F
FredLeonard
Guest
The point is, that noncom station owners are going to have to find legitimate loopholes like this to put themselves in the black. Skirting the law with questionable programs like the health and exercise or wealth-protecting shows we're seeing a lot of on noncoms is dangerous and many have been caught and fined. Better to run a tight content ship on the main channel (which is what the FCC cares most about anyway) and cut loose on sub-channels.
And what makes you think public television stations aren't way in "the black" already?