J
-juan-
Guest
So, what's up with KHCB. I know that non-commercial stations are under 91.9 MHz but what about 105.7. Can it ever be changed into a commercial station? Anyone that knows the FCC rules inside out, can you explain?
It IS a commercial channel....it is not a reserved educational channel...they CAN play commercials and charge rates for ads....Always has been. There ARE channels between 221 and 300 (92.1 and 107.9) that are reserved for such use in certain areas...but none in the Houston area are.-juan- said:So, what's up with KHCB. I know that non-commercial stations are under 91.9 MHz but what about 105.7. Can it ever be changed into a commercial station? Anyone that knows the FCC rules inside out, can you explain?
I thought WRR was a commercial station? That is why the city of Dallas wanted to exchange it with a non-commercial station and get 50 million dollars in exchange. (not shure which station they were considering and what was the exact amount they were to receive)Troy Goodwin said:As you can see there are other N/C stations over the commercial airwaves as we speak. examples are WRR, a city-owned Classical stration in Dallas (101.1FM),
It is.-juan- said:I thought WRR was a commercial station?
And the $50MM figure is correct. But some on council do not want to sell. To quote from the Dallas Morning News,Dallas officials are beginning to pursue a deal that could send city-owned classical music station WRR-FM (101.1) to another radio frequency and transform it from a commercial to a noncommercial entity.Such a deal, they say, would probably involve trading WRR's commercial license for another station's noncommercial license. But the deal could also score Dallas as much as $50 million, they estimate. http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/localnews/stories/DN-wrr_01met.ART.North.Edition1.1dab55ca.htmlMediafrog+ said:It is.-juan- said:I thought WRR was a commercial station?
Wrong. WFMT is a commercial station that happens to be co-owned with Chicago's PBS station, WTTW. The commercial load on WFMT has always been modest (often five minutes or less per hour) but there are commercials nonetheless. Has been that way for decades.I believe profits from the WFMT operation go towards subsidizing WTTW.Troy Goodwin said:I forgot to mention another N/C station that is located on the commercial tier-and That's WFMT in Chicago
Yes, and this has been the subject of much speculation on this board in the past. But the current KHCB ownership isn't going to sell anytime soon...in fact they've been growing their network of stations in recent years.-juan- said:In this case, can Houston see KHCB sold one day and turned into a commercial station?
Replying to Juan's first statement, the FCC allocation table shows 105.7 as a commercial station...it is not reserved as a NCE station.On the second statement, true...KHCB will NOT sell....I happen to know Liberman was interested in the freq and may have thrown some serious cash numbers to KHCB...well you see where we are nowMediafrog+ said:Yes, and this has been the subject of much speculation on this board in the past. But the current KHCB ownership isn't going to sell anytime soon...in fact they've been growing their network of stations in recent years.-juan- said:In this case, can Houston see KHCB sold one day and turned into a commercial station?