Filed by Comcast Corporation Pursuant to Rule 425
                               under the Securities Act of 1933 and deemed filed
                               pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Securities
                               Exchange Act of 1934

                               Subject Company: AT&T Comcast Corporation
                               Commission File No. 333-82460

                               Date: May 2, 2002


     The following conference call was held by Comcast on May 1, 2002:


                               Comcast Corporation
                 First Quarter Earnings Release Conference Call
                                   May 1, 2002

Operator:         And welcome, everyone, for the first quarter earnings release
                  conference call for Comcast Corporation. Today's call is being
                  recorded. At this time, for opening remarks and introduction,
                  I would like to turn the call over to Executive Vice President
                  and Treasurer of Comcast, Mr. John Alchin. Please go ahead,
                  sir.

John Alchin:      Thank you, Operator, and welcome, everybody, to our first
                  quarter 2002 earnings call. Just before I proceed, I would
                  like to remind everybody of our Safe Harbor disclaimer and
                  that this conference call contains forward-looking statements
                  that are subject to certain risks and uncertainties. I would
                  refer you to our 10K for a full list of those risks and
                  uncertainties as outlined. The call this morning, we have
                  everybody here with Ralph, Brian, Julian, Larry Smith, Steve
                  Burke, Bill Costello. Steve will give you some additional
                  color on the terrific results that we had out of the Cable
                  Division this quarter. Bill will be available for Q&A on the
                  great results that have come out of QVC, and we will then open
                  to general questions and answers. The results have really been
                  fantastic this quarter. It is one of the best ever results out
                  of the Cable Division in terms of revenue and cash flow
                  growth. Revenue and operating cash flow are driven by over 60%
                  growth in addition of new service revenue generating units. In
                  fact, our Digital and On-Line products represented over 6.8
                  percentage points of growth. That is more than half of the
                  12.3% growth that the Cable Division reported in revenue for
                  this quarter, and we did this even though we had to transfer
                  100% of our High-Speed Data customers in the first quarter.
                  QVC results remain very strong in a rather soft retail
                  environment, and I would refer everybody to the front page The
                  Wall Street Journal article this morning that just highlights
                  how QVC continues to attract new buyers and also people who
                  want to get their products onto QVC. So, we had a great
                  quarter in our Content Division in the face of rather soft
                  advertising with almost 34% growth in operating cash flow
                  including our new channel, G4, which launched just recently.
                  The final point I would make before we go into the details of
                  the call is that we have just about completed the final
                  documentation on a $12.8 billion bank line of credit that,
                  along with our existing lines of $4.4 billion, gives us over
                  $17 billion of credit availability to meet the needs that we
                  have at closing and leaves us with about $3 billion of undrawn
                  availability at close. However, to drill down into the
                  results, on a consolidated basis, we reported 19.7% increase
                  in revenue to $2.7 billion and 28% increase in operating cash
                  flow to over $800 million. When we adjust those numbers only
                  to reflect the timing of acquisitions to present a pure
                  apples-to-apples comparison, revenues increased 12% and
                  operating cash flow 18.3%, and every one of our divisions,
                  Cable, QVC, and the Content Divisions, all reported double
                  digit revenue and operating cash flow growth. If we drill in
                  then to the Cable Division, we reported 12.3% revenue growth
                  to $1.47 billion. That is up from fourth quarter growth of
                  9.1%, up from first quarter last year 8.5%, and as I mentioned
                  a little earlier on, fully 6.8% of the points of growth, the
                  12.3% growth that we report for the quarter, came from our
                  Digital product and our On-Line data product. That is up 36%
                  from the levels of contribution made by those two products in
                  the first quarter of last year. Other drivers of revenue
                  include





                  consistent subscriber growth at almost 1%, 0.9%, bringing us
                  to a subscriber count of 8.511 million at the end of March,
                  adding about 40,000 subscribers in the first quarter of this
                  year. Further contribution from ad sales, which was up 13.6%,
                  better than the 7% decline that we had in the fourth quarter
                  of 2001. But, we really could not be more pleased with Cable's
                  operating cash flow growth, an increase of 13.5% to $598
                  million for the quarter, and there is a very strong trend line
                  developing here. We are up 11% in the first quarter of last
                  year, 12% by the time we got to the fourth quarter of last
                  year, 13.5% first quarter of this year. Margin was on a pro
                  forma basis, restated for the treatment of new accounting
                  treatment for franchise fees, up 50 basis points to 40.7%.
                  That is up from 40.2% a year ago, and even if we go back to
                  the old accounting treatment for franchise fees, you would
                  still see an almost similar increase in the operating margin.
                  As I mentioned before, the single-most important driver in the
                  first quarter of cable revenue and operating cash flow
                  continues to be new service RGU growth. We added fully 300,000
                  new service RGUs in the first quarter and over 1.3 million in
                  the last 12 months. That is a 59% increase in the number of
                  2.25 that we had at the end of first quarter last year,
                  bringing us to a total number of 3.58 million at the end of
                  the first quarter of this year. In the Comcast On-Line
                  product, our High-Speed Data product, we continue to see
                  strong demand despite the fact that we have to transition 100%
                  of our customer base from the Excite@Home network to our own
                  network in a six-week period. We finished the quarter with an
                  81% increase in the number of data customers from where we
                  were a year ago, an increase of almost 466,000 over that
                  period of time from a base of 575,000 a year ago. We finished
                  the quarter with 1.04 million customers. And, if you look at
                  what happened to our weekly ads during that period, weekly ads
                  throughout the quarter were about 7,000 a week, but if you
                  drill in behind that number, you find in January we were
                  adding less than 5,000 a week. That increased throughout the
                  quarter to give us an average of 7,000. We are now adding
                  almost 10,000 a week. So, the momentum has really built from
                  the slow-down that we incurred because of all of the effort
                  that was required in the transition. Furthermore, another
                  really strong development in this product line is that you see
                  an 8.5% increase in average revenue per unit for this product.
                  The average revenue per unit increased to $40.10 from $36.95
                  in the first quarter of last year, but in fact if you look at
                  the increase over where we were in the fourth quarter last
                  year, we are up in excess of 14% because of some promotional
                  activities that were taking place in the fourth quarter. So,
                  customers are now paying us $39.95 for the monthly service
                  plus $5.00 for the modem if they lease the modem from us and
                  over 75% of the customer base do in fact lease the modem from
                  us. And, now that we are out of the transition, we are
                  continuing to see very stable churn in this product, absent
                  the impact of the transition in January as we wrapped up the
                  quarter and as we went into April, the churn numbers
                  stabilized at around 1.5% to 2% on the product. This is a
                  product that is now available to over 80% of our customer
                  base. Out of the 13.5 million homes that we have, fully 11.3
                  million homes have access to this product. That is up almost a
                  million homes from where we were at the end of 2001. This is a
                  product that by the end of this year will be available to 86%
                  of our homes. Over 12 million homes will have access to the
                  product at year end. It is also a product that we are seeing
                  rapid improvement in our operating cash flow margins.
                  Operating margins increased from about 10% to 15% in the first
                  quarter of last year to about 25% in the first quarter of this
                  year, and we believe that this margin can further improve into
                  the 30% to 40% range over the next 12 months as we continue to
                  increase the subscriber base. The four point improvement, 4
                  percentage point improvement in operating cash flow growth
                  from the On-Line product reflects our ability to cut costs
                  from the level that we incurred when we were on the
                  Excite@Home network where it was costing $12 to $13 a month
                  down to a level of about $7 to $8 per customer per month.
                  Steve is going to say more about the On-Line rollout strategy
                  when I wrap up the commentary on the Cable Division. Digital
                  had another terrific quarter. Demand was much stronger than we
                  expected. We finished the quarter with 2.54 million Digital
                  subscribers representing 51% growth or fully 862,000 additions
                  over the last 12 months from the 1.7 that we reported at the
                  end of the first quarter last year. We added over 204,000
                  subscriptions in the first quarter, up 29% over the first
                  quarter last year and essentially flat with where we were in
                  the fourth quarter of last year, and at the same time, we
                  continue to hold the average revenue per unit for each box at
                  about $10.60, up sequentially by about 1%. We have added
                  additional disclosure in our pro forma disclosure at the back
                  of the


                                        2



                  press release this time, showing that each home has
                  approximately 1.3 boxes and this now means we are adding both
                  boxes and subscribers. The average Digital customer is now
                  paying us approximately $14.40, about 9% higher than the
                  $13.25 we reported in the first quarter of last year. The
                  margin on this product continues to remain very strong, in the
                  80% to 85% range. So, it continues to be a significant
                  contributor to operating cash flow. Just before I pass to
                  Steve to describe the next phase of Digital and an update on
                  the On-Line rollout, let me just reiterate guidance for the
                  quarter. All of the trends in the Cable Division bode well for
                  a very strong year in this division. We have accelerating
                  revenue and cash flow growth, and declining capital
                  expenditure. Capital expenditure in the Cable Division this
                  quarter at $358 million is down 18% from a year ago, and in
                  fact, our cap ex in the Cable Division is slightly front-end
                  loaded this year. We have completed rebuild of almost twice as
                  much plant in the first quarter as we had budgeted some 3,800
                  miles of an 8,000 mile rebuild that we had planned for this
                  year and it was completed in the first quarter. So, we
                  finished the quarter with 83.5% of our plant at 750 or 860
                  megahertz of capacity, and we are reiterating our guidance of
                  $1.3 billion for Cable cap ex for the year. The acceptance of
                  both Digital Cable and the On-Line service is far outstripping
                  our expectations, and this is further contributing to our
                  confidence in our ability to meet the guidance at year end.
                  With that, I will just pass over to Steve to go into further
                  detail before we go onto QVC.

Steve Burke:      Thank you, John. When we put our budgets together this year in
                  September or October, we were looking at a world that was
                  post-September 11th and thinking about the impact on our ad
                  sales and the rest of our business, the consumption of new
                  products, uptick of new products. We were also looking at
                  @Home literally disintegrating in the need to shift to the new
                  network, and we were also realizing that at some point,
                  without a product enhancement, Digital growth would start to
                  slow down. The good news is now after the first quarter, it
                  appears that on all of those measures, all of those worries,
                  we are in much stronger shape than we thought we would be when
                  we put our budget together. So, it has been, I think, both a
                  strong quarter with solid results across the board, but I
                  think also a very strong indication that 2002 is going to be a
                  better year than we had originally budgeted a few months ago.
                  If you look at the key indicators that we look at whenever we
                  analyze our business, all of our key indicators are in good
                  shape. As John mentioned, basic sub growth of 40,000 during
                  the quarter or .9% growth trailing. The Digital net ad number
                  of 203,000 is the strongest first quarter we have ever had for
                  Digital, and it now appears that we are going to be rolling
                  out our video-on-demand product quickly enough that there is
                  really no reason that we can see for our Digital net ads to
                  slow down this year if we can get video-on-demand out to 6
                  million of our 13 million homes by the end of this year, which
                  is our goal. High-Speed Data, the net ad number was comparable
                  to last year, but as John mentioned, it was really two
                  different stories. In the first two or three weeks in January,
                  we focused 100% of our attention on getting everyone converted
                  to the new network and getting that network stabilized. The
                  good news is for the last eight weeks, we have had a very
                  stable network. The customer contact rate in the last couple
                  of weeks, which is a very good surrogate for service quality,
                  is actually lower than it ever was under @Home. So, we think
                  we are in very good shape with a more secure, stabilized
                  network and the good news is in the month of March, after we
                  made the transition, our weekly net ads were 30% higher than
                  last year. I think as you come out of the first quarter into
                  the second, third, and fourth quarters you are going to see an
                  acceleration of our High-Speed Data business which is positive
                  both in terms of revenue growth, but also with the improving
                  economics that John mentioned in his overview. As it relates
                  to ad sales, we signaled in the fourth quarter that we thought
                  or hoped that this was going to be a bottoming of the ad sales
                  business. We were down 7% in the fourth quarter. We were up
                  13% this quarter, and when we look out into the future, we see
                  those positive trends continuing into the second quarter and
                  hopefully beyond. The good news is the regional interconnect
                  strategy, which we have talked about on these calls before, is
                  really what is driving this growth. We were up over 20% in the
                  regional portion of our business, and we see that continuing
                  as the 16 Interconnects that we have put in place over the
                  last year or so are really starting to kick in. So, when you
                  combine all that, it leads to a cash flow growth of 13.5%
                  which is also the strongest cash flow growth we have had in
                  the first quarter for a number of years. Typically our
                  business, the programming increases click in on January 1st,
                  and we take rate


                                        3



                  increases through the year. The first quarter is normally
                  lower than where we would end up for the year. It is typically
                  our lowest growth quarter. So, I think we are well positioned
                  for the rest of the year. Our organization, I feel, is in very
                  strong shape. Ninety-five percent of our plant is rebuilt
                  which means we are competitive in 95% of our plant and we are
                  also stable. We do not have the stress and strain on our call
                  centers and our organization that rebuilds bring, and it also
                  means, as John mentioned, that our free cash flow for the
                  quarter rose to almost $240 million. In addition, all of the
                  integration work that we have been doing over the last two and
                  three years is now essentially complete. So, we are stable
                  from a management point of view in terms of integrating all
                  those systems and bringing them up to Comcast levels of
                  profitability. As we look toward sometime in the second half
                  of the year, merging Comcast Cable with AT&T Broadband, I
                  think we are in as good shape as we could reasonably hope to
                  be, and we look forward to the challenges ahead. John?

John Alchin:      Thanks a lot, Steve. Let us move onto QVC. As I said at the
                  beginning, for those of you who missed it, a great QVC article
                  on the front page of The Wall Street Journal this morning. So,
                  congrats to the QVC team for the great results and to the PR
                  team for their timing on that article. Just could not have
                  been better. The revenue increased 12.4% to $994 million in
                  the first quarter. In fact, if you go back and look at the
                  trailing 12 months results for QVC, over $4 billion in sales
                  over the trailing 12-month period, a new threshold for QVC. At
                  the same time, operating cash flow improved 11.4% to $192.3
                  million. The domestic operation delivered revenue growth of
                  11.5% driven by Homes growth of 4% now in front of 73 million
                  homes, and sales per FTE growth of 7.4% now up to $11.46 from
                  $10.67 a year ago. Cash flow growth in the domestic operation
                  up 11.6% consistent with the revenue growth and resulting in
                  bottom line cash flow margins being stable at 22.6%. If you
                  look back to the gross profit margin though, you see a slight
                  decline down to 36.9%, but what is interesting with this
                  number, this is a result of a change in mix of the products
                  that QVC has been selling, selling more in computers in the
                  Home category and less in jewelry, a higher profit margin
                  business, but if you look at the trend lines though, still
                  very, very encouraging. Going back to 1998, the number was
                  35.1 increasing to 35.6 in 1999, 36 in the first quarter of
                  2000, and the 36.9 in the first quarter of 2002 continues that
                  very stable, upward trend line. But QVC continues to keep very
                  tight control on both fixed and variable expenses. Telecom
                  expenses are now about a third less than they were five years
                  ago. If you look at the numbers that they were paying five
                  years ago, it was about $.08 a minute down to $.03 a minute or
                  down from $.3.7 a minute in first quarter last year. If you
                  take into account that in the first quarter of this year, they
                  handled over 26.7 million calls with total minutes of 67
                  million minutes, you will understand why having just a
                  marginal change like that has a huge impact on bottom line
                  efficiency. The results out of Germany, Germany is now in the
                  black for the first in the history of the German operation.
                  Very encouraging to see revenue up 31% to over $60 million for
                  the quarter and continued increase in carriage up over a
                  million homes in the carriage to 24 million homes for the
                  quarter. Still operating at about 40% awareness given the
                  idiosyncrasies of television, channel tuning in that country.
                  No real news out of the UK operation. Basically flat in the
                  first quarter, revenue at $67.6 million and operating cash
                  flow up 5% to $5.8 million from $5.5 million a year ago. We
                  now have QVC Japan celebrating its first anniversary at the
                  beginning of last month. Revenue there almost $12 million for
                  the quarter, running very strongly relative to the budget.
                  Moving onto our Content Division, great results, 11.8%
                  increase in revenue, 34% increase in operating cash flow
                  representing an increase or reflecting an increase in carriage
                  across virtually all fronts in the Content Division. So, each
                  one, E! seeing a 6% increase in carriage for that channel, up
                  to 71 million homes. style up 85% to almost 20 million, 18
                  million homes style is now in front of with contracts within a
                  couple of years to be in front of over 40 million homes. Golf
                  almost a 25% increase to 47 million homes, and Outdoor Life
                  now consolidated in our numbers, up 23% to 42 million homes.
                  Great news out E!. On Sunday, March 25th, with the most
                  watched day in the network's history, driven by record numbers
                  at the Academy Awards Pre-Show, a 3.6 rating over 3.7 million
                  viewers watching the channel on that date. Let me wrap up with
                  a couple of quick comments on two important items, the free
                  cash flow that we generated for the quarter and just
                  reiterating the point that I made on shoring up the liquidity
                  requirements that we need to close


                                        4



                  the AT&T deal. We generated over $200 million of free cash
                  flow in the first quarter of this year, and essentially all of
                  this is driven by results out of the Cable Division. Cash flow
                  for the Cable Division increased over $70 million to $597
                  million and cap ex declined $155 million. So, when you look at
                  the components of free cash flow, you can see the results of
                  the completion or near completion of the rebuild as cap ex
                  declines and cash flow increases. We deliver the metric that
                  has been talked about for so long in very large numbers, and
                  the outlook for this year is for consolidated, free cash flow
                  generation between $750 million to $1 billion for the year.
                  And my final comment relates to the fact that we have now
                  arranged a $12.8 billion new financing to effect the close of
                  the merger of AT&T Broadband and this financing along with the
                  existing availability gives us over $17 billion of
                  availability, and we will have a need at close between $12 to
                  $13 billion. So, we should have a comfortable cushion over and
                  above of the availability that we have secured. With that, let
                  me pass to Brian for some closing comments before Q&A.

Brian Roberts:    Thank you, John, and thank you, Steve. A fantastic quarter and
                  I think reaffirms our belief and commitment that this is a
                  fantastic industry and Comcast management team in the Cable
                  Division and in Content and in QVC and in the Corporate Group
                  could not be more pleased and proud of where we are as we
                  embark on what is clearly a major challenge and a major
                  opportunity as we get further along here toward closing AT&T
                  Comcast and making it a reality. Talking about AT&T Broadband,
                  we were obviously disappointed with the Cable subscriber
                  losses that they reported, but in the big picture, I think the
                  current management team is doing a lot of the hard work that
                  we all knew needed to be done to begin to move this massive
                  operation in the kind of direction that Comcast today enjoys,
                  and that involves redesigning the Digital package, rebuilding
                  customer care, beginning the cost-cutting effort which they
                  announced that they had reduced the work force and restarting
                  and really reenergizing the all-important rebuild program to
                  get their plant at the same level that our plant now enjoys.
                  But they are a small team, a handful of senior experienced
                  Cable executives who AT&T brought in, led by Bill Schleyer and
                  others, but we can expect and count on building on their
                  efforts when our really army of infrastructure, 250+ strong,
                  is able to work with their existing system management and
                  their team to put the best possible team on the field, but it
                  will be a much, I believe, accelerated program of getting the
                  business moving in a direction that we want it to end up being
                  at. But, there is nothing that I see that deters us on our
                  basic concept which was a "sub is a sub." When we made this
                  transaction, that was basically how it was valued, and when
                  you get to 22+ million customers and you talk about how to
                  integrate it, you do not do that with 22 million at a time.
                  You break it into small units, and that is how we are going to
                  approach it as we being the post-merger planning process. But,
                  the most important metric in analyzing the business is the
                  network rebuild, and they are properly focused on getting that
                  cranked up to begin to improve not just system reliability,
                  but the overall competitiveness and that is what, as they
                  pointed out, seems to be distinguishing or differentiating
                  them from everyone else in the industry and the sooner that
                  rebuild completes, the better, and we are committed to that.
                  But when I step back and certainly take any questions on any
                  subject, John is absolutely right. All the business
                  fundamental metrics are, this is a fantastic moment for the
                  cable industry, and it is ironic, given where the market place
                  is right now, this is the highest revenue and the highest cash
                  flow we have ever reported in the last five years, and at the
                  same time, the new products are selling better than we even
                  thought ourselves, and it is only the first quarter. So, with
                  that, let us open it up to questions, and we have members of
                  all the senior management, as John said, to take your
                  questions.

Operator:         Thank you, sir. Investors wishing to ask a question may signal
                  us by pressing the digit one on your touch tone telephone. If
                  you question has been answered and you wish to be removed from
                  the queue, please press the pound sign. If you are using a
                  speaker phone, please pick up the handset before pressing the
                  numbers. And our first question today comes from Richard
                  Greenfield from Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead, sir.


                                        5



Richard
Greenfield:       When you look at the number of boxes for Digital that you are
                  shipping or selling per home, it looks like the number was
                  about 1.8 boxes per home versus your aggregate which was 1.3,
                  1.4. Is that a trend in terms of really focusing on driving
                  multiple boxes that we should expect to continue? And, what is
                  that mean you are doing from a pricing standpoint? Or, is it
                  really more of the new products that you have added onto
                  Digital, like VOD, etc. And, you mentioned the number of about
                  $240 million in free cash flow, John, can you just give us a
                  little bit of clarity on how you get to that number and how
                  much is Cable, how much is QVC, etc.? Thanks.

John Alchin:      Steve, do you want to handle the box and then I will do the
                  free cash flow number?

Steve Burke:      Sure. I am not sure where you are getting the 1.8 boxes per
                  home. I think the real number is more like 1.3.

John Alchin:      That is the number if we look at just the first quarter, the
                  results there Steve show that the additions for the first
                  quarter have customers coming on with on average of 1.8 boxes.

Steve Burke:      I understand. Okay. The basic strategy on Digital that we have
                  right now is to continue to extend Digital with the existing
                  assortment, and then in the second half of the year, to really
                  start to push video-on-demand. Our feeling is that this is
                  something that is going to happen at exactly the right time
                  when we would normally be plateauing Digital. For the first
                  quarter, what we did is sold a certain number of AO,
                  additional outlet, units most of which were at $6.95 to
                  further solidify our very top-end customers, and we will
                  continue doing that in the second or third quarter, but we
                  would see that 1.3 boxes per-home average maybe nudge up a
                  little bit but not dramatically.

John Alchin:      And one of the things we are not sure of, Rich - what was that
                  number in the first quarter last year. We put this out as just
                  additional disclosure because others were doing it this way,
                  but what is really, really important to us is to measure the
                  average revenue per unit. In the fourth quarter, average
                  revenue for the unit for Digital boxes was about $10.45, and
                  here we see an increase to $10.61. So, however these boxes are
                  selling, on average, across the entire base, we are generating
                  $10.61 of revenue per box for each and every box. To hit the
                  question on the free cash flow, $212 million, that is after
                  gross cap ex of $399 million, cash taxes of about $30 million,
                  and net cash interest of $167 million, delivering $212 million
                  for the quarter. That is split approximately 50-50 between
                  Cable and QVC with virtually 100% of the growth in that number
                  coming from Cable because of the metrics of increased cash
                  flow and declining cap ex, as I described in the formal
                  comments.

Brian Roberts:    Let just close with one other point on that question. One of
                  the things that we have now gotten better at is something that
                  is intuitive but it requires a lot of training in having your
                  operation up, and that is having the call centers sell the new
                  products. With the amount of volume of phone calls that we
                  take and for new customer orders, we keep track of something
                  called the DSI, the Digital Sell-In, rate. Our DSI was over
                  40%. So, whether we are better off selling multiple sets of
                  Digital or a higher product, there is no real sales
                  commission, no marketing cost. Our HIS, our High Speed Sell-In
                  rate is now over 10%. So, all people calling up to get Cable
                  television, we are selling the product much better, and that
                  is something we track every month in every call center around
                  the country and that may also contribute to our ability to now
                  be moving more of these boxes both first and second set boxes
                  and High Speed Data.

Richard
Greenfield:       Thanks a lot. The additional disclosure is really appreciated.

John Alchin:      Thanks, Rich.  Next question?


                                        6



Operator:         I have Niraj Gupta from Salomon Smith Barney. Please state
                  your question.

Niraj Gupta:      Hi. Good morning. First question: John, you talked about how
                  the HSD provisioning costs are down to $7 to $8 a month, which
                  is largely consistent with what you guys have been saying
                  recently. Could you give us a sense of what an all-in,
                  inclusive, incremental cost for each Hi-Speed Data customer
                  is, if you include marketing? Can you guys take a stab at
                  that? The other two questions are: Given what we saw with
                  respect to the QVC domestic margin in the first quarter, i.e.,
                  flat year over year, should that be the assumption we carry
                  for the balance of the year? Or, should we expect
                  ever-so-modest margin expansion on top line? Lastly....

John Alchin:      Niraj, how many parts are there to this question?

Niraj Gupta:      Just three, John. So, this will be the last one. On QVC,
                  second question is, do you guys pay Cable MSOs up-front
                  distribution fee each year, like HSN does? In addition to your
                  5% of revenue, and if so, how do you guys treat that? Is that
                  something you capitalize and amortize below the EBITDA line?
                  Or take through your cash flow? Thanks.

John Alchin:      Let me handle the data question, and the up-front payment
                  question on QVC or maybe I can give that to Bill as well and
                  have Bill handle the margin part of the QVC question. If you
                  look at the Data product, we generated all in, including
                  acquisition costs and everything, approximately 25% operating
                  margin reflecting a month or 6 weeks or so of having
                  relatively smooth operations on our own network. That is an
                  operating cash flow margin on that product that we expect to
                  continue to see improvement throughout the remainder of the
                  year. On a run rate basis, we are currently probably just
                  north of about 30%, 33%, and by year end we expect that number
                  to increase to approximately 40%. So, without giving any other
                  breakdown, that is the profitability that is coming out of
                  that product. Our business in QVC, and I will have Bill add
                  further color to this, is a retail model driven by 5%
                  commissions to each of the MSOs who carry the signal. It does
                  not rely on other launch payments or anything else that is
                  made. Anything else that is done in that model is all
                  relatively immaterial to the overall scheme of things which is
                  driven by the 5% commission line. Bill, do you want to pick up
                  anything else on that and also add color on the margin?

Bill Costello:    Yes, I think that is correct, John, with regard to the launch
                  fees. Every agreement with the cable operators is different
                  and once in a while we might give some additional payments for
                  channel placement, and if we do, and as John mentioned, it is
                  not that material, but when we do that, this would be for
                  getting a lower channel position over a period of years, and
                  that would be amortized and included below the line. It is not
                  really a launch fee per se. With regard to the question on the
                  margin, and I assume you are talking about our EBITDA margin,
                  which was flat, 22.6% this year versus 22.6% last year.
                  Assuming we hit our top line goals, which is revenue increases
                  for the base and QVC.com business in the low double digit
                  area, we should see some improvement in the EBITDA margin, but
                  I would expect somewhere in the area of 25 to 35 basis points
                  throughout the rest of the year. We will not see the
                  phenomenal increases that we have had in the past because I
                  think we are operating the business right now at a very, very
                  high efficiency rate, and although there is some other cost
                  benefits to be had, we have really done a good job over the
                  last several years of wringing out as much as we can. So, I
                  think the leveraging of the fixed cost over a higher revenue
                  base should continue to boost our margin, bottom line, EBITDA
                  margin by about 35 basis points a year.

John Alchin:      Thanks a lot, Bill.  Next question, Operator?

Operator:         Our next question comes from Jeff Dorsey of Wellington
                  Management. Please state your question.

Jeff Dorsey:      No question.  Sorry.


                                        7



John Alchin:      Thanks, Jeff.  Next question?

Operator:         Our next question comes from Richard Bilotti of Morgan
                  Stanley. Please state your question.

Richard Bilotti:  Good morning. Obviously margins improved in the overall Cable
                  business, and some of that is the acquired properties from
                  last year, but what you did not mention on the call was
                  programming costs trends, and I am specifically interested in
                  understanding now that you are almost done with the rebuilds,
                  what are your programming costs trends looking like going
                  forward? For instance, are program costs increases on the
                  Basic or the Video side lower in systems that have been
                  rebuilt, where you are no longer adding channels? Does that
                  apply, therefore, to next year? Meaning when we look at 2003,
                  if there are no new channel launches on the analog side, do we
                  see some abatement of the growth of programming costs
                  pressure? I am talking about basically programming costs
                  trends X whatever savings that you might get from the AT&T
                  merger, more related to your channel addition strategy and the
                  underlying organic growth of programming.

Brian Roberts:    Okay. This is Brian. Let me take a shot at that. I think you
                  are absolutely right that when the rebuild activity abates,
                  and I do not have a specific breakout done that way, the
                  expanded Basic which is not then adding lots of new products,
                  will just logically begin to slow down. I think we have seen
                  some trends that are encouraging, but what is really part of
                  the equation is constantly trying to tweak the Digital to come
                  up with more and more appealing Digital content such that the
                  Digital package can continue to expand in its revenue, as John
                  was outlining earlier, each year. So, we have found ways and
                  we have layers of Digital, we have a Digital Basic, a Digital
                  Plus, and now we are beginning and what I would like to shift
                  that question to a little bit if I might, is our excitement
                  with VOD, video-on-demand. We really see somewhat of a
                  replication of the Cable model and perhaps an improvement on
                  the Internet model, and that is there will be three buckets of
                  VOD content. For years we have all talked about
                  movies-on-demand, and we are making great progress, and I
                  think you are going to see some announcements this week and
                  next on major studio relationships with various VOD providers,
                  which is going to inure to our benefit, but impulse-on- demand
                  product is one bucket. The second bucket is subscription VOD
                  which is, the best example is if you buy HBO Plus, whether we
                  charge more for that or not is a separate issue or they charge
                  us more or not is a different question, you can access any of
                  the HBO movies or "Sex in the City" or "Sopranos" anytime you
                  want and maybe even earlier than it is broadcast, and these
                  kinds of experimentations are going to be very exciting. But,
                  the latest category is what we are calling "Free VOD" or "Free
                  Video-on-Demand" where if you come into Digital, and this is
                  what Steve was talking about, giving folks a reason to take a
                  Digital box who maybe do not want to subscribe to HBO or Starz
                  or Showtime or who have not yet done Movies-on-Demand that in
                  our 1,500 hours of content that we can put on a Digital server
                  that we will have running this summer in our first market, 750
                  hours of that 1,500 we are going to offer to the same content
                  companies you are talking about in your question to say,
                  "Would you like to take the best biographies on A&E and have
                  them available to customers, including the commercial," or
                  "Would you like to have the nightly news broadcast rebroadcast
                  any time a consumer wants it until the next night," or a
                  sporting event that they could not watch live but they want to
                  get at any time. It is a controlled personal video recorder
                  where there is a relationship between a content company and
                  the cable company to create the best-of experience for the
                  consumer. In that mix, and the reason I bring this up now, if
                  you take the combined AT&T Comcast around $3.5 billion of
                  content purchasing, can we find ways and win-win ways to
                  expand the content to this new platform, do it in a way where
                  we begin to get the consumer to want to buy or want to push
                  the Okay or the Buy button and pay nothing for it. If you look
                  at the Internet, every time you clicked, if it costs $.10 we
                  all would not be out there surfing the Net the way we are
                  today where it is "free," and I think that it is a marvelous
                  model that we are now in conversations with the content
                  company. So, we do not break out the relationship just by
                  Basic or VOD or new launches or now Digital. It is a
                  relationship on how to make the best value-add using the Cable
                  technology to expand their reach and to make a compelling
                  consumer proposition. All in all, we are quite satisfied with
                  the progress we are making, look forward to testing this new
                  product this summer.


                                        8



Richard Bilotti:  Thank you very much.

John Alchin:      Next question please, Operator?

Operator:         Our next question comes from Jessica Reif Cohen of Merrill
                  Lynch. Please state your question.

Jessica
Reif Cohen:       Thank you. Your Data growth is phenomenal. Where do you think
                  peak penetration as a standalone ISP will be and how much
                  further can multiple ISPs take your business? Could you also
                  comment, given the growth in margins throughout the year,
                  where do you think peak margins on this side of the business
                  will be?

Brian Roberts:    Well, let me kick it over to Steve after one up-front comment
                  on Data growth because I think you are absolutely right. Given
                  the transition, and in fact, if you look at the weekly ad
                  rate, in January it was what John?

John Alchin:      We started out at less than 5,000, and we are now doing very
                  close to 10,000 a week.

Brian Roberts:    So, the trend is only getting better, and one of our problems,
                  Jessica, is really knowing where does Data, where does Digital
                  end. Our goal is to keep coming up with compelling
                  propositions in the description of the product that just makes
                  that answer unlimited or unanswerable at this moment. So, what
                  are we doing in Data? Well, one thing would be multiple ISPs,
                  and as you know, we announced United On-Line, Net Zero. AT&T
                  Broadband announced Juno and a regional Massachusetts ISP. We
                  really do believe that again, in a win-win,
                  non-governmentally-mandated way multiple ISPs can help us. We
                  are working with other broadband content, just as with VOD to
                  enhance Digital, whether that is voice-over-IP or whether that
                  is folks like Real Networks and what they are doing or
                  whomever, we want to create the experience. But, the first job
                  was to stabilize the network, to get it to perform better than
                  the at-home network was performing, to allow us to have
                  multiple ISPs, and finally and probably most importantly, was
                  to get it to DOCSIS 1.1 so that we can begin to differentiate
                  the experience by charging people who are interested in more
                  consumption more and people who are interested in more speed
                  more and people who may be interested in always-on but not
                  high-speed less, and to have bandwidth-on-demand and to also
                  have the ability to have two-way at higher bandwidth rates,
                  which is what Cable Labs is working on. All of that is what
                  was the benefit of this painful conversion that we had to go
                  through, and I think we did a fabulous job. Steve?

Steve Burke:      Well, if you look at our mature markets, we have penetrations
                  significantly in excess of 20% now. We also have in many of
                  our markets, our on-line sell-in rate, in other words the
                  percentage of people who are new to Cable who would move in,
                  who also take on line is over 20%. So, I think going over 20%
                  with the existing configuration should be no problem at all.
                  We look at this in a similar way to Digital in that you keep
                  evolving the product and you need each evolution to occur
                  before the life cycle starts to flatten. The type of things
                  that we are working on now that we have our own network, Brian
                  mentioned tiering introducing a tier above the $45 rate and
                  also eventually introducing a tier below, although I think you
                  have to be careful with cannibalization before you do that.
                  Multiple ISPs we see as being additive to the business. I
                  think the track record at Time Warner Cable with Earthlink and
                  AOL would suggest that they really are getting a lift. So, we
                  are excited about that. And then new products, home
                  networking, we think is clearly an opportunity to get an extra
                  $10, $15, $20 a month in recurring revenue. Security we have
                  some ideas on a security product, and their audio, gaming,
                  streaming media, etc., and I think the idea is as with
                  Digital, once you get a cable modem in someone's house, that
                  is just the beginning, and you keep refining and making the
                  product more rich so that you can layer on more revenue and
                  drive penetration deeper.

John Alchin:      Next question please, Operator?


                                        9



Operator:         Our next question comes from Raymond Katz of Bear Stearns.
                  Please state your question.

Raymond Katz:     Good morning. Two things. First of all, Digital penetration,
                  it looks like it is going to be close to 30% by the end of the
                  year, and I am sure there are systems where you are at that
                  now. Could you talk to us about spectrum, analog spectrum
                  recapture, can you start that soon if you are at 30% and you
                  are pushing all your premium customers now onto Digital? Can
                  you get that recaptured soon? What should we expect rolling
                  forward, say, a handful of years, what would use that spectrum
                  for? Brian, can you just elaborate a little bit more on the
                  model VOD that you talked about? Specifically with the
                  Movies-on-Demand and Release Windows?

John Alchin:      Steve, go ahead.

Steve Burke:      Well, in terms of Digital penetration growing and recapturing
                  analog Spectrum, our feeling is that the Cable business is a
                  gradual business. So, what has been happening to us as we have
                  had individual systems reach penetrations up in the 25%, 30%
                  range is we have started to recapture analogue spectrum
                  already, and we have done it, we have taken back pay-per-view
                  channels. We have taken back, in some cases, analog pay
                  channels. So, that is a process that has been occurring. That
                  process will accelerate as Digital reaches a higher
                  penetration level. In terms of usage, I think the most
                  immediate major use is going to be Video-on-Demand where we
                  have allocated four analog channels to Video-on-Demand but
                  have a feeling that our Video-on-Demand product, as Brian
                  described, could be robust enough that you may want to
                  allocate more than four analogue channels, which I think would
                  ultimately be a good problem to have because it would indicate
                  that simultaneous usage would get above 10% and into the 15%,
                  20%, 25% range which would indicate that the product would be
                  going into a completely different level of attractiveness
                  which, after all, is really the purpose of the on-demand
                  strategy that we are looking at expanding.

Brian Roberts:    I think one of the things with Movie Windows is obviously the
                  desire in the cable industry to over time find a model to move
                  them from where they are today closer to home video and in
                  some event-type cases, even try to play around with some
                  special events only on cable where, who knows? Maybe it is
                  earlier or a sneak preview or whatever. In order to do that,
                  we have to get the product going, and I think we are going to
                  show some real progress in that regard, and the model will
                  allow for the studio, movie by movie, company by company, to
                  determine if it wants to begin to experiment with different
                  ways of making this more attractive. At the same time, what we
                  are talking about in the free world is getting people used to
                  pushing and getting what they want now. Give them a sample,
                  give them something that they want, and of course, for the
                  broadcast network, if I just did "60 Minutes" and I am
                  throwing it away until next week, and it does not have a
                  shelf- life value, and they can re-sell the advertising and
                  (inaudible)...their rating, is that not something, and to
                  advertise their network, why would we not want to offer that
                  product? And, that gets people used to click and watch, and
                  then one day they see a movie, they click, and they buy. I
                  think if you could do the Internet all over again, you would
                  have a lot of surfing around and you would have a lot of
                  levels of clicking that would have some fees, but the free
                  nature of it was critical to its success, and I believe that
                  is a little bit of what we are thinking about while we are
                  waiting for the volumes and the dollars to allow for more
                  meaningful events to premier in Cable.

John Alchin:      Next question please, Operator?

Operator:         Our next question comes from Alan Gould of JP Morgan. Please
                  state your question.

Alan Gould:       Yes, thanks. Two questions. John, can you tell us a little
                  more about the (inaudible)...you have set up? What is the
                  average life of the security is?

John Alchin:      Alan, we are having trouble hearing you.  Can you speak up?

Alan Gould:       Is that better?


                                       10



John Alchin:      Oh, that is way better.  Thank you.

Alan Gould:       Can you tell us a little bit about the debt line that you
                  have? What is the average interest rate? What the debt
                  maturities are? How much you plan to eventually have fix
                  floating? And secondly, what do you expect your price
                  increases of Basic Cable to be this year?

John Alchin:      Steve, do you want to handle the price increase?
                  (inaudible)...already.

Steve Burke:      Yes. In terms of price increases, we would be in the same
                  range that we have been over the last few years, which is 5%
                  to 6%.

Alan Gould:       And those happened in the first quarter, Steve?

Steve Burke:      No, those come in throughout the year. We have a lot of
                  increases in the August through November timeframe. They sort
                  of come in ratably. We do not have a particular day and time
                  when all 8.5 million subscribers take increases; it comes in
                  over time.

John Alchin:      And, Alan, our average cost of debt is under 6% at the end of
                  the first quarter, it was about 5.89%. We have a relatively
                  high ratio of fixed to floating at the moment in the 85 to 15
                  range. I think, going forward, we have something that we
                  manage constantly. We have had ratios more consistently over
                  time in the 60-40 range. Obviously what we draw down at
                  closing of the merger at the outset absent any activity in the
                  bond market in anticipation or in advance of closing would
                  result in initial drawings being 100% floating, taking this
                  number down dramatically from the 85- 15 that we are at now.
                  And, then subsequently, if we did any bond offering into the
                  market place, we would have the ability through hedging to do
                  swaps back from fixed back to floating. So, somewhere between
                  60-40, 75-25 is where we have historically been.

Alan Gould:       Okay, thank you.

John Alchin:      Next question please, Operator?

Operator:         Our next question comes from Tom Wolzein of Sanford Bernstein.
                  Please go ahead.

Tom Wolzein:      Good morning, gentlemen. Related in two parts. One, how you
                  are on the maturity of the debt going forward. Secondly, does
                  the fact that you have solved the cash needs for closing, are
                  you okay for the following year for your cash needs, and does
                  all of this reduce any pressure on you to try to do a fast
                  resolution, perhaps having to pay taxes on TWE?

John Alchin:      Sorry, Tom, I did not mean to duck the maturity issue. We have
                  very modest maturities on our own balance sheet in the 2002,
                  2003, 2004 timeframe. The facilities that we put in place for
                  the AT&T merger involve financings that are about 50-50 split
                  between longer term, 2 to 5 years, and short term being 364
                  days facilities. The 364 day component of the financing
                  arrangement is directed primarily at giving us a bridge into
                  the bond market, and yes, the financing we have arranged takes
                  into account virtually any need that we can see from here
                  through the next 18 to 24 months.

Brian Roberts:    I do not want to comment on TWE publicly except that we are
                  hopeful to get a private resolution, but that conversation is
                  best left to private discussions. It is ongoing.

John Alchin:      Do we have one last question, please, Operator?

Operator:         Our final question comes from Michael Kupinski of AG Edwards &
                  Sons. Please go ahead.


                                       11



Michael
Kupinski:         Thank you. With the company's focus on advertising, given the
                  merger and the platform that you had so eloquently talked
                  about, how interested in getting those LA systems and
                  consolidation in the LA market, especially with the prospect
                  of Adelphia LA systems on the market, and I know AT&T owns an
                  interest in those, could you acquire those Adelphia systems
                  prior to the approval of the merger? And are lawmakers looking
                  at the aggregate number of subscribers given the AT&T
                  partnerships and ownerships that you might have, could you
                  roll up some of those companies' insistence without the ire of
                  Congress? So, perhaps if you could just give us an update on
                  some of your hearings or what the Senators had concerns of
                  yesterday?

Brian Roberts:    Last week. This is Brian. Let me say that we were, what you
                  are referring to is the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee Hearing
                  that took place on the merger, and people have to draw their
                  own conclusions although a number of the Senators commented
                  that they did not see an anti-trust issue with the merger. So,
                  we were pleased with that, and I think it was a very good and
                  fair hearing and do not anticipate anything that would have
                  changed our estimate of when the deal will close. If anything,
                  we are hoping to make it happen a little sooner, not a little
                  later, but we will stand by our estimates at this point.
                  Rather than getting into any specific market and specific
                  potential transactions by other companies, I would just say
                  that the government is looking at it in aggregate. There could
                  be lots of swapping that goes on. We are not any, at this
                  point, we have plenty to work on if we can make it less
                  markets with more concentration in those markets for the way
                  we run the business in the clusters, that is always desirable
                  and whether that is adding one particular cluster or getting
                  out of a particular cluster and adding systems that are
                  contiguous somewhere else, we will leave that to others, but
                  we are not looking at anything except how to get the new
                  company to have the kind of margins that our company today
                  enjoys with the kind of new product success and with the kind
                  of focus on operations that I think has made results like
                  today possible. That is really where we are focused, and any
                  one individual market is not the center of attention at this
                  point.

John Alchin:      Thank you, all. We are available for anybody who has any
                  follow-up questions. So, look forward to another great quarter
                  and a terrific year. Thank you.

Operator:         Thank you. There will be a replay immediately following
                  today's conference call, and it will run through tomorrow
                  night at midnight. The dial-in number is 630-652-3000, and the
                  passcode is 5605377. Once again the number for the replay is
                  630-652-3000, and the passcode is 5605377. A recording of the
                  conference call will also be available on the company's Web
                  site. This concludes today's teleconference. Thank you for
                  participating. You may all disconnect.


                                       12



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                                       13