tlyle said:What do you consider TBS's heyday: Andy Griffith/Gilligan/Bill Tush Day's (70's/80's), Braves winning again (90's), or current fair (2000)?
jal41 said:WGN will be the only superstation left.
jal41 said:A few notes:
WTBS is not a licensed superstation. It is basically a local feed of TBS.
livingfruitvirus said:So all those years of channel 17 being uplinked to satellite nationwide was done illegally? What about WPIX, WSBK, KTLA, etc.? They're on my cable's extended package.
jal41 said:livingfruitvirus said:So all those years of channel 17 being uplinked to satellite nationwide was done illegally? What about WPIX, WSBK, KTLA, etc.? They're on my cable's extended package.
No laws were broken. TBS was technically a basic cable station, and WTBS broadcast a feed of TBS OTA.
WPIX, KTLA, WSBK, and the current WWOR are "legal superstations", while TBS and WGN are "marketing superstations" (these terms are for the lack of ones that I am aware of, WWOR ended as a marketing superstation in 1996). There is a lot of confusion between these two types. The legal superstations have a special definition for legal reasons (which I don't know the reasons for).
Mark said:Interesting where does one find the defintion of Superstation. I tried searching the FCC site, but got no where. Of course I never do, I hate that site![]()
A "nationally distributed superstation" is a term that is defined as a television broadcast station, licensed
by the Commission, that meets the following three criteria:
(A) is not owned or operated by or affiliated with a television network that, as of January
1, 1995, offered interconnected program service on a regular basis for 15 or more
hours per week to at least 25 affiliated television licensees in 10 or more States;
(B) on May 1, 1991, was retransmitted by a satellite carrier and was not a network
station at that time; and
(C) was, as of July 1, 1998, retransmitted by a satellite carrier under the statutory license
of section 119 of title 17, United States Code.
It appears that the television broadcast stations that meet the foregoing criteria are limited to KTLA-
TV (Los Angeles), WPIX-TV (New York), KWGN-TV (Denver), WSBK-TV (Boston), WWOR-TV
(New York) and WGN-TV (Chicago). We do not believe that any other station could meet these
criteria in the future due to the date-specific conditions set forth in the definition. We believe this is,
therefore, a finite list of the nationally distributed superstations covered by the statute, but we invite
comment on this issue.
Kevin Lagasse said:Is WSBK still on that list? I don't know of a single cable system here in Connecticut which carries them anymore.
jal41 said:The big 4 network affilates in Atlanta and Denver uplink their signals onto satellites. As a result, WSB-TV is avaliable on cable over 300 miles away from Atlanta in south Georgia (where there is a lack of an ABC station), and in Highlands, NC (way inside the Greenville/Spartenburg/Ashville DMA, where WLOS serves as the ABC station). Any cable system in Georgia that can carry WSB-TV that can get away with it does (WPGA in Macon cracked down on WSB being available on the cable system owned by...a division of WSB's parent company Cox).
In Atlanta, WPIX, KTLA, WSBK, nor WWOR are available on cable or satellite AFAIK. Many people don't get these stations.
Buddy Hayes said:When I had DISH network, they had a package with those four stations plus KWGN, not sure if they still offer it.
I believe some cable systems in California carry local programs (i.e., news and sports) from KTLA, but are required to black out the CW and most syndicated shows.
Tim-In-Houston said:jal41 said:WGN will be the only superstation left.
I don't know that I even consider WGN a superstation anymore, either. Other than the WGN News at Noon and WGN News at Nine, the cable feed differs significantly from the over-the-air feed in Chicago.
Kevin Lagasse said:WWOR-TV had something called EMI-Eastern Microwave, a.k.a. a generic feed running public domain shows and whatnot. The only stuff let though was news and (at the time) New York Mets baseball.
Kevin Lagasse said:The cable here in New Britain, CT dropped them for good in the late 1990s.
livingfruitvirus said:So why would they carry WSB-TV in Highlands or even Macon when there is already a local ABC affiliate providing coverage? I always thought must-carry prevented that practice, even if the ABC programs themselves are syndexed out.