Sinclair and Time Warner Cable Agree to Two More Weeks of Talks; No Blackout Tonight

Phillip Dampier December 31, 2010 Bright House, Consumer News, Time Warner Cable Comments Off

When the ball overlooking Times Square drops at midnight tonight, Time Warner Cable subscribers won’t have to say goodbye to local stations owned by Sinclair Broadcasting.  The two companies reached an agreement Friday to extend negotiations over programming fees paid by the cable operator until Jan. 14.

While the talks progress, Sinclair-owned stations will continue to be seen on Time Warner with no interruption.

The two companies have been locked in a dispute over programming fees that Sinclair characterizes as a dime’s worth of difference.

Sinclair owns stations in these communities.

Barry Faber, general counsel for Sinclair, said the two are arguing over Sinclair’s request to charge ten cents per month more per subscriber for their stations.

“We intend to continue our good-faith negotiations during this period with the intent of finalizing a longer-term agreement at pricing that reflects the higher cost of programming we are faced with today,” said Barry Faber, executive vice president and general counsel of Sinclair, in a statement released Friday.

The notion Sinclair faces “higher programming costs” is one some industry experts seriously question, considering Sinclair does not have a reputation for being a big spender.

Instead, many believe Sinclair is attempting to earn additional revenue they lost in the advertising downturn, attributable to the Great Recession.

The two companies hope to hammer out a final agreement after the New Year holiday, potentially ending the latest retransmission consent dispute threatening to throw channels and networks off the cable dial.

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Avoid the Bully Boys’ Retransmission Consent Battles: Get ivi for Blacked Out Football, Shows

Phillip Dampier December 30, 2010 Consumer News, Editorial & Site News, Online Video 2 Comments

A reminder to those who are at risk of losing some channels Saturday: you can watch stations from the East, Central, and West coast with newly expanded ivi.tv, which remains $4.99 a month.  We’ve had the service here since the first week it launched and it generally works well and delivers access to a very large number of network affiliates and stations.  For football fans in particular, ivi.tv is a great way to avoid local blackouts.  For an additional dollar a month, the player can timeshift programming by recording it to watch later.

The ivi service is not done adding channels either.  Philadelphia is forthcoming in a few weeks, and ivi will carry all of the market’s network signals.  What is still missing?  A mountain time zone bouquet of stations — Denver being the obvious choice.

If you want to give it a shot, here is the sign-up form: ivi.tv

Current Channel Guide

  • WCBS 2 (CBS) New York
  • WNBC 4 (NBC) New York
  • WNYW 5 (Fox) New York
  • WABC 7 (ABC) New York
  • WPIX 11 (The CW) New York
  • WNET 13 (PBS) New York
  • Universal Sports (NBC) New York
  • Kids 13 (PBS) New York
  • Qubo (Ion) New York
  • WWOR 9 (My TV) New York
  • WPXN (Ion) New York
  • Estrella TV (LBI) New York
  • WXTV Univision (UCI) New York
  • WFUT TeleFutura (UCI) New York
  • WNJU Telemundo (NBC) New York
  • New York NonStop (NBC) New York
  • KCBS 2 (CBS) Los Angeles
  • KNBC 4 (NBC) Los Angeles
  • KTLA 5 (The CW) Los Angeles
  • KABC 7 (ABC) Los Angeles
  • KCAL 9 (CBS) Los Angeles
  • KTTV 11 (FOX) Los Angeles
  • KOCE 50 (PBS) Los Angeles
  • KCOP 13 (My Network) Los Angeles
  • KMEX 34 Univision (UCI) Los Angeles
  • KVEA 52 Telemundo (NBC) Los Angeles
  • KAZA 54 (TV Azteca) Los Angeles
  • KSCI 18 SBS Korean Los Angeles
  • MBC-D (MBC) Korean Los Angeles
  • Trinity Broadcasting Network (TBN) Los Angeles
  • Enlace USA (TBN) Los Angeles
  • WBBM 2 (CBS) Chicago
  • WMAQ 5 (NBC) Chicago
  • WLS 7 (ABC) Chicago
  • WGN 9 (The CW) Chicago
  • WTTW 11 (PBS) Chicago
  • WFLD 32 (FOX) Chicago
  • WCIU 26 (The U) Chicago
  • MeTV (WWME) Chicago
  • MeToo (WMEU) Chicago
  • Chicago NonStop (NBC) Chicago
  • WLS Live Well (ABC) Chicago
  • WYCC 21 (PBS) Chicago
  • KOMO 4 (ABC) Seattle
  • KING 5 (NBC) Seattle
  • KIRO 7 (CBS) Seattle
  • KCTS 9 (PBS) Seattle
  • KSTW 11 (The CW) Seattle
  • KCPQ 13 (Fox) Seattle
  • KZJO (My Network TV) Seattle
  • KONG 6/16 (Belo) Seattle
  • Retro TV (RTV) Seattle
  • V-ME (PBS) Seattle
  • This TV (MGM) Seattle
  • Create TV (PBS) Seattle
  • ScreenPlay
  • TopShop Direct
  • CedarburgTV
  • Intereconomia Business TV
  • Orange Sport Info
  • Sport Italia
  • RTL 102.5
  • CCTV9
  • Zeilsteen TV
  • Telemicro
  • Play TV
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Ontario County, N.Y. Fiber Provider Wants Every Resident to Have Fiber-to-the-Home Service

Ontario County, N.Y. has completed its 200-plus mile fiber ring and is now open for business… at least for area businesses that want commercial accounts.

But the county’s Office of Economic Development has no intention of building a 21st century fiber network that consumers can’t use — it wants fiber-to-the-home service for every resident.

The formerly rural Finger Lakes county has become an economic growth spot in western New York, with urban sprawl from nearby Rochester and new high-technology businesses attracted by the area’s relatively low taxes and pro-technology attitude.

The high tech fiber ring is the most recent example of the county’s growth-oriented philosophy.

Axcess Ontario, a public-benefit corporation established to oversee the project, built the ring well under its $7.5 million budget.  In the end, the whole project ended up costing just $5.5 million.

The project benefited from faster than expected contracting work and the installation of a natural gas pipeline, through which some of the county’s fiber travels.  Much of the rest is attached to utility poles that stretch across the county’s rural farmlands and small cities, towns and villages.

Now complete, the project is capable of delivering ultra-fast service from cities like Geneva and Canandaigua to the wine-growing region of Naples, to the outer ring towns like West Bloomfield, Victor, Manchester, and Phelps.

Ontario County, N.Y.

“Our mission from the outset was to ensure that every community in Ontario County had access to fiber, no matter how remote that community might be, geographically speaking,” said Geoff Astles, chairman of Axcess Ontario’s board of directors. “We’re proud to say that not only have we accomplished that piece, but we’ve done it under budget.”

The county says the network is open to all-comers, and eight companies are currently using the network themselves or reselling access to commercial businesses that need the capacity fiber brings.  Among them — Verizon Wireless; TW Telecom; Finger Lakes Technologies Group and its sister company, Ontario Telephone Co.; WavHost; Clarity Connect; OneStream Networks; Layer 8; and Integrated Systems.

But nothing prevents a residential service provider from hopping on board, if they’re interested in providing wiring from the fiber ring to individual homes.

“We’re working with several service providers who now have plans to bring fiber to each individual residence,” Michael Manikowski of Ontario County’s Office of Economic Development says. “That’s a little bit down the road. It’s a fairly complicated technical thing that we have to attract other partners to come to the county to help us.”

“The concept of ‘fiber to the home’ is the ultimate game-changer,” said Axcess Ontario CEO Ed Hemminger. “Once residents have fiber to the home, everything changes. Someone who wants to work from home or start a home-based business can do so with ease. Not only will they have instant access to the online global marketplace, but they’ll also have confidence that their home-based Internet connection will be as fast, as reliable and as competitively priced as any office-based system. Imagine conducting videoconferences on your iPad with business partners halfway across the world, all from your living room or your back deck.”

“This project is going to make a difference in the lives of residents and business-owners for the next 25 years,” he said.

Among those reportedly interested: Frontier Communications, which runs limited fiber to some of the county’s new housing developments, but currently does not leverage that technology to deliver broadband faster than traditional DSL accounts the company sells elsewhere in the region.  Time Warner Cable also covers the more populated areas of county through its Rochester/Finger Lakes division.

Individual communities inside the county could also decide to build their own community fiber service for residents, if they are willing to wire individual homes.

Residential fiber service has rarely attracted commercial service providers, convinced the technology is overkill for most consumers.  Some also balk at the capital costs, which are considerably higher than existing copper phone wire or running coaxial cable to homes for traditional cable service.  But many communities suffering from very low speed DSL service and not well served by cable-TV find doing it themselves can deliver service that commercial companies may never provide.  Without the immediate need for quick returns on investment, towns and villages clamoring for faster broadband can finally have it, without the expense of building and running their own fiber ring.

Axcess Ontario threatens to deliver service better and faster than what is on offer further north in much larger Monroe County, which includes Rochester.  That’s because Ontario County’s advanced fiber network could ultimately scrap Frontier’s obsolete copper wire landlines and call out the incremental, slow upgrades from Time Warner Cable.

The Ontario County fiber ring is a nationally recognized broadband model. Harvard University’s Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation at the John F. Kennedy School of Government this fall recognized the fiber ring as a “Bright Idea” — a promising, innovative solution that can assist other communities as they face their own challenges. And earlier this year, county officials met with the Federal Communications Commission in Washington, D.C., to educate FCC officials about the fiber ring and how it can be implemented elsewhere in the country.

http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WHAM Fiber Ring in Ontario County 12-29-10.flv

WHAM-TV in Rochester reports Ontario County’s new community-owned fiber ring could eventually deliver fiber to the home service to every resident in the county.  (2 minutes)

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Use the Time Warner-Sinclair Dispute to YOUR Advantage By Demanding Price Break

While Time Warner Cable and Sinclair Broadcasting duel to the Dec. 31 deadline, some Time Warner Cable customers are using the dispute to their advantage — demanding, and winning price concessions on their cable service.

Time Warner Cable has fielded so many calls about the dispute, it has added a message to its customer call-in lines to share its side of the dispute.

Listen to the announcements Time Warner Cable is using around the country on its customer service lines to address the Sinclair-Time Warner dispute. (7 minutes)
You must remain on this page to hear the clip, or you can download the clip and listen later.

Some customers tired of being put in the middle have decided to take their business elsewhere.  Others are just threatening, which brings forth customer retention deals to keep customers from cutting Time Warner’s cord.

“I scored a one year extension of my new customer deal — $99 a month for every kind of service the cable company offers,” writes Scott from Syracuse, N.Y.  Time Warner Cable is expected to drop WSYT (Fox) and WNYS (MyNetwork TV) late Friday night.  “I told them their rate hike notice was bad enough, but dropping two stations from my lineup without offering me a refund was too much.”

Scott was prepared to switch to Verizon FiOS, but Time Warner offered a price he’ll take for some inconvenience.

“I threw my Time Warner rate hike notice in the trash — it doesn’t apply to me for a year,” Scott says.  “It took ten minutes on the phone with the cable company and now I’ll save hundreds a year.”

In Texas, Time Warner Cable customers trying to exit the cable company for a competitor found the cable company’s term contract harder to walk away from.

“They are playing hardball with me, telling me I’ll have to pay an early termination fee if I switch,” says Stop the Cap! reader Rod who lives in San Antonio.  He’s preparing to say goodbye to KABB (Fox) and KMYS (MyNetwork TV).”

“I told them with their attitude, it would be worth paying the fee to see the back of them,” Rod says.  “Besides, when you tell some of their competitors about the cable company’s exit fees, they sweeten the deal as a sign of goodwill, something I am not getting from the cable company.”

http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/Sinclair TW Dispute 12-30-10.flv

Sinclair stations across the country are airing various news reports about the upcoming signal blackout on both Time Warner Cable and Bright House Networks, which uses Time Warner to negotiate programming contracts.  Virtually all are biased towards Sinclair’s position, and ignore the fact Time Warner plans to import Fox network programming regardless of what happens.  (25 minutes)

In Rochester and Buffalo, the cable company is willing to extend their $99 triple play promotion to customers threatening to drop service over the Sinclair dispute, especially when customers also mention the company’s recently announced rate hike.

“If the first person you speak with doesn’t offer you a better deal, hang up and call back,” advises Susan, our reader in Amherst, N.Y.  Both she and her mother in Cheektowaga are saving $35 a month for the next year all thanks to Sinclair and Time Warner’s money fight.

One of the stations impacted in the dispute

“We would have never thought about doing this before we started reading Stop the Cap!,” she says. “We had no idea we could get these kind of deals.”

“We’d lose WUTV (Fox) and WNYO (MyNetwork TV), but Time Warner promises all of the Fox network shows will still be aired and losing MyNetwork TV is hardly a loss at all,” Susan shares.  “Just call them and use the word ‘cancel’ and see what they offer.”

Sinclair stations are notorious for running local news operations on the cheap, when they bother to run local news at all.  So many viewers remain blissfully unaware of the dispute because many of the affected Sinclair stations are low-rated afterthoughts.  Of the 35+ impacted stations, fewer than six have serious local news operations, and many of those are in last place in the local ratings.  That’s a point Time Warner Cable had reportedly raised in their negotiations, noting the stations are not worth Sinclair’s asking price.

But the cable operator is also not saying a whole lot about the dispute on their various local news channels.  The company has instead taken out full page advertisements in newspapers alerting viewers to the upcoming signal disruptions and pushing customers to visit the cable operator’s national carriage dispute website: RollOverOrGetTough.com.

http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/Time Warner News Sinclair 12-30-10.flv

Time Warner Cable briefly mentioned the dispute between the cable company and Sinclair Broadcasting on a few of their local news channels.  (2 minutes)

http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WHAM Rochester TW Sinclair Dispute 12-30-10.flv

WHAM-TV in Rochester took a third party look at the dispute and explained it to western New York viewers.  Special bonus: A brief interview with Scott Fybush, editor of Northeast Radio Watch who understands western New York media like few others.  (3 minutes)

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New Jersey Mayor Presses Verizon for Explanation of Extended Service Outage

Phillip Dampier December 29, 2010 Consumer News, Public Policy & Gov't, Verizon 1 Comment

Pagliughi

Avalon mayor Martin Pagliughi wants answers about why Verizon left hundreds of residences and businesses on the Seven Mile Island with intermittent phone service for more than a week, with no notification or explanation forthcoming from the telephone company.

The service outage, which began Oct. 28, extended all the way until Nov. 8, forcing customers to endure incomplete calls, one-sided conversations, and other problems.

Verizon blamed a piece of failing equipment for the outage — a technology card installed at a switching office in central New Jersey.  The result was disrupted service for residents of both Avalon and neighboring Stone Harbor, and Verizon officials never realized it.

Verizon officials claimed technicians missed the failing card because an alarm on the card never sounded.  Dozens of complaints from customers were ignored by Verizon customer service representatives.

Pagluighi wants to know how this could have happened.

“It was very troubling to me that in an era of mass telecommunications and putting men on the moon that Verizon could not be aware of a big problem in Avalon and Stone Harbor while dozens of complaints were coming into their representatives,” Pagliughi told the Cape May County Herald.

He added that many residents told the borough that when they contacted Verizon to complain about the lack of telephone service, Verizon reps told them their complaint was the first one from Avalon.

“This outage is not only about an inconvenience to our community, it’s really about a critical public safety issue,” Pagliughi said. “It’s time for utilities that make a lucrative business in our communities to have a greater level of accountability for the services they are paid to provide,” he said.

The mayor met with public safety officials and representatives from Verizon to create a plan to prevent a repeat occurrence.  Had the winter storm that barreled up the east coast over the weekend struck at the same time as the phone outage, public safety could have been at risk.

The newspaper reports the parties agreed to take the following actions:

  • A total replacement of the technology card that failed during the telephone outage. The card will be replaced by technicians sometime during January 2011 with no anticipated interruption of telephone service;
  • Verizon will draft a plan that will result in greater recognition of a community-wide problem along with proper notification of emergency management authorities in the affected region;
  • A special practice “drill” will be conducted involving county and municipal emergency management officials that will test Verizon’s new contingency plan to notify a community when a phone outage occurs;
  • Verizon will arrange a field trip during the first quarter of 2011 so local officials can talk with staff at a local field office to discuss communication efforts between the utility and local emergency management officials.
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AT&T’s Book Club: Buys Over 700 Copies of Texas Gov. Rick Perry’s Book to Hand Out At Luncheon

AT&T customers looking for better service need to put down those cellphones and turn off the computer and pick up a good book.  AT&T recommends Fed Up! Our Fight to Save America From Washington, written by Texas Gov. Rick Perry.

Perry’s book, which compares Social Security and FDR’s “New Deal” social programs with a Communist takeover is so popular with the Big Telecom, it purchased over 700 copies to hand out for free to state legislators, lobbyists and activists attending a conservative policy summit luncheon.  Oh, and the company paid for the lunch, too.  Total cost?  More than $13,000 — all ultimately paid for by AT&T’s customers.

AT&T made sure every guest had their own personal hardcover copy of the governor’s book, something that didn’t go unnoticed by former Texas Solicitor General Ted Cruz, who thanked AT&T from the microphone for paying for the books.

“Governor Perry has written a book – a book that all of us very kindly have been given by AT&T,” Cruz said. “Thank you, AT&T.”

AT&T’s gladhanding of conservative state politicians doesn’t come accidentally, reports the Dallas Morning News.  With hundreds of millions in revenue at stake, AT&T’s investment in the state’s Republican dominated legislature guarantees the company’s voice will be heard on important legislative matters.

AT&T has spent as much as $9.3 million to lobby Austin lawmakers and regulators, according to Texas Ethics Commission data. AT&T’s political action committee has donated $494,740 to Perry during his nine years in office, according to Texans for Public Justice.

The latter group told the newspaper AT&T doesn’t get into the book club business lightly.

“It does raise concerns. AT&T has a lot of business before the state of Texas and Texas regulators,” said Craig McDonald, director of Texans for Public Justice, a group that tracks money in politics. “They are generally the largest lobby in the state. They can reach out and touch every lawmaker simultaneously.”

Elected officials who write books routinely find some of their biggest sales come from lobbyists, who buy books in bulk and hand them out at public speaking engagements, or simply shove them into the nearest storage locker.  It’s not about the book, it’s about the access companies like AT&T gain from the goodwill earned from buying copies.

Perry does not profit directly from the book sales, but his political interests do.  Proceeds of the book sales go to the Texas Public Policy Foundation’s Center for Tenth Amendment Studies, a group dedicated to protecting corporate interests and “state’s rights.”

AT&T’s corporate interest is protected by the Policy Foundation’s opposition to Net Neutrality, but the group generally opposes broadband stimulus funding, some of which is likely to end up in AT&T’s pockets.

http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/Texas Public Policy Foundation Net Neutrality.flv

The Texas Public Policy Foundation invited two Republican FCC commissioners — one current and one former — to bash Net Neutrality and broadband reforms before a stacked panel and audience of like-minded thinkers.  (1 hour, 50 minutes)

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Brooklyn Borough President Tries to Enlist Telecom Companies to Help in Snow Emergency

Phillip Dampier December 29, 2010 Cablevision, Public Policy & Gov't, Time Warner Cable, Verizon, Video Comments Off

An upset borough president

Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz is calling on New York City’s telecommunications workers to be pressed into service to cope with the snow emergency created by a weekend blizzard that left more than two feet of snow in parts of New York and New Jersey.

Markowitz told WABC-TV news the mayor’s response to the storm was a “royal screw-up” and he’s angry Manhattan streets are bare while outer boroughs like his contend with roads that have not seen a plow since the storm began.

“Verizon, Cablevision, Time Warner — we need men and women that are healthy and able-bodied,” Markowitz appealed on air.  “Twelve bucks an hour — that’s a lot of money — up to fifteen bucks an hour, to be able to help our Sanitation Department clean out streets.”

“We need every available vehicle you’ve got to help clean this place up,” said Markowitz. “I want as to look as good as Broadway in Manhattan — clean it like Broadway in Manhattan, no more and no less.”

These Verizon trucks won't be of much help, stuck in an intersection in Queens.

Much of the city remains under difficult driving conditions because of abandoned vehicles left in the middle of streets and a lack of plowing.  Disruptions to electric, phone and cable service have been reported because of accidents, damage done by snow removal vehicles, and moisture-related equipment failures.

Pressing companies like Verizon and Time Warner into service may not provide much assistance, considering vehicles belonging to both companies were themselves stuck in many locations around the city.

For residents upstate, already dealing with record-breaking snowfalls in December, the chaos downstate is mystifying.  Residents in Buffalo, Rochester, and Syracuse have another word for the holiday blizzard: Sunday.

The three cities continue their annual competition for the Golden Snowball Award for the upstate community left with the most white stuff:

Golden Snowball Totals for the 2010 – 2011 Snowfall Season
Updated  12/27/2010

Cities This Season Normal Average
to Date
This Time Last Season Normal
Seasons Average
All Time Season Snowfall Record
Syracuse 73.1 32.3 12.5 121.1 192.1 inches
( 1992 – 1993 )
Rochester 46.8 26.1 20.4 100.3 161.7 inches
( 1959 – 1960 )
Buffalo 31.9 32.3 17.5 97 199.4 inches
( 1976 – 1977 )
Binghamton 31.1 22.8 19.8 81 134.0 inches
( 1995 – 1996 )
Albany 7.7 15.6 12.0 62.6 112.5 inches
( 1970 – 1971 )
http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WABC New York City Copes With Storm Aftereffects 12-28-10.flv

WABC-TV provides the views of Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz, as well as a roundup of the lightning-hot anger being felt by an increasing number of New Yorkers stuck at home because of unplowed streets. (17 minutes)

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Breaking News: Sinclair Says Time Warner Cable Ends Talks, Stations Going Dark Friday Night

Phillip Dampier December 29, 2010 Consumer News, Public Policy & Gov't, Time Warner Cable 3 Comments

Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc. today said Time Warner Cable Inc. will no longer hold talks in a programming dispute between the two firms. The stations will no longer be available on Time Warner Cable after December 31st.

According to Sinclair, Time Warner did not accept its latest offer of a monthly $0.10 increase per station, per subscriber.

Officials from Time Warner, however, said the cable company “has at no time told Sinclair that we were terminating negotiations.”

But Time Warner Cable has strengthened its hand in negotiations with its own agreement with the Fox network, which will allow the cable operator to continue carrying all Fox network programming after the local stations are blacked out.

A source at Time Warner Cable tells Stop the Cap! subscribers who have called the cable company to complain have been generally satisfied once they learn the network shows will still be available.

“It may cost viewers some Judge Judy, People’s Court, and a whole mess of program length ads these stations run all night and on weekends, but as long as they still can watch Glee and football, they are fine with it,” says our source.

“As for local news, does anyone watch Sinclair stations for local newscasts?  There are better choices, and viewers already knew that,” our source adds.

Time Warner Cable initially plans to place a chyron on the blacked out stations when network programming is not available, but discussions are underway about replacing that with cable-company acquired programming if the standoff continues for long.

“Time Warner Cable can easily license some older shows and movies and place them on our new ‘Fox’ channel and many viewers might find that more interesting than the stuff Sinclair stations run,” our source said.

The cable operator has experience doing exactly that in many markets, especially when they create channels to support networks like CW or MyNetworkTV that are not aired over the air in many medium-sized cities.  The cable operator could license a number of syndicated shows for free, ranging from talk programs to court shows, and run them during the day.

Stop the Cap! predicts after a few weeks at most, Sinclair will be back at the negotiating table to pound out a deal.  Sinclair stations will face an enormous financial hit from the loss of local advertising revenue, especially considering the majority of viewers still watch their stations over cable.

Stations Impacted

  • AL Birmingham — WTTO (CW)
  • AL Birmingham — WABM (MyNetworkTV)
  • FL Pensacola — WEAR (ABC)
  • FL Tallahassee — WTWC (NBC)
  • FL Tampa — WTTA (MyNetworkTV)
  • KY Lexington — WDKY (Fox)
  • ME Portland — WGME (CBS)
  • MO Girardeau — KBSI (Fox)
  • NC Greensboro — WXLV (ABC)
  • NC Greensboro — WMYV (MyNetworkTV)
  • NC Raleigh — WLFL (CW)
  • NC Raleigh — WRDC (MyNetworkTV)
  • NY Buffalo — WUTV (Fox)
  • NY Buffalo — WNYO (MyNetworkTV)
  • NY Rochester — WUHF (Fox)
  • NY Syracuse — WSYT (Fox)
  • NY Syracuse — WNYS (MyNetworkTV)
  • OH Cincinnati — WSTR (MyNetworkTV)
  • OH Columbus — WSYX (ABC)
  • OH Columbus — WTTE (Fox)
  • OH Dayton — WKEF (ABC)
  • OH Dayton — WRGT (Fox)
  • SC Charleston — WTAT (Fox)
  • SC Charleston — WMMP (MyNetworkTV)
  • PA Pittsburgh — WPGH (Fox)
  • PA Pittsburgh — WPMY (MyNetworkTV)
  • TX San Antonio — KABB (Fox)
  • TX San Antonio — KMYS (MyNetworkTV)
  • VA Norfolk — WTVZ (MyNetworkTV)
  • WI Milwaukee — WVTV (CW)
  • WI Milwaukee — WCGV (MyNetworkTV)
  • WV Charleston — WCHS (ABC)
  • WV Charleston — WVAH (Fox)
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Sen. Bernie Sanders Lectures FCC’s Julius Genachowski Over Comcast-NBC Merger Deal

Phillip Dampier December 29, 2010 Comcast/Xfinity, Competition, Public Policy & Gov't, Video 1 Comment

Sanders

Sen. Bernie Sanders has challenged FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski’s view that a merger between NBC-Universal and Comcast would not harm America’s media landscape or consumers.  The independent senator from Vermont released a statement today blasting the chairman for rolling over for another media conglomerate:

The FCC released some very bad news for the future of American media and, in my view, for the future of American democracy.  FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski has circulated an order that would allow Comcast, the country’s largest cable and Internet provider, to merge with NBC Universal, one of the country’s largest media conglomerates.

If approved, this new media giant will be the largest cable provider, the largest Internet provider, and one of the largest producers of content in the United States.  At a time when a small number of giant media corporations already control what the American people see, hear, and read, we do not need another media conglomerate with control over the production and distribution of media content.  What we need is less concentration of ownership, more diversity, more local ownership-and more viewpoints.

By law, the FCC may only sign off on the merger if it determines that it serves ‘the public interest, convenience, and necessity.’ Far from meeting the public interest standard, Comcast’s takeover of NBCU would create a monolithic media superpower and cause irreparable damage to the U.S. media landscape and society as a whole. In addition, the merger of these two media giants would likely precipitate other media mergers and make an already bad situation of media consolidation far worse.  Despite the public interest standard, Chairman Genachowski appears to be charging ahead, pressuring his fellow commissioners to approve this deal.

Some take solace in the fact that Chairman Genachowski’s order would approve the merger only subject to certain conditions and regulations.  This in no way changes my opinion about the scope of the damage.  If this merger is approved, I have little doubt that Comcast-NBCU will retain hundreds of attorneys and lobbyists to exploit gaps and loopholes in any conditions and regulations.  Once we allow companies to become this powerful, the FCC does not regulate them.  They regulate the FCC.

Time is running out to stop this deal.  I hope the American people will take notice and stand with me to demand that the FCC change course, vote down the order, and reverse the disturbing trend of media consolidation.

http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/Sanders on Comcast 12-2-10.flv

Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont appeals to Americans to join him in opposing the merger of Comcast and NBC-Universal.  (2 minutes)

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Abdicating Journalism: Salt Lake City ABC Station Can’t Stop Gushing About Comcast

Phillip Dampier December 28, 2010 Comcast/Xfinity, Editorial & Site News, Video Comments Off
HTTP://WWW.phillipdampier.com/video/KTVX Salt Lake City Comcast for the Holidays 12-22-10.flv

Salt Lake City’s local ABC affiliate never runs out of wonderful things to say about Comcast, the area’s dominant cable company. KTVX devoted more than four minutes of airtime last week to a puff piece promoting Comcast’s cable products.

It’s just the latest example of the blurring of the line between journalism and ingratiating sponsors by lending the station’s news talent out to shill for advertisers.

Included in the ‘Good Things Utah’ segment, an extended interview with Comcast’s Ray Child, who was encouraged to rattle on about all of the wonderful things Comcast/Xfinity offers local residents.  The two cheerleaders hosts presiding over the affair offered nothing but extended praise, although one host may have touched the third rail when she mentioned “monopoly.”  (4 minutes)

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  • James R Bivins: I live on a budget and cable is in that budget,but if you don't have cable or the speeds for the these sevices.You are out of luck when is comes to ru...
  • James R Bivins: People in rural area are not been offered the better option for true broadband.Cable is faster,cheaper,and has the GB's.They offer 1 to 3 services an...
  • Fred: Bruce Edward Walker and Dr. Joseph P. Fuhr, Jr are two frauds who no one needs to listen to....
  • nolan: antenna did not work, i have a outside antenna with a digital converter box that pulled in 31 channels.and clear cast only got 12, also have 2nd tv w...
  • David Smith: AT&T's bandwidth capping is akin, in my opinion, to trampling on free speech. The Internet and today's technology makes us realize that there is ...
  • Michelle: How can I file a lawsuit against Cricket broad spying on my service. Every time I connect to the internet, I am bombard with a VPN connection of a rou...
  • Theresa Reid: I just got my Clear Cast today I was able to get only 4 channels. It WILL be going back....
  • Alex Perrier: Ultra-Lite discontinued! :|...

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