I should have clarified my previous remarks. When I meant Dover, I also meant the transmitter site as well. It lets the station be a bigger fish in a smaller pond.
ixnay said:w9wi said:Channel 9 in NYC was in trouble in the early 1970s. Their owners were judged guilty of serious misdeeds. Congress passed legislation requiring the FCC to renew for five years the license of any VHF commercial station that agreed to move to a state that had no such station, as long as it was technically feasible, regardless of any other provisions of law. (such as those requiring the revocation of the licenses of owners convicted of serious wrongdoing)
New Jersey and Delaware were the only two such states. NYC and Philadelphia stations were the only ones for which a move to NJ/DE would be technically feasible. Rules at the time required the main studio be in the community of license, so any station wishing to take advantage of the law had to move its studio into the state. NYC channel 9 was the only station interested - I would imagine they really didn't *want* to move but when the alternative is losing your license, you'll move...
Once NYC channel 9 moved, NJ had a commercial VHF and the move was no longer open to anyone else. Nobody in Philadelphia ever expressed interest.
Gee, and all these years I thought Ch. 9 moving its COL to Secaucus was no more or less than an act of pure gumption by the Garden State, which, if you'll recall, had previously pilfered NYC's NFL and NASL (North American Soccer League) franchises.
ixnay
Neil Rattigan said:I should have clarified my previous remarks. When I meant Dover, I also meant the transmitter site as well. It lets the station be a bigger fish in a smaller pond.
Neil Rattigan said:Moving it to Dover makes sense. Not only does it guarantee coverage to the entire state, it also gives NBC an affiliate in Delmarva.
imhomerjay said:Sometimes, hard as it is to believe, you can serve an audience with content that has nothing to do with being "in" their town.