This is why you can’t really call over the air free anymore. The are charging for their signals.
Those signals are not as strong as they were 30 years ago.Unless you use an antenna
Those signals are not as strong as they were 30 years ago.
I’d like to see the percentage of how many people get their locals from antenna vs paid service.But they're still free. If you want free, you find a way to get it. If it's too much work, you pay someone.
I’d like to see the percentage of how many people get their locals from antenna vs paid service.
I’d like to see the percentage of how many people get their locals from antenna vs paid service.
People are lazy
From Google AI:I’d like to see the percentage of how many people get their locals from antenna vs paid service.
The big difference is that lower income homes have higher percentages of OTA TV usage.
To add to that question, how many are streaming their local networks for free.I wonder, have any studies (or surveys) been done to determine how many households that could subscribe to cable/satellite/streaming -- or who may have in the past but cancelled in favor of OTA -- are only using terrestial reception based on lesser needs, on the premise that all of the extra channels are not worth the money to them?
(Yeah, I know ... run-on sentence as a question.)
BOB BARKER: "Higher."the average cable bill now includes close to $20 a month in retrans for local stations
They can’t because the carriage agreements won’t allow it.BOB BARKER: "Higher."
Why aren't the cable companies packaging all their consent locals into a tier subscribers can opt out of so as to avoid the associated retransmission fee completely? Opt out and you only receive the must-carry locals, and that horse-choking $50/month line item disappears from your invoice. Subscribers in areas like mine where a roof antenna gets you everything at 98% signal strength would rejoice.
How? It sounds like you're saying a station can designate itself as retransmission consent under FCC regulations, then grant itself must carry status anyway through private contracts.They can’t because the carriage agreements won’t allow it.
Stations can permit where they are carried on a lineup. ESPN refuses to be on a higher more expensive tier. When agreements are signed they forbid alacarte as they want the most money possible.How? It sounds like you're saying a station can designate itself as retransmission consent under FCC regulations, then grant itself must carry status anyway through private contracts.
I would need clarification on this but I believe local channels have to be on basic cable not the higher tiers.
Read Scott Fybush's post from two days ago. He even straightened out my miss-use of the terms for legal requirements on the carriage of different kinds of local stations.How? It sounds like you're saying a station can designate itself as retransmission consent under FCC regulations, then grant itself must carry status anyway through private contracts.
I guess Scott did a better job of straightening you out than I did.🤣🤣🤣Read Scott Fybush's post from two days ago. He even straightened out my miss-use of the terms for legal requirements on the carriage of different kinds of local stations.