The rulemaking specifically bars any additional stations to provide analog audio services beyond the thirteen currently operating via STA and the one with a CP that had been awaiting Canadian interference approval.Now what’s to stop full power channel 6 stations to run a Franken FM?
Why would any full power station want to stay on channel 6 if there was any other option?Now what’s to stop full power channel 6 stations to run a Franken FM?
Many have moved off of Channel 6. The most recent being WRGB. KTVM, Billings MT has also been granted a CP to move from RF6 to RF20. This will leave only 8 full-service stations left on 6. Other than WPVI, some of the others are PBS stations with no real incentive to move (these stations are mainly in rural areas where people are still using their old mammoth color approved channel masters on the roof to pull in the signal). There are about 80 LPTV/translator stations on 6 (including the 13, soon to be 14 frankies).Why would any full power station want to stay on channel 6 if there was any other option?
Disney is so stubbornly dead-set to keep WPVI on such an awful, awful signal (even giving it a recent power boost after WRGB fled) and it is absolutely ponderous as to why.Many have moved off of Channel 6. The most recent being WRGB. KTVM, Billings MT has also been granted a CP to move from RF6 to RF20. This will leave only 8 full-service stations left on 6. Other than WPVI, some of the others are PBS stations with no real incentive to move (these stations are mainly in rural areas where people are still using their old mammoth color approved channel masters on the roof to pull in the signal). There are about 80 LPTV/translator stations on 6 (including the 13, soon to be 14 frankies).
ABC, like the other O&Os were so hellbent on staying on VHF after the transition because it was in their culture that they must remain VHF to be strong and not be just another measly UHF station. To me, this was a decision of the suits, not a decision of the engineers. It's what I referred to in the FCC proceeding on this subject (and the FM to TV6 protection) as "R.J. Fletcher Syndrome" referring to the Weird Al movie UHF.Disney is so stubbornly dead-set to keep WPVI on such an awful, awful signal (even giving it a recent power boost after WRGB fled) and it is absolutely ponderous as to why.
It can't move! It's stuck between New York and Baltimore and all the other channels are used.. ATSC version 3 will fix WPVI's problem..Disney is so stubbornly dead-set to keep WPVI on such an awful, awful signal (even giving it a recent power boost after WRGB fled) and it is absolutely ponderous as to why.
I don't think "ponderous" means what you think it means. It has nothing at all to do with wondering (or pondering). You may have been reaching for "imponderable."Disney is so stubbornly dead-set to keep WPVI on such an awful, awful signal (even giving it a recent power boost after WRGB fled) and it is absolutely ponderous as to why.
I was using the word as Casey Kasem would have, but decided not to use the exact full term as this is a family boardI don't think "ponderous" means what you think it means. It has nothing at all to do with wondering (or pondering). You may have been reaching for "imponderable."
That type of outdated thinking would explain why ABC has had zero intention to buy any of their affiliates over the past decade as the broadcast groups of yore all chose to cash out, instead letting Sinclair, Tegna, Nexstar and Apollo Global Management snap them up in unison.ABC, like the other O&Os were so hellbent on staying on VHF after the transition because it was in their culture that they must remain VHF to be strong and not be just another measly UHF station. To me, this was a decision of the suits, not a decision of the engineers. It's what I referred to in the FCC proceeding on this subject (and the FM to TV6 protection) as "R.J. Fletcher Syndrome" referring to the Weird Al movie UHF.
ABC, like the other O&Os were so hellbent on staying on VHF after the transition because it was in their culture that they must remain VHF to be strong and not be just another measly UHF station.
WABC, WPVI and KABC all succeed despite being owned by a group so hopelessly stuck in the past but still has a ton of money.
Nielsen pretty much validated Bob's statements a few months ago:There's an internal battle going on between ABC and Disney over the future of broadcast. The Disney folks are of the opinion that owning towers and transmitters isn't core to Disney's business plan. Bob Iger is an old ABC guy, but even his view seems to be changing, based on an interview I read.
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Bob Iger Predicts A Reckoning For Streaming Services, Linear TV Death, “Smaller” & “Scarred” Movie Industry
Also a year after he left Disney, the ex-CEO & Chair offered a wide ranging take on the state of the industry, & he was bluntdeadline.com
Linear TV = broadcast, and he sees it falling off the cliff.

Yet look at the 23% of viewing that is OTA. That means that roughly a quarter of all household units does not choose to pay for added services to save money or because they can not afford another expense of $100 or more a month for cable or high-speed internet plus needed program subscriptions in the case of streaming.Linear TV = broadcast, and he sees it falling off the cliff.
Yet look at the 23% of viewing that is OTA.
When the stations don't have the $$$ to continue payments like that, an inevitability given the collapse of cable television, then you'll see Disney drop ABC like a hot potato.
It appears that, since the second year of the pandemic was the beginning of a recession, the "OTA" percentage has increased by about 2 points.Like all things broadcast vs digital, the broadcast number is declining. So yes, today there's still money to be made. But the clock is ticking.
The behaviour at Disney in the last several years has been downright bizarre. It is as if they can't even start to predict where tomorrow's money will come from.Disney had the opportunity to buy some of their affiliates, such as WJLA, and declined. There's a big sale going on at Paramount for all the heritage CBS real estate. Get ready to see more of that.