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Time Warner Yanks WKTV Off Central NY Cable Screens, Replaced With Pennsylvania NBC Station

Phillip Dampier December 16, 2010 Consumer News, Video 5 Comments

It's a three hour drive down Interstate 81 from Utica to Wilkes-Barre.

WKTV-TV Utica is off Time Warner Cable's lineup in parts of central New York this morning.

Viewers across Oneida, Herkimer, and other adjacent central New York counties lost their local NBC station early this morning after another retransmission consent dispute led Time Warner Cable to drop WKTV-TV in Utica, N.Y., from the lineup.

The fact Time Warner dropped a station is hardly unprecedented, but the cable company managed to replace the station almost immediately.  Away went WKTV, in came Nexstar-owned WBRE-TV, an NBC station serving Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, Penn.

This morning, Mohawk Valley viewers woke up to watching local news and weather for the Susquehanna Valley — 187 miles away to the south.

While Time Warner’s apparent agreement with WBRE keeps NBC shows rolling, the loss of local news and weather represents a major blow for area subscribers, many enduring a western and central New York winter that has brought more than 50 inches of snow in just the last two weeks in some areas.

Utica city officials expressed concern about the loss of the local Utica station because important snow emergency alerts were often delivered over the station.

“They might as well have imported a station from Florida, because there is very little in common between Herkimer County, New York and Luzerne County, Pennsylvania,” writes Steve, who lives in Herkimer.  “You would have thought they would have just grabbed an NBC station from Syracuse.”

...replaced with WBRE-TV, a station in Wilkes-Barre, Penn.

Apparently, Time Warner has permission from Nexstar to import the distant signal of the Pennsylvania station for impacted subscribers.  The effective reinstatement of network programming may make it more difficult for WKTV’s owner, Smith Media, to negotiate the station’s return to Time Warner’s lineup anytime soon.  That one NBC affiliate may have granted permission to replace another station during a contract dispute may become a point of contention on the network level.  Traditionally, broadcasters have not been quick to undercut other stations with such carriage agreements.

Smith’s other stations were also affected.  Time Warner dropped WFFF (Fox) AND WVNY (ABC), which serve the Burlington, Vt. market and the CW-affiliated digital sub-channel running alongside WKTV in Utica.  The station owner launched a website to share their position and educate people about how to receive the signals either over-the-air or via satellite.

In nearby Rochester, Time Warner continues to play hardball with Sinclair Broadcasting over a carriage agreement renewal for WUHF-TV.  But Time Warner customers facing the loss of the Fox affiliate will not see any interruption of Fox network programming — the cable company has a separate agreement with the network.  Ironically, Sinclair jointly operates WUHF with Nexstar Broadcasting of Rochester LLC, the owner of WROC-TV, the city’s CBS affiliate.

[flv width=”640″ height=”500″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WKTV Carriage Dispute 12-16-10.flv[/flv]

Time Warner’s replacement of WKTV-TV in Utica with a distant station may be a new tactic in the hardball war over cable-broadcaster carriage agreements.  WKTV ran several stories about how the station’s loss impacts the area.  YNN’s Central NY news station, run by Time Warner Cable, also ran its own story this morning, all of which are covered here.  (9 minutes)

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Andrew Madigan
Andrew Madigan
13 years ago

In fact, since Nexstar produces the news for both WROC and WUHF, the “loss” of WUHF won’t change the news availability, just the time. If anything, WUHF being dropped from Time Warner probably just means that WUHF will eventually close after advertisers stop paying for ads that won’t reach Time Warner customers. I notice WUHF is being pretty dishonest with their new ads telling people to “take action now”. They claim that Time Warner subscribers will lose “Fox Rochester shows like The Simpsons, Family Guy…” etc. If Time Warner does have an agreement with Fox then those shows won’t be… Read more »

Mike
Mike
13 years ago

So even though Sinclair is running those stupid annoying commercials on WUHF in Rochester the channel will not go off Time Warner on the 31st? There is some kind of separate agreement that will prevent this?

Loons In June!
Loons In June!
13 years ago
Reply to  Mike

My understanding is the channel may be pulled if that is what Sinclair wants to do, however TWC has a agreement with the FOX network to show the national feed. This would be for programming predominantly throughout Prime Time.

Ben
Ben
13 years ago

Um, your article title is wrong. Time Warner didn’t “yank” the channel. WKTV/Smith Media/Boston Ventures pulled the plug. Only the content provider can “pull the plug”.

Tina
Tina
13 years ago

And just as soon as we lost wktv (with the recent nor-eastern beating out 1993’s, and no idea what’s going on in our area now!) we got slammed with a rate hike letter telling us that we get to pay lots more for tons of channels we could care less about … golf, kids, shopping, sports, travel, religious…seriously?! HGTV isn’t worth paying 5 cents a month for anymore.
Thanks, Time Warner, and happy freaking holidays to you, too!
I really wish I had some kind of option to get rid of them for good.

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