Often high speed internet and / or cable tv may not be economically viable options at RV parks which are often located outside of towns. 5-10 years ago I knew someone that owned a small rv campground that primarily catered to contract workers, the campground was mostly gravel, with 30-40 full hookups sites, had some trees (more than many places do), a basic laundry room and that was about it. The owner had visions of adding other amenities, one of the first they considered was cable TV, or satellite TV service like DISH or DirecTV. Local cable was available at the highway a few hundred feet away, but it was not economically viable to install. The installation quote was just under $40,000, plus an additional $2,300 per month flat rate for basic cable to all sites. Ignoring the $40,000 up front investment the ongoing cost would work out to around $2 per day per site assuming 100% occupancy to break even. We all know that these sorts of parks don't run at 100% occupancy, month after month. When you look at the cost Broadband internet outside of a city to support multiple people in 30-40 RV's streaming movies at once, makes the above look cheap. Even in cities people pay $50 or more per month per household for cable internet, so best case there goes another $2 per day right out the door, but in reality in remote locations the cost for broadband could be ten times that.