Scott Fybush said:
badjef said:
Scott has seen many TV transmitters, but I guess the question never came up in conversation because of all the other informtion the engineers are more than happy to give. I found, in the past, the engineers were more than happy to receive guests interested in their equipment and the technology.
If you want to see confusion, check out WNET. Their ID is WNET-Newark which quickly disolves into WNET-New York - but it's legal.
And it appears that way both OTA and on cable and satellite.
I do, in fact, often ask the very question Jeff seems to think I haven't asked, and the answer is always the same: the feed to cable is the same MCR output that goes to the OTA transmitter. The legal ID at most stations these days is part of a production element, usually a promo or a newscast open. Why go to the trouble of creating a separate legal ID-free production element just to spare cable viewers a glancing look at a set of call letters?
You are correct, of course, that graphics originate from MCR. The ID becomes part of the graphic. And it is probably to keep the audience familiar with the station. WOR-TV made a big deal when they were sent to solitary confinement in Secaucus. But the transmitter remained on Empire. The reality was they only changed their COL. The studio change, extra “W”, and ownership x2 (or x3) came later.
At the particular station where I work, our OTA transmitter goes off the air from time to time for planned (and sometimes unplanned) maintenance. We have a fiber feed to cable that remains active, and those viewers still see "WXXI-TV Rochester" even when we're not on the air on UHF. The same is true of everyone else in town.
Jeff, can you cite an actual example of a station that's doing what you describe (no legal ID on the MCR output, ID inserted at the transmitter only for OTA viewers), or are you just surmising?
I never said the stations offered a separate feed. It was a suggestion that that might be where it was and why they hadn’t seen it if they were watching on cable/dish.
But, I am not surmising, either.
There is a transmitter and a studio. The transmitter is FCC licensed, the studio is not.
Since the call letters are not assigned to a studio, only the transmitter, only the transmitter needs to see the legal FCC assigned ID. WTSP, I have noticed it and TiVo’d it to be sure. But WTSP is a great example of a station that would be in a perfect position to do it. I have my antenna turned toward Ft. Myers for the blacked out Bucs games. WTSP won’t come in on the backside anymore since digital.
At some time in the not so distant future OTA television will have the final nail in the coffin. With cable, dish, and internet offering so many other choices for the eyeballs, it will not be worth the electricity to keep OTA on.
Why aren’t the broadcasters in NYC going ahead with the rebuild downtown? Stay at the temporary Empire. It isn’t worth the effort even in #1 to move. (but nothing is etched in stone there, either)
If radio goes completely digital, the same will apply. Show me the call letters and legal ID on an internet only radio station. “Radio Russia – Your Dance Connection” doesn’t count, it would be a slogan. Neither would “KKGO-New York.”
Satellite radio has no ID’s. The closest they came was “XM radio – Planet Earth.” On their 80’s on 8 channel – still not a legally licensed ID, though.
Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!