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FCC Eliminates UHF Ownership Discount


The Frog

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They have to completely divest of KTLA,WGN and the sad one...not a half-assed deal....a total all out sale of all three.

 

Our (mine) insect leaders need to trust me on this.

 

SELL all 3 outright...maybe Byron will buy KTLA if you ask nice.

 

Remember the Gilligan's Island where they were gonna feed Ginger to the volcano???

Wouldn't surprise me if that is the endgame. The attempted shell sales to Cunningham and that Balto car dealership just smelled of a last-ditch effort they knew they couldn't win.

 

I don't know how they can close the whole deal before the ruling is delivered, assuming that it could come down at any time.

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Hell I think the Albritton deal took just as long because Sinclair was doing wacky things like switching signals, putting ABC affiliates on .2s, and even making a case that Cunningham could run a station on its own. This is the Allbritton deal on a much grander scale.

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  • 1 month later...

The cap would have be raised by Congress, of course, though undoubtedly based on the FCC's recommendation.

 

That said, I'd be okay with 50%. Heck, I'd be okay if it was only rounded up to 40%. At least that would be a more sensible number than 39%!

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Isn't the ownership cap enshrined in law?

 

Hence my reference to Congress two posts before you. ;)

 

Good luck getting Congress in on this.

 

I'm holding out hope that Congress can at least agree to bump the cap up to an even 40%... :D

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I'm holding out hope that Congress can at least agree to bump the cap up to an even 40%... :D

With a nearly split Senate and a House that is highly dysfunctional, Congress is lucky to agree on tying their own shoes.

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With a nearly split Senate and a House that is highly dysfunctional, Congress is lucky to agree on tying their own shoes.

WE NEED TO GET OUT OF THE POCKETS OF BIG VELCRO!

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  • 2 weeks later...

Well, we should have seen this coming. Bloomberg reports that Ajit Pai is considering a vote to raise the ownership cap as soon as the agency's July 12 meeting, heading off any effect on the Sinclair-Tribune deal (and therefore, failing to realize that would seemingly confirm that Pai is helping engineer that deal). Former Democratic FCC official Gigi Sohn noted though that any increase of the cap above 39% would be subject to a court challenge.

 

Ion Media, Univision Communications and the Trinity Broadcasting Network, meanwhile, are suggesting that the FCC should grandfather the discounted audience reach of their stations if any modification to the ownership cap is made, and that they be allowed to transfer that grandfathered status to a new owner.

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Well, we should have seen this coming. Bloomberg reports that Ajit Pai is considering a vote to raise the ownership cap as soon as the agency's July 12 meeting, heading off any effect on the Sinclair-Tribune deal (and therefore, failing to realize that would seemingly confirm that Pai is helping engineer that deal).

Sorry, Paid Off, but unless Congress acts on that proposal, the cap will remain at 39%. And this Congress can't do shit.

 

And I doubt the appeals court looking over Paid Off's revival of the UHF Discount is going to think fondly of him basically sticking the middle finger in front of them.

 

It's nothing but a ceremonial gesture from a former Verizon lobbyist.

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Well, we should have seen this coming. Bloomberg reports that Ajit Pai is considering a vote to raise the ownership cap as soon as the agency's July 12 meeting, heading off any effect on the Sinclair-Tribune deal (and therefore, failing to realize that would seemingly confirm that Pai is helping engineer that deal). Former Democratic FCC official Gigi Sohn noted though that any increase of the cap above 39% would be subject to a court challenge.

 

Ion Media, Univision Communications and the Trinity Broadcasting Network, meanwhile, are suggesting that the FCC should grandfather the discounted audience reach of their stations if any modification to the ownership cap is made, and that they be allowed to transfer that grandfathered status to a new owner.

 

 

Just remove the cap.

Just let the free market fight it out. The sooner it happens, the sooner all this crazy stuff ends. I really think the cap is gonna disappear soon. it's death will be buried in some immigration bill...or repealed late some night after "special orders".

 

Who would even hear any public outcry due to the noise level in the beltway.

 

It's not needed and it's outdated. Media companies are going to be pushing hard to remove it based on the ATT /TW decision.

 

The floodgates are open now...grab yer waders... or your knickers... if that's what you are into.

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Well, we should have seen this coming. Bloomberg reports that Ajit Pai is considering a vote to raise the ownership cap as soon as the agency's July 12 meeting, heading off any effect on the Sinclair-Tribune deal (and therefore, failing to realize that would seemingly confirm that Pai is helping engineer that deal). Former Democratic FCC official Gigi Sohn noted though that any increase of the cap above 39% would be subject to a court challenge.

 

Ion Media, Univision Communications and the Trinity Broadcasting Network, meanwhile, are suggesting that the FCC should grandfather the discounted audience reach of their stations if any modification to the ownership cap is made, and that they be allowed to transfer that grandfathered status to a new owner.

I think if Free Press, et. al. can't prove their case against the UHF Discount, they most likely will with the modification of the cap

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Just remove the cap.

Just let the free market fight it out. The sooner it happens, the sooner all this crazy stuff ends. I really think the cap is gonna disappear soon. it's death will be buried in some immigration bill...or repealed late some night after "special orders".

 

Who would even hear any public outcry due to the noise level in the beltway.

 

It's not needed and it's outdated. Media companies are going to be pushing hard to remove it based on the ATT /TW decision.

 

The floodgates are open now...grab yer waders... or your knickers... if that's what you are into.

Pandora's box was opened back in 1996 in radio. It was inevitable with TV.

 

That being said, the 39% charade will have to continue due to simple inertia. That's because of the divided (and for all intents and purposes, inoperable) legislative branch that will deadlock on Paid Off's proposal. Until then, you're going to see more backdoor deals like WGN-TV going to a Baltimore car dealership magnate because it takes advantage of loopholes we'll never see closed or retrofitted into actual policy (you can make a case for both, and honestly, the sidecar arrangements with JSAs/SSAs have been used for so long already, by almost every major broadcast chain, that it's besides the point).

 

That legislative inertia, and this neverending M&A spree, are far and away the two worst byproducts of the 1996 Telecommunications Act. And indeed, neither will ever really be resolved for a very, very long time.

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http://www.tvnewscheck.com/article/114352/sook-hints-at-suit-if-fcc-adopts-50-tv-cap

 

It seems we have multiple fronts right now:

 

NAB wants it at 78%, which is likely the positions of the networks (maybe not ABC). Sinclair and Nexstar want it at 100% (i.e. no cap). The "group of 8" want it at 50%.

 

I'm curious what the positions of groups that have not spoken, like Tegna, Meredith and Cox, are?

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I'm curious what the positions of groups that have not spoken, like Tegna, Meredith and Cox, are?

 

Best for them to keep mum on the subject.

Let Sinclair take the heat.

 

Full repeal of the cap is the best way to go.

 

Let the market fight it out.

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I'm curious what the positions of groups that have not spoken, like Tegna, Meredith and Cox, are?

They're likely dreaming of the untold millions they'll make when they inevitably sell out to the bigger fish. Wouldn't you if you were in their position?

 

Gannett made a nice ROI when they sold their radio station group to Jacor when the nationwide caps were removed in radio. Don't think they (as TEGNA) aren't envisioning a nice payday a second time around.

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http://www.tvnewscheck.com/article/114352/sook-hints-at-suit-if-fcc-adopts-50-tv-cap

 

It seems we have multiple fronts right now:

 

NAB wants it at 78%, which is likely the positions of the networks (maybe not ABC). Sinclair and Nexstar want it at 100% (i.e. no cap). The "group of 8" want it at 50%.

 

I'm curious what the positions of groups that have not spoken, like Tegna, Meredith and Cox, are?

I imagine their position is they don't care and they just want to sell their broadcast stations and focus on the publishing business (Meredith/Cox) as for TEGNA they'll have room depending upon where the cap is at but if the cap is raised to 78% or no cap at all, you might say that TEGNA would be a target for possible acquisition

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I really think the cap should be raised to 45 to 50% but congress is the ones that need to do it but since neither side ever wants to get anything done it will remain at 39% maybe the courts will be deciding what the cap will be or maybe ditch all together.

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