FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler once again took aim at pay-TV providers as the snake in the potentially virtuous circle, this one between video content providers and consumers.

In a speech at an INCOMPAS conference in Washington April 11, Wheeler told his audience of competitive carriers that video watching was in a golden age given the abundance of content and of outlets, which he called the third era of video (the first two characterized by a scarcity of outlets).

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But that golden age of competition faced threats, he said: "It can be artificially blunted by incumbent pay-TV providers, who can play both ends against the consumer in the middle – by supplying broadband connectivity to online video providers while at the same time competing with these emerging video providers for viewers."

He also invoked two mergers once before the commission, saying his concerns include high-profile issues that came before the FCC in the Comcast/TWC deal that the FCC nixed, and the AT&T/DirecTV deal, which it approved with conditions.

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He did not say how the Charter/TWC deal currently before the commission fit into that scenario.

The FCC is currently collecting comment on the state of the video marketplace and access by independent programmers to distribution platforms. The inquiry was requested by FCC Commissioner Mignon Clyburn, but Wheeler has signaled he has issued, and clearly did so again in the INCOMPAS speech.