republican-creole
Search:  

 
 
   News
newer
story category Local TV Stations Fight FCC Localism Proposals
Competing with cable TV is getting too expensive
(old news - 11:02AM Saturday May 10 2008)
tags: Video · competition · business · cable
Whenever the FCC does anything controversial related to media ownership, they are quick to announce that their intention is to further three main goals: competition, diversity and localism. That third goal could cause some serious problems for local television networks if the FCC moves forward with a series of proposals that are intended to further that goal.

A proposal of primary concern is one which would require local broadcasters to move their studios to the city in which they are licensed. This was an FCC rule twenty years ago after which it was changed due to changes in transportation and technology that make it unnecessary to keep the buildings within a certain geographic area. However, the FCC seeks to return to that old rule in the interest of promoting localism and many stations fear that the cost to relocate would be too high. For example, ABC spent $100 million to move its KABC Los Angeles station to Orange County and believes that a move back to L.A. would cost millions more.

Combined with the cost of the forced migration from analog to digital viewing, television stations fear that they can’t afford to continue to compete with cable and satellite TV. Apparently one way not to try to raise that money is for TV stations to make their content available on the Internet; a new study shows that is going to cost the stations $66 billion in revenue and suggests that it's a mistake for stations to go that route.

Related:
  1. NAB Sues FCC Over White Space Broadband
  2. Cox Gears Up for Multi-Room DVR
  3. Netflix Says No PS3 Streaming....Yet
  4. Cablevision Ramps Up HD Availability
  5. 'Free' Comcast TV Coming To Fancast
  6. Mark Cuban: Still Terrified of TV Competition
  7. Internet Video Still Just a Baby
  8. Verizon Uses Your Forum Complaints Against Cablevision
Forums » Local TV Stations Fight FCC Localism Proposals
view: topics flat text 
Post a:
clickie

join:2005-05-22
Monroe, MI

It's Obvious...

It's obvious that the FCC wants to kill off local broadcasters, for whatever reason.

Not that I think local TV is worth saving at this point with the constant staple of "you're going to die if you don't tune-in at 11", the truth is that free local over the air broadcasts are still what bunch of people can afford.

The transition to digital has cost the stations a lot of money all so the FCC can auction off their previous channels. Then, once they've gone and built out new facilities, the FCC proposes that the stations who are not within the city of license pack it all up and build new ones again. Ridiculous.

Not well thought out, or it underscores an ulterior motive. And with today's FCC, I'm betting on the latter.

LiamJunket
Premium
join:2002-03-03
Ocean City, NJ
·Comcast


1 edit

Martin out of control once again

Not to grandfather existing facilities would punish all of the companies that built those facilities based on the old FCC rules. Would the FCC really create such an ex post facto nightmare? “I have no idea,” the communications attorney said. “I have given up thinking what they could or could not do.”
I think the last comment sums up what most people think about the FCC. No one looks for logic in their decisions anymore. Martin is pursuing some agenda only he understands in his twisted brain.
--
My BLOG .. .. Internet News .. .. My Web Page

kamm

join:2001-02-14
Brooklyn, NY
·T-Mobile US
·Packet8

Re: Martin out of control nce again

said by LiamJunket See Profile :

Not to grandfather existing facilities would punish all of the companies that built those facilities based on the old FCC rules. Would the FCC really create such an ex post facto nightmare? “I have no idea,” the communications attorney said. “I have given up thinking what they could or could not do.”
I think the last comment sums up what most people think about the FCC. No one looks for logic in their decisions anymore. Martin is pursuing some agenda only he understands in his twisted brain.
Is this news? Martin and his predecessor Powell should be tried for what they did to the whole US media and telecom market.
Techie714

join:2005-08-02
Anaheim, CA

Dumb!

Maybe I'm missing something here, but that's the dumbest idea I have heard in a long time. Who cares where the stupid station is located, what matter's is content. The Government witch yet another stupid rule.

en102
Canadian, eh?

join:2001-01-26
Valencia, CA

Re: Dumb!

True - taxes and county laws make for a difference though.
I like HD OTA... unfortunately, KABC analog is 'strong', but KABC is barely usable.
--
Canada = Hollywood North
patcat88

join:2002-04-05
Jamaica, NY

said by Techie714 See Profile :

Maybe I'm missing something here, but that's the dumbest idea I have heard in a long time. Who cares where the stupid station is located, what matter's is content. The Government witch yet another stupid rule.
So what is your plan for stations that air 2 local segments a night and the rest are [»en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_news_release]s?

Newsie

@spcsdns.net

You've got your facts wrong

This article may be correct in most things... but you got one major statement wrong.

KABC did not move to Orange County. It is in Glendale, CA which is in Los Angeles County. Glendale is a city adjacent to the city of Los Angeles.
The station has an Orange County bureau... as does every other station in the market... but the main office and studios are in Los Angeles County.
I don't know where you got the information that it moved to Orange County... but it's wrong... check your facts.

Jmartz

join:2000-07-20
Tenafly, NJ

Re: You've got your facts wrong

said by Newsie :

This article may be correct in most things... but you got one major statement wrong.

KABC did not move to Orange County. It is in Glendale, CA which is in Los Angeles County. Glendale is a city adjacent to the city of Los Angeles.
The station has an Orange County bureau... as does every other station in the market... but the main office and studios are in Los Angeles County.
I don't know where you got the information that it moved to Orange County... but it's wrong... check your facts.
So let KABC change its location to Glendale. LA would make it sound more prominent, but it would still have the same coverage area and channel number, and network affiliation, and it would sink or swim depending on more than just the city of licence.
ISurfTooMuch

join:2007-04-23
Tuscaloosa, AL

This is a great idea

This is one area where I agree with the FCC. The reason this rule should have been kept in the first place is because stations in small markets are often bought up by new owners who never intend to serve that city. What they want to do is to move the tower as close as possible to the nearest major city and try to get a rimshot signal into it. If they can do that, they then move the station's studios and offices there, abandoning their real city of license.

A perfect example is Tuscaloosa, AL. The metro area has something like 120,000 residents, and, before 1996, it had two local stations doing news. Then there was a network affiliation shakeup in Birmingham, which is about 55 miles away, and the new owners of one of the stations decided they wanted to be a player in the Birmingham area, so they essentially packed up WCFT and moved it. At the same time, the owners of WDBB, who also owned a Birmingham station, converted the Tuscaloosa station into nothing more than a repeater for WTTO, dropping their local news in the process. So, in just a few months, the area went from having two local stations to none. The only thing that brought local news back was when, a few years later, some local businessmen bought a LPTV station and added local programming.

So, yes, I agree with the FCC. If someone owns a local station, then they should serve the city it's licensed to serve. If they don't want to do that, then they can start a cable or satellite channel and not worry about local programming. And, while the FCC is at it, they could change some more rules, such as:

Reinstitute ownership limits. The 12-12-12 rule seems perfectly reasonable to me, with a limit of no more than 1 AM, 1 FM, and 1 TV per market. This worked fine for decades, and lest anyone think this is stupid, it was the elimination of ownership caps that allowed companies like Clear Channel to turn local radio into the wasteland it is today.

Require an operator on duty at all time, and require them to keep transmitter logs. For those who don't know, radio stations had to have someone there at all times who checked transmitter readings each hour and logged them. You didn't have to have a degree in engineering to do this, nor did you really have to know the ins and outs of what all the numbers meant, but you knew what was normal for your transmitter, so, if the numbers went awry, you called in your station engineer to have a look. But that was back when people actually gave a damn what their stations sounded like.

Eliminate bidding for licenses and return to a comparative application process. It wasn't a perfect process, but at least a little guy had a chance of winning a license, as opposed to now, when the high bidder gets it. And again, this is why keeping stations in their cities of license makes sense. As it stands, any town within 75 miles of a large city isn't going to have a chance in hell of having a local station. Even if someone there wants to get a license and serve that local area, they often can't outbid the big media companies who want that license so they can try to get a slice of the bigger media pie farther up the interstate.
RadioDoc
58ef2c0
Premium,ExMod 2000-03
join:2000-05-11
·AT&T Midwest


2 edits

Re: This is a great idea

Your info is a little outdated but I get your point. A little supplemental data:

The situation in Tuscaloosa would not have been changed by a stricter main studio rule. They would have set up in Birmingham and originated 49% of their local programming there and met the old rules. The Tuscaloosa studio would serve mostly as a sham office and control point. One of the reasons the rule was changed to allow the studio to be anywhere inside the city-grade contour is that it was outdated and irrelevant, and trivially easy to circumvent. Radio's doesn't even need to be in the city grade anymore, which is kind of stupid but so are the congresscritters who pressured the FCC to do it.

The 12-12-12 limit worked fine when there were half as many stations. While I don't agree with unlimited ownership the old limits were too tight. What really needs to be done is to reclaim the noncommercial, educational end of the FM band (88.1-91.9) from the so-called "religious" operators and return it to its original purpose: Community service.

ATS (Automatic Transmission System, basically automated remote control) has been around for almost 30 years, and hourly readings gave way to readings every three hours (and the hourly readings replaced readings every 30 minutes) due to advances in transmitter technology which made them unnecessary. Most modern transmitters can run for weeks without adjustment...some for years...and the meter readings don't really tell you anything. The days of the transmitter babysitter are over. Most of those people taking readings got their FCC licenses via license mills and would not have known what to do even if the transmitter lost AFC lock and took off down the dial... Properly set up ATS will call the engineer when something goes out of tolerance, which is what that babysitter was supposed to be doing anyway.

Instead of trying to stick it to licensees with what amounts to regulatory extortion, the FCC should simply require local content again, produced for the community of license. Ascertainment Interviews, Issues and Programs lists, news and public affairs requirements, et. al. were a pain in the ass but it did get at least basic service to the CoL. And it helped localize radio and to a certain extent TV. Radio sold its soul when it eliminated the local DJ.

The auction nonsense is purely a Congressional figment. The FCC has a Congressional mandate to award commercial broadcast licenses by auction when a conflict exists, but it is not always required. For example, there are a couple hundred new AM station construction permits in process or already on-air which do not conflict with others filed in the January 2004 filing window and did not go to auction.
--
Toolmaster of La Grange.
patcat88

join:2002-04-05
Jamaica, NY


1 edit

Re: This is a great idea

said by RadioDoc See Profile :

Instead of trying to stick it to licensees with what amounts to regulatory extortion, the FCC should simply require local content again, produced for the community of license. Ascertainment Interviews, Issues and Programs lists, news and public affairs requirements, et. al. were a pain in the ass but it did get at least basic service to the CoL. And it helped localize radio and to a certain extent TV. Radio sold its soul when it eliminated the local DJ.
BBBBUTTTTTTT THATS VIOLATING FIRST AMENDMENT RIGHTS AND CENSORSHIP TO DIRECT ON AIR CONTENT!!!!!!!

*statute struck down in federal court*
RadioDoc
58ef2c0
Premium,ExMod 2000-03
join:2000-05-11

Re: This is a great idea

Wrong.
EPS

join:2008-02-13
Hingham, MA
No first amendment on television- all airwaves are legally controlled by the FCC and they can do whatever they want with the licenses.
patcat88

join:2002-04-05
Jamaica, NY

Re: This is a great idea

said by EPS See Profile :

No first amendment on television- all airwaves are legally controlled by the FCC and they can do whatever they want with the licenses.
Not when you get an activist federal judge or the supreme court involved and your a mega corporation.

Verizon Wireless has used the first amendment to control and filter content on its network by claiming it has a right to express itself (which is interpreted to mean controlling its image).
RadioDoc
58ef2c0
Premium,ExMod 2000-03
join:2000-05-11
·AT&T Midwest

Re: This is a great idea

said by patcat88 See Profile :

said by EPS See Profile :

No first amendment on television- all airwaves are legally controlled by the FCC and they can do whatever they want with the licenses.
Not when you get an activist federal judge or the supreme court involved and your a mega corporation.

Verizon Wireless has used the first amendment to control and filter content on its network by claiming it has a right to express itself (which is interpreted to mean controlling its image).
Again, Wrong. Broadcast and cell phones aren't even in the same regulatory planetary system.
--
Toolmaster of La Grange.
patcat88

join:2002-04-05
Jamaica, NY


1 edit

Re: This is a great idea

Nope, explain this.

»www.verizonwireless.com/pdfs/wel···uide.doc
quote:
FCC Rules And Regulations

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) requires that wireless phones be operated in accordance with FCC rules and regulations and under supervision of the licensee.
Severe punishment can result from failure to comply with the following regulations:
...........
No person shall utter any obscene, indecent or profane language by means of radio communication.

EDIT

Regarding first amendment rights. Here is a quote from a FCC filing by Verizon.
(OCR may have screwed up some things and bold is by me source: »fjallfoss.fcc.gov/prod/ecfs/retr···19866994 )

quote:
VII. THE RELIEF PETITIONERS SEEK WOULD VIOLATE THE FIRST
AMENDMENT RIGHTS OF WIRELESS OPERATORS.
The Commission should also reject Petitioners' invitation to exercise its Title I discretion
to impose common carriage obligations because any such action would violate the First
Amendment. Petitioners argue that Section 202 obligations are needed to protect "new modes of
speech,,,74 but they have the First Amendment issue precisely backward: the non-discrimination
duty they propose would undercut the free speech rights of wireless operators.75
In managing
short code campaigns, wireless operators exercise editorial discretion by choosing to feature
certain content, while refraining from providing other content. Under settled principles, such
activity constitutes expression protected by the First Amendment.76 Because a duty of nondiscrimination
would preclude wireless operators from making editorial judgments and indirectly
burden their interests as speakers, that duty must satisfy searching constitutional review-at least intennediate scrutiny.77 In addition, a court would accord the Commission no Chevron
deference given the presence of a serious constitutional question surrounding its actions.78
footnote 75
quote:
Cf. Motion Picture Ass'n of Am., Inc. v. FCC, 309 F.3d 796, 805 (D.C. Cir. 2002) (holding that rules requiring broadcasters to provide video content for blind customers were outside the Commission's Title I authority, in part because regulation of content raises serious First Amendment issues); Audio Communications, Inc. Petition for a Declaratory Ruling that the 900 Service Guidelines of US Sprint Communications Co. Violate Section 201(a) and 202(a) of the Communications Act, 8 FCC Rcd 8697, 8700-02, ~~ 30-31 (1993) (noting that First Amendment prohibition does not apply "to business decisions by private entities," and rejecting petitioners' request to exercise Title I jurisdiction in order to impose Section 202 obligations, in part because the challenged action did not "harm First Amendment values," as the petitioners contended).

ISurfTooMuch

join:2007-04-23
Tuscaloosa, AL

Agreed. Actually, I agree about the improvements in transmitter technology. In reality, since most of them are off-site at the tower some distance away, you're already doing remote monitoring. At the station where I worked in high school and summers during college, the transmitter was in a room right next to the control room. It was this ancient Collins behemoth. And did it ever need monitoring and routine tweaking. But anyway, my point was more that monitoring was beneficial because it kept a live human at the station, and, more often than not, it was a DJ, so it kept at least a few more stations live for a while longer.

As for ownership limits, 12-12-12 may be a bit strict, but there needs to be curbs, especially on how many stations can be co-owned in a single market. Other than leading to bland, cookie-cutter programming, large clusters tend to squeeze out the remaining independents. If you're a local operator, it's hard to compete with a couple of corporate-owned clusters that have everything fed in via satellite and/or voice-tracked from another city. The big group owners like to say that, because of satellite radio, iPods, CD's, etc., there is plenty of competition and no need for limits. However, one could also argue that, because of satellite radio, iPods, CD's, etc., there are plenty of other avenues for these companies to pursue and no need for them to own a bunch of stations.

I'm not for overly-restrictive rules, but it's the lack of any meaningful regulations that have turned local broadcasting, especially radio, into the cesspool of mediocrity that it is today. Radio used to be a pleasure to listen to. The big-city stations had slick production values and the best talent, while the small-town stations had all that homespun local programming and the new guys who were trying to get good enough to make it to the big stations. It was fun to listen to, no matter where you were. But now all we hear is the same shitty programming coast to coast. The big media companies swooped in, bought up everything, and flushed quality right down the toilet.

Oh, about the Tuscaloosa/Birmingham situation, some of the rules might have helped, specifically the duopoly prohibition. When Albritton (sp?) bought WCFT, they couldn't use it to cover all of the Birmingham metro, so they also bought WJSU, which could hit the other side of the metro area, and combined them. Since Tuscaloosa was no longer its own DMA (it was absorbed by the Birmingham DMA), the old duopoly rules might have kept ABC 33/40 from being created, which might have meant that WCFT could have remained a Tuscaloosa station. No guarantees there, but in a more regulated environment, this situation might not have been allowed to happen. If a company wants to serve a large city, let them buy a station in that city, not steal local service away from nearby communities to enter the market. Another side effect of the combined DMA is that we now get to have WIAT as the market's CBS affiliate. That station isn't even viewable OTA in Tuscaloosa. If you don't have cable or satellite, you can't even get it at all.

sporkme
drop the crantini and move it, sister
Premium,MVM
join:2000-07-01
Morristown, NJ
·Optimum Online

said by RadioDoc See Profile :

What really needs to be done is to reclaim the noncommercial, educational end of the FM band (88.1-91.9) from the so-called "religious" operators and return it to its original purpose: Community service.
That is a fabulous idea. While they are tax-exempt, they are there to turn a profit, even if it is for a church. I won't even touch the separation of church and state issue here... oops, I just did.

I'd also like to see a bit more spectrum for the community stations so that they can spread out and have a bit more power. At least around here, the only stuff worth listening to is down at the low end of the dial but it sucks to not be able to listen in the car or to have to rig some elaborate antenna system in the attic to pull in stations not more than 20 miles away.

Not to mention the rinky-dink stations seem to be the only ones that give a rat's ass about how they sound. The big stations with all that compression and magic "sweeteners" sound like the audio equivalent of runny oatmeal. The little guys still have dynamic range, which I'll take over a bit of hiss or whatever else the compression is masking.

Internet radio is great as well, but until I can easily/cheaply get it in my car and my bathroom it's limited in it's usefulness.
RadioDoc
58ef2c0
Premium,ExMod 2000-03
join:2000-05-11
·AT&T Midwest


1 edit

Re: This is a great idea

Heh...well that's the problem with "community radio". It is not supposed to be serving you 20 miles away.

Here in the Chicago area there are about three dozen college and high school station stuffed into those 20 channels, along with a couple of the usual suspects like Moody on 90.1 (running a grandfathered 100 KW ERP which takes six other channels out of the pool for small locals but at least runs some local programming) and Family Stations up at 91.9 in Joliet at 50 KW ERP wasting electricity & spectrum and running nothing local.

At least in the Chicago market the very high density of little class-D NCE-FMs in the 70's who upgraded to class-A predated the "religious" invasion and occupation of the band so the bulk of what you hear down there is amateurish, inconsistent and totally wonderful.

Having been in this business for over 30 years now it really pains me to see what the "product" has become, but many of my clients still do it the old fashioned way, and actually serve their markets and gives me a little ray of hope...
--
Toolmaster of La Grange.
Kearnstd
Elf Wizard
Premium
join:2002-01-22
Mullica Hill, NJ

quote:
Instead of trying to stick it to licensees with what amounts to regulatory extortion, the FCC should simply require local content again, produced for the community of license. Ascertainment Interviews, Issues and Programs lists, news and public affairs requirements, et. al. were a pain in the ass but it did get at least basic service to the CoL. And it helped localize radio and to a certain extent TV. Radio sold its soul when it eliminated the local DJ.
wow never knew some stations outsource their DJs. course ive had only two primary stations in my life lol. though i wouldnt be surprised of a company named Clearchannel was the biggest offender of remote DJs.
--
[65 Arcanist]Filan(High Elf) Zone: Broadband Reports
ISurfTooMuch

join:2007-04-23
Tuscaloosa, AL

Re: This is a great idea

You've never heard of voice tracking? Oh man, you don't get out much, do you?
RadioDoc
58ef2c0
Premium,ExMod 2000-03
join:2000-05-11
·AT&T Midwest

Re: This is a great idea

LOL...especially since it's been around for probably 40 years.

These days instead of reel-to-reel or carts it's done via digital audio files and FTP-d or emailed right into the automation system. Nobody local even touches it.

Which is another cause of non-local radio...
--
Toolmaster of La Grange.

Dogfather
Premium
join:2007-12-26
Laguna Hills, CA

1 edit

Why move?

Why would KABC need to move back? What difference would it make if they're licensed in LA, Orange County or the Valley? Their coverage area is their coverage area.
RadioDoc
58ef2c0
Premium,ExMod 2000-03
join:2000-05-11

Re: Why move?

I suggest you actually read the background information before posting. This is not about coverage.
--
Toolmaster of La Grange.

Dogfather
Premium
join:2007-12-26
Laguna Hills, CA
·Cox HSI
·Verizon FIOS
·Cox VOIP
·ViaTalk
·RoadRunner Cable
·MegaPath
·Verizon west (ex G..
·Time Warner VOIP


4 edits

Re: Why move?

I suggest you actually read the post before replying.

Orange County and certainly Glendale are both local to Los Angeles. Whether their station is located within the city limits of Los Angeles doesn't change anything in terms of how easy it is to get to the station or locality of programming. If anything, having the station in LA it makes it worse in terms of accessability.

You obviously have zero clue about Los Angeles traffic or the LA market and LA isn't Chicago or New York City. These Greater Los Angeles stations serve about 13 million people in the LA area and 17 million are in range of these stations. Less than 1/4th of these serviced people are actually in LA. Local programming like news covers thousands of square miles and millions of people OUTSIDE the city of LA. In terms of KABC, they're doing just fine with local programming and accessibility from their new studios in Glendale including Ventura, Orange, W. SB and W. Riverside Counties. Changing their street address doesn't so anything other than cost the station millions and millions of dollars and make the already horrible traffic worse.
RadioDoc
58ef2c0
Premium,ExMod 2000-03
join:2000-05-11

Re: Why move?

Guess what, I read what you posted. It is irrelevant. Thank you for showing your utter lack of knowledge of what this is all about though.
--
Toolmaster of La Grange.

Dogfather
Premium
join:2007-12-26
Laguna Hills, CA

Re: Why move?

Whatever troll.
Ulmo

join:2005-09-22
San Jose, CA
·Comcast
·SONIC.NET

If I didn't know what happened to KNTV, I would be wondering the same things as Skeedatl.

FYI, KNTV broadcasted local news for Monterey Bay and San Jose. Then, someone bought it, and the signal for Monterey Bay was eliminated (the tower was moved from Santa Cruz Mountains overlooking Monterey Bay and San Jose to some hill overlooking instead San Francisco), and the programming for Monterey Bay was also eliminated, and San Jose's programming was severely reduced if not eliminated. The previously strong signal to San Jose is now a very, very week signal that needs special antennas that cause court battles, city council sessions, fights with landlords, etc. to receive.

So, in other words, they completely eliminated a station from Monterey Bay, and removed most of it from San Jose.

Why does anybody care? Well, there are considerations of the cost to bring TV to that frequency in San Jose and Monterey Bay. Perhaps it wasn't something that was profitable. However, having that same frequency in use in San Francisco precludes it being used in Monterey Bay or San Jose, so if it was profitable down there, then they stole it. The above is not the full story, then.
tantivy

join:2007-03-17
Palo Alto, CA

Re: Why move?

KNTV (11 San Jose) was affiliated with ABC for many years, for the Moneterey/Salinas market. KGO (7 San Francisco) is a ABC O&O in SF. Part of the affiliation agreement was that KNTV would reduce power so as not to compete with KGO in the SF market. KNTV ran for years with the power levels turned down, but their license was never modified, so they were allowed to return to their previous level if they chose to do so.

KNTV lost or terminated the ABC affiliation a few years ago, and went independent for a while, increasing power to their previous level. When KRON (4 San Francisco) had their NBC affiliation come up for renewal around the same time, NBC tried to reverse the normal order of things, and charge KRON to carry NBC programming. KRON told them where to put that idea, and went independent.

NBC was now left without an affiliate or O&O station in the SF area. They tried to buy KRON, but were not willing to pay the asking price, which was not unreasonable, but was more than the fire sale price that NBC was willing to pay.
NBC then grudgingly affiliated with KNTV, and eventually bought the station.

Now they have two stations covering into the Monterey/Salinas area (KNTV, and KSBW 8 Monterey), so they start figuring out how to move KNTV (licensed to San Jose) north to San Francisco, while still maintaining coverage of San Jose. They managed to move the station, but coverage? what coverage?

I'm told that KNTV production facilities are still in San Jose, but their news coverage seems highly biased towards San Francisco.

KSBW (8 Monterey) used to cover the San Jose area as well, but they moved their tower south to better cover their primary coverage area, which was a bit annoying, as I liked their programming.

CapitalistOinker

@comcast.net

Corporate fiscal responsibility...

The FCC should but out. This is capitalism at its finest.

The important thing here is to maximize station profit and enrich the pockets of top management and stock holders. The viewers don't matter. Get it?

Like the telco shills say, "If you don't like it then move."

Now quit whining and go watch some commercials.
EPS

join:2008-02-13
Hingham, MA

Re: Corporate fiscal responsibility...

The difference is that telcos don't use the common airwaves. You can build more wires (though no one wants to), you can't get more TV stations, especially as the FCC shrinks the broadcast band more and more as more bands are sold off to cell-phone companies and others.

But I think a more capitalist way to deal with it is to allow "non-local local" stations, but if someone else comes along willing to actually have a local focus, they should have a chance at grabbing the license.

This happened in Boston, the original WHDH on channel 5 lost its license in the 1970s to the group that founded the modern WCVB, which promised more local programming. Even today they're known for their local focus, though they produce less programming in-house than they used to.
ISurfTooMuch

join:2007-04-23
Tuscaloosa, AL

Re: Corporate fiscal responsibility...

I'm pretty sure he was being sarcastic.

But your point is well-taken. Another example was WLBT. They lost their license because of the way they covered the civil rights movement. Whenever someone opposed to it was interviewed, things went fine, but when they were going to interview someone who supported it, the station suddenly developed "technical difficulties". This happened over and over and over, complaints were filed with the FCC, and WLBT's license was yanked. Actually, if I remember my history, the only reason the station remained on the air was because it was transferred to new owners who were committed to providing access to those on both sides of the issue.
russotto

join:2000-10-05
Collegeville, PA

Futility.

Probably two things will result from an FCC attempt to re-instate the rule that the main studio be in the city of license

1) Stations will set up a teeny-weeny "main studio" in their city of license, and re-label their existing facility as a satellite studio, and fire up the lawyers to deal with any FCC objections.

2) If there's no grandfather clause, stations will immediately sue claiming regulations are "unduly burdensome"... and they'll probably win.
EPS

join:2008-02-13
Hingham, MA

Re: Futility.

I doubt they'd win anything. The FCC has the very clear legal authority to regulate television- most recently they got away with that silly E/I regulation, for example.

The right comes in part from the fact that no television station has a right to their airwaves, they are solely at the FCC's discretion.
MyDogHsFleas
Premium
join:2007-08-15
Austin, TX
·AT&T U-Verse
·AT&T Southwest

Why should local TV stations exist, long-term?

This is serious question, not trying to be argumentative.

Local TV stations were originally set up because this was the only way to get video signals to customers.

Now, with most homes able to receive video content by either satellite dish, copper, or fiber, why shouldn't most network programming be nationally broadcast rather than having to be re-transmitted by local stations?

The satellite providers (Dish and DirecTV) have to allocate a ton of transponders and bandwidth to carrying almost identical programming over a hundred or more "local stations".
EPS

join:2008-02-13
Hingham, MA

Re: Why should local TV stations exist, long-term?

You know, there is no real reason why a network like NBC, ABC, CBS, FOX, that joke "the CW", or the bigger joke "MyNetworkTV" needs to have a network of OTA stations I suppose- they could convert to a 24/7 cable channel.

But I think there is a value to local stations, if they actually do coverage of a local area. It may be different in your market, but in Boston the local newscasts are quite strong and have a lot of viewers and intermarket competition.

Honestly, the local newscast seems to me to be the greatest value to a local station, to provide coverage of local issues and such. Also, note that while most Americans CAN get Dish or DirecTV or cable, and those who do are the majority, it's not that great of a majority. (~45% of people don't get non-OTA TV IIRC)
Kearnstd
Elf Wizard
Premium
join:2002-01-22
Mullica Hill, NJ

local weather is another big thing and let me say this, the Weather is always the best part of a local station because every area the weather guy is unique. while all the anchors seem like cloned talking heads the weather guy is always quirky in some way.
--
[65 Arcanist]Filan(High Elf) Zone: Broadband Reports

DTV Watcher

@verizon.net

WTF is Diversity?

Does this mean we'll have even more non-english channels?

Give me a break.

Why is our government sponsoring this?
ftth_freak

join:2005-06-17
Ballwin, MO

KILL the FCC

Can we not just elect a libratarian and drive a stake through the FCC's heart. This Martin is simply a nightmare, heck, I'm ready to vote dem just so this guy exits quickly in 09.
Forums » Local TV Stations Fight FCC Localism Proposals


Sunday, 05-Jul 10:45:50 Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Hosting by www.nac.net - DSL,Hosting & Co-lo | feedback | contact
over 9.5 years online! © 1999-2009 dslreports.com.