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WaPo Piece on Brendan Carr

If “Broadcast licenses are not sacred cows” is not a clear enough signal of what’s coming, I’m not sure anything can help.

We’ve seen this blueprint many times before in any number of countries.

The people voted for change. That's what they say they want. They say they want to drain the swamp. Guess where the FCC is based. In the swamp. If the new government wants to give the people change, that should mean LESS intrusion by the FCC. But that's not what he's saying. He's actually saying MORE intrusion. This is more of an agenda-driven FCC, coming from the white house, rather than cutting the size of government.

If licenses are not sacred cows, then the companies that hold them are less interested in investing in them. Why invest money in a license that could be taken away based on someone's interpretation of public interest?
 
The people voted for change. That's what they say they want. They say they want to drain the swamp. Guess where the FCC is based. In the swamp. If the new government wants to give the people change, that should mean LESS intrusion by the FCC. But that's not what he's saying. He's actually saying MORE intrusion. This is more of an agenda-driven FCC, coming from the white house, rather than cutting the size of government.
Wait, how could the incoming administration possibly be considering doing something other than what they said they would.

Why, next you’ll tell me all that supposed disavowing of project 1933, er, I mean, 2025, wasn’t honest.
 
Wait, how could the incoming administration possibly be considering doing something other than what they said they would.

They said conflicting things that even they don't all agree on. That's why Carr says he waiting for guidance from the transition team before doing anything. He's not taking his orders from congress or the public. In 2016, that administration took the internet away from the FCC and moved it to Commerce. Carr is waiting to be told how much of the internet he can oversee. A lot of what we hear in these interviews are part of his audition to the white house for what his responsibilities will cover. We really won't know that until they replace the exiting chairman, and are back at 5 commissioners.
 
Although George Soros is certainly a controversial figure I think the real controversy here is that his group sought and received an expedited approvals process that others have not/would not have received. If there is any legal basis to challenge his acquisition I think it would have to be that.
 
Although George Soros is certainly a controversial figure I think the real controversy here is that his group sought and received an expedited approvals process that others have not/would not have received. If there is any legal basis to challenge his acquisition I think it would have to be that.

But as we have said, Cumulus and iHeart received the same treatment, and all three took the same amount of time. Audacy was submitted in February, and approved in October. The same length of time it took to approve Cumulus and iHeart. It wasn't "his group" that sought this approval. It was Audacy and the Audacy management. Contrary to Carr and Bozell, neither Soros nor his fund were part of that process. The approval didn't go to him or his fund. It went to Audacy, and they didn't do anything unusual with the stations after receiving the approval.

To be clear, all three bankruptcies were what are called "pre-packs." That means they were fully planned and laid out in advance so they could be approved easily and quickly. So all three received the same treatment because all three were done in ways that weren't controversial or had any outstanding issues, unless you looked at the last name of one investor. And there's nothing unusual about that investor, because he already owns 25 radio stations, and they received quick approvals from the FCC two years ago.
 
Although George Soros is certainly a controversial figure I think the real controversy here is that his group sought and received an expedited approvals process that others have not/would not have received. If there is any legal basis to challenge his acquisition I think it would have to be that.
There was no expedited approval on the part of the FCC. It took many months for the agency to provide its consent.

The foreign ownership limit waiver question remains pending. In the meantime, Audacy's foreign beneficial ownership is capped at 25 percent, consistent with established FCC rules.
 
Although George Soros is certainly a controversial figure I think the real controversy here is that his group sought and received an expedited approvals process that others have not/would not have received. If there is any legal basis to challenge his acquisition I think it would have to be that.
[citation needed]
 
This thread is about Brendan Carr, but the other republican on the FCC is Nate Simington, who questions the ability of the FCC to levy fines on pirate radio operators:


The article notes that Carr voted with the majority, and Simington was the lone dissenter. It demonstrates the conflicting views of the incoming administration on such simple things as imposing fines.
 
It's interesting where certain groups believe the government is overreaching and not.

Carr's worried that businesses (social media, Audacy) are "stifling" voices from his side, Simington thinks the FCC lacks authority to fine people abusing actual licensed spectrum.

Carr's worry is easily solved by going to another service or starting a blog. The people affected by pirates can't simply change frequencies.

And their own side, broadcast coast to coast, will continue to fawn over the likes of Carr with no critical analysis. Maybe they'd have more credibility if they held him to as much account as the people they rail on daily who often aren't even in power. I still hear hosts blaming Obama for things that happened last week.
 
"The FCC also proposes to eliminate language concerning a cap on the number of applications each applicant could submit in the noncommercial FM filing window. It mandates that an applicant may file no more than a total of 10 applications. The FCC says the limit was intended to be a “limited” rule, and it seeks to have it eliminated."

Is this what I think it is? The return of what happened when Calvary Chapel filed for all those translators, only this time with full power NCEs?
 
Is this what I think it is? The return of what happened when Calvary Chapel filed for all those translators, only this time with full power NCEs?

Could be. It might also reflect a lessening of demand for non-coms, especially with so many colleges seeking to sell their licenses.
 
Incoming FCC chairman Brendan Carr wants to cut staff and make new efficiencies at the FCC. He sounds a lot like Bob Pittman:


“I think there’s lots of opportunities of synergies at the FCC to push for greater efficiencies,” Carr said earlier this month during his monthly press conference. “We need to be nimble and continue to innovate,” Carr said. “It’s important that all of us in the agency continue to question what’s the best way and most efficient way to do things since we’ll do a soup-to-nuts review.”
 
Incoming FCC chairman Brendan Carr wants to cut staff and make new efficiencies at the FCC. He sounds a lot like Bob Pittman:

I'm guessing FCC field officers will be even more a thing of the past than they already are. Don't sweat that night power, AMers.
 
In some aspects, he makes a valid point. In so many markets, network affiliates make as much as half of their revenue on "must carry". As cable subscribers decline, local TV can't sustain expensive news coverage at all if the networks increased fees to affiliates.

ABC owns some of those affiliates. So increasing those fees also hurts network O&Os. Iger is well aware of local news costs.
 
Is this why some local news has national stories from DC or other bureaus? For example, KSHB runs a lot of stories from Scripps in DC.
As far back as I can remember (well before color TV became common), local news even in larger markets included some national stories, particularly the late news, noon news and, in earlier years, morning news that was not back-to-back with a national newscast.
 


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