SixtiesGuy said:
How about pushing to protect OTA broadcasting? Hungry wireless service provider wolves are circling the spectrum currently used for OTA TV.
More people use wireless spectrum than use broadcast television - by a huge margin.
Per the CTIA, there are 321.7 million wireless subscriber connections in the United States (of course, many people have more than one) as of June 2012. There are about 60 million people (20% of the country, and I'm being generous) who use OTA television without cable or satellite, and many of those (like me) supplement it with TV from the internet, although most of that is via a wired connection...for now.
It is an endangered species and there is absolutely no reason for optimism that the FCC, charged with protecting the public interest (please keep you laughing to a dull roar) will suddenly develop a spine and live up to that mission. Having said that I agree that such a lobby would be seriously outmatched on the cash front.
The public interest dictates that there is a need for more wireless spectrum and less OTA television spectrum. Probably at least 50% of the broadcast TV stations on the air today could go off the air and not be missed - mostly LPTV/Class A stations that are running paid religion or infomercials.
Why does a market even as large as New York need more than 10 or 12 channels? Most markets, outside of the largest, could survive with 6 or less. And that's with the current broadcast networks, a few independents, and public television staying on the air. If one or more of the networks shuts down, that will mean more full-powered stations going off the air since not everyone could survive as an independent.
End duopolies unless an absolute need can be demonstrated. Why does a little-watched CW affiliate need its own separate transmitter (my example here is KASW Phoenix), when it could be piggybacked on a co-owned channel (KTVK in this case)? In fact, how much TV
needs to be in hi-def? If all broadcast TV went to wide-screen 480p, would most people notice? That would allow 4-6 program feeds per channel, reducing spectrum usage. Even using 720p (I think) allows two - enough to replace a duopoly if the wasted weather channels were dumped.
This is 2013, not 1993. Wireless spectrum is as important today as electricity, running water, and good roads. Broadcast television is rapidly becoming a dinosaur, and is going the way of the dial telephone and AM radio.