I agree more competition is better for the consumer but you have to look at it from the other end.
I worked in a hotel and it was an independent hotel. Very upscale and we wanted a flag for it. We went with Best Western. Part of it was they said, we had a ten mile exclusive zone around the hotel. No other Best Western could locat 10 miles from us.
Six months later Best Western awarded a franchise less than half a mile up the road and it was a dump.
To make matters worse we were on an island and 90% of our business entered from the north end of the island, past this other Best Western.
So you can see our problem. We pay a large franchise fee, a fee for every reservation booked by us or them and then they not only violate the exclusitivity zone but make our customers think for a minute they're paying a huge rate to get the dumpy Best Western they past first.
Well we got rid of Best Western in a hurry
This is how affiliates feel. If they pay for a zone of exclusiveness they should get it.
If we don't want to do this, then I say let's do away with affiliates all together and just have one station in NYC and have it relay small translators all across the country.
That model certainly would save spectrum and make it more efficent. But would this be better? I don't know maybe it would. Maybe localism has run its course.
I remember reading about an experiment with WLW in Cincinnati and they were allowed to go to 500 kilowatts. (Way way back in the 30s and 40s) Yes, that many. They found that the could charge more for their advertising but found the additional cost of power and hiring more people to sell ads, were about the same as running the station at 50kw. That and complaints of them overpowring stations from Omaha to Toronto, the FCC decided localism would be better.
Now again, maybe this is an idea that is no longer valid today.
I worked in a hotel and it was an independent hotel. Very upscale and we wanted a flag for it. We went with Best Western. Part of it was they said, we had a ten mile exclusive zone around the hotel. No other Best Western could locat 10 miles from us.
Six months later Best Western awarded a franchise less than half a mile up the road and it was a dump.
To make matters worse we were on an island and 90% of our business entered from the north end of the island, past this other Best Western.
So you can see our problem. We pay a large franchise fee, a fee for every reservation booked by us or them and then they not only violate the exclusitivity zone but make our customers think for a minute they're paying a huge rate to get the dumpy Best Western they past first.
Well we got rid of Best Western in a hurry
This is how affiliates feel. If they pay for a zone of exclusiveness they should get it.
If we don't want to do this, then I say let's do away with affiliates all together and just have one station in NYC and have it relay small translators all across the country.
That model certainly would save spectrum and make it more efficent. But would this be better? I don't know maybe it would. Maybe localism has run its course.
I remember reading about an experiment with WLW in Cincinnati and they were allowed to go to 500 kilowatts. (Way way back in the 30s and 40s) Yes, that many. They found that the could charge more for their advertising but found the additional cost of power and hiring more people to sell ads, were about the same as running the station at 50kw. That and complaints of them overpowring stations from Omaha to Toronto, the FCC decided localism would be better.
Now again, maybe this is an idea that is no longer valid today.