ice here, we chant “V-P-N! V-P-N!”

It’s civic malpractice, a middle finger to the masses: The two best teams in town, and almost no one can watch them. With the Broncos in hibernation, the Avs and Nuggs pretty much have center stage to themselves for the next four months. Maybe five or six, if the playoff fates are kind.

This is about leverage. And how you’re losing yours.

This is about eyeballs lost. Eyeballs and generations.

This is about presumption that the sheep will come crawling back.

This is about hubris.

“Ideally, Altitude and Comcast would work out a limited — likely, a 1-year — deal as they work on larger issues,” offered Daniel Durbin, director of USC’s Annenberg Institute of Sports, Media and Society in Los Angeles, ground zero for the Dodgers’ ongoing rhubarbs with DirecTV and Charter cable.

“The one thing I would warn Stan about is that Denver, lovely as it is, isn’t the size market that New York or even San Francisco are. He may be challenged finding sufficient volume in user numbers to create the level of support he seeks. Though, given his financial streams, I’m not sure that worries him a lot.”

No kidding.

“There are rabid sports fans in this town, and our fan base is so knowledgeable and so smart, so in tune with what’s going on with the team,” Avs defenseman Ian Cole said. “But, unfortunately, we have so little influence and say in the matter.”

Oh, we’ve heard the stories. And the spin. You’ve tried to play ball. Comcast won’t budge. We’re the little guys here.

Little guys?

On a clear night, you can almost hear the laughter from London, where Arsenal fans have watched a worldwide brand wither and die under your watch.

We can’t print what they’re saying in St. Louis.

“Sports bars and restaurants may be their only option for seeing all the games they want,” Durbin said of Nuggets and Avs faithful. “And they will have to scope out those venues to see if they carry Altitude. Streaming local sports is really challenging online.”

If you’re not going to cut the cord, cut the crapola.

Or drop the price, if only for a year. Do it for the neighbors. For the kids. Throw the little guys — the real little guys — a bone for once.

“This is challenging because, ultimately, the biggest money for Kroenke is getting Altitude launched as a major provider, something that would cost Comcast and their viewers money,” Durbin said.

“Don’t look for either side to suddenly get religion and start fighting for the fans. This is about money. First, last and always.”

You’re blowing it, Stan. Big-time.