Just wondering, since it's my understanding they all had to agree to this.
@ UNCLEHONKEY: How will interference between WCBS-TV and WFSB-TV be any different if they're still on the same physical channel?
It's not like the towers are side by side. I assume it would not be a huge problem as the transmitters are what 80 miles apart?@ UNCLEHONKEY: How will interference between WCBS-TV and WFSB-TV be any different if they're still on the same physical channel? It must suck for some of those people using a big roof antenna in portions of Fairfield or New Haven County (CT)!
Also surprising to see WGBH moving to VHF 5. I wonder if that will hurt their ratings and viewer support from OTA viewers.
WQED in Pittsburgh is moving from VHF 13 down to VHF 2. This in exchange for auction cash to try and pay down the massive debt that was racked-up by prior management. Their transition channel was UHF 38, which they could have kept, which would have fetched them WAY more in the auction than what they actually received.
It seems this station is mismanaged in every way possible.
WQED in Pittsburgh is moving from VHF 13 down to VHF 2. This in exchange for auction cash to try and pay down the massive debt that was racked-up by prior management. Their transition channel was UHF 38, which they could have kept, which would have fetched them WAY more in the auction than what they actually received.
It seems this station is mismanaged in every way possible.
Hindsight is 20-20 vision, goes the old cliche. In 2009, VHF-Hi seemed the sweet spot for broadcasters. Lower utility bills than UHF and good, if not great coverage. OTA viewers didn't really count for enough. UHF 38 might have fetched more in the most recent repack auction, but who might have envisioned that scenario in 2009?