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NBC Boston channel speculation.

We actually don't know where NBC Boston will land yet. It won't be Ch. 7 unless Ch. 7 sells to NBC which is highly unlikely or somehow the new NBC Boston doesn't happen and 7 somehow retains their affiliation with NBC which is, again, highly unlikely.
 
How much sharing will the new NBC Boston do with NECN, New England Cable News, also owned by NBC? It seems odd that NBC wouldn't just run both operations jointly if it owns both operations. NECN was originally a project of Comcast Cable, giving its subscribers a local all-news channel. But now Comcast and NBC are one company.

I'm certainly for providing employment for many news professionals. But since NECN spends about half its time doing Boston stories, I wonder why NBC would need two sets of meteorologists, two sets of sportscasters, etc.

(And personally, I wouldn't mind if NBC and WHDH go their separate ways. My family's summer cottage in NH gets WHDH on cable, but all the NBC shows get blanked due to WCSH Portland not wanting another NBC affiliate in its market. WHDH is the only Boston station on the system, minus NBC shows.)
 
I wonder if NECN will simulcast NBC Boston newcasts and then run their own newscast when NBC Boston is doing entertainment programming. Of course, I'm just guessing. I'd expect full sharing of resources and maybe even a new name for NECN.
 
Padden: FCC Should Aid Ansin In NBC Fight

Former Fox and ABC network executive Preston Padden calls on the agency and Congress to pressure NBC to cancel plans to dump Ed Ansin's WHDH as its Boston affiliate so that it can launch its own O&O there at the end of this year. "If this 'experiment' is successful, it almost certainly will be repeated in other cities," Padden says.

http://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/judicial/283022-trouble-in-tv-land
 
I'm with Mr. Padden. Quoting from the article above:

"The second broader public policy question involves the government’s review of major media mergers. The imposition of negotiated “conditions” has long been a safety valve to allow private parties to close transactions that pose a threat to competition and the public interest. The slippery, and apparently meaningless, “cooperative dialog” language in the Comcast/NBC conditions raises the question whether conditions ever can be relied upon to protect the public interest. Perhaps, as former FCC Commissioner Mike Copps has argued for years, problematic mergers like Comcast/NBC simply should be blocked."

We are repeating the cycle of the early 1900s where entities gain too much power over a marketplace. Never is such excess power more dangerous than in the marketplace of ideas
 
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It's not over...

WHDH to file appeal in suit against Comcast

WHDH will appeal a judge’s decision to dismiss its lawsuit against media behemoth Comcast Corp., according to documents filed in federal court.

The Boston TV station, which is fighting to keep its affiliation with NBC, had its case tossed by Judge Richard G. Stearns last month.

Comcast indicated earlier that it was ending its contract with WHDH at the end of 2016 with plans to launch its own new local TV station, NBC Boston, in 2017, prompting a lawsuit from Ed Ansin, the 80-year-old owner of WHDH.

WHDH filed its notice of appeal in the U.S. District Court in Boston yesterday, according to court documents.

http://www.bostonherald.com/news/local_coverage/2016/06/whdh_to_file_appeal_in_suit_against_comcast
 
There's an article in today's Boston Herald about Dish customers losing WHDH-TV and WLVI-TV if Sunbeam cannot reach an agreement by today. Direct TV stopped carrying the stations July 16th, and the possible loss of the NBC affiliation is a factor. We'll see what happens by January 1st.
 
Well, that's odd. WHDH isn't going off the air. If it loses NBC affiliation, it will still be a major station in the Boston market. It will likely run its own news where Today and NBC Nightly News air. It already runs more local news than any other Boston station. It still has all its syndicated programming. And it will find shows and movies for prime time. Not to mention, WLVI isn't losing its affiliation.

So why would Direct TV and Dish drop the station?
 
NBC Boston channel speculation

It has been speculated that Comcast may buy Channel 68 WBPX to launch the new NBC station. If that happens, Ion still has both Channel 21, WPXG from NH and Channel 58 WDPX on the Cape. If Ion negotiates and gets one of the two remaining Ion station on Comcast, Verizon, DirecTv, & Dish, most people won't lose it. Ion even has low powered translator in Boston for OTA in the city.
 
It has been speculated that Comcast may buy Channel 68 WBPX to launch the new NBC station. If that happens, Ion still has both Channel 21, WPXG from NH and Channel 58 WDPX on the Cape. If Ion negotiates and gets one of the two remaining Ion station on Comcast, Verizon, DirecTv, & Dish, most people won't lose it. Ion even has low powered translator in Boston for OTA in the city.
Looking at coverage maps, the WBPX signal has only minimally less coverage area than any other signal transmitted from Needham. WPXG and WDPX are also both in the Boston market and either could insist on must-carry status once no longer redundant to WBPX. Some of the cable systems north of Boston now carry WPXG and not WBPX.

I thought the speculation centered around Channel 62, WMFP.
WMFP actually seems to have the least value now, with SonLife now on it's main channel. SonLife is no doubt mainly interested in the must-carry status of the channel. Comcast / NBCUniversal could possibly work out a swap with WMFP owner NRJ of the WNEU and WMFP licenses / transmitters. NRJ would still have must carry rights, and a signal with value in the spectrum auction, while NBC would have a full coverage signal.
 
Wait I thought the Telemundo station that NBC owns was supposed to be converted into an NBC station at the end of the year on Channel 60? Wow the contract disputes with Sunbeam and DirecTV and Dish only bolsters why NBC wants their own station in the Boston area.
 
Well, that's odd. WHDH isn't going off the air. If it loses NBC affiliation, it will still be a major station in the Boston market. It will likely run its own news where Today and NBC Nightly News air. It already runs more local news than any other Boston station. It still has all its syndicated programming. And it will find shows and movies for prime time. Not to mention, WLVI isn't losing its affiliation.

So why would Direct TV and Dish drop the station?


Remember KRON in San Francisco it used to be a Major NBC affiliate in the Bay Area until 2002 when NBC took over KNTV and ran that station very well. Only difference is that KNTV was launched in most parts of the Bay Area. Note Some parts of Solano county in California was diverted to KCRA in Sacramento the NBC Affiliate/Hearst station in that area once KRON lost their affiliation. KRON has not been as relevant since they lost the NBC affiliation. WHDH could face the same fate.
 
Remember KRON in San Francisco it used to be a Major NBC affiliate in the Bay Area until 2002 when NBC took over KNTV and ran that station very well. Only difference is that KNTV was launched in most parts of the Bay Area. Note Some parts of Solano county in California was diverted to KCRA in Sacramento the NBC Affiliate/Hearst station in that area once KRON lost their affiliation. KRON has not been as relevant since they lost the NBC affiliation. WHDH could face the same fate.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gap8sUIZWJY See this KNTV Flip to NBC Bay Area.
 
Earlier someone mentioned that WHDH carries more news than any other broadcast station but actually WFXT Fox 25 carries 10.5 hours weekdays while WHDH carries 8.5 hours. WFXT carries more news hours on the weekends too.
 
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