Their retransmission aggreement must be coming for renewal for SD otherwise, threatening to pull the SD unless you agree to add HD amounts to a form of extortion and could land them in hot water legally.
I thought about the same thing However, in Albany advertisers seem to be mostly local businesses that probably could care less about a few less Dish customers in the Berkshires. In terms of the emails, Olver's staff must glance at them and initiate autoresponses based on a few key words in the message. At least this is happening in the summer, so mostly repeats and the best time for the disagreement. In addition, 6 will be moving to VHF and increasing power next week, so I should be able to reliably get them off air. (Can't now.)
Actually I am up in Rutland County but I have quite an elaborate antenna system and am up pretty high. I have had pretty good luck with all the Albany stations except WNYT which is unreliable. WCWN is next and has been pretty good, but kind of so/so lately. I was going to go up another 10 feet but I thought I would wait until the transmitter changes that you mentioned above, as I got that same info from them a few weeks ago, (although I think you meant ch 43, as 45 is their analog signal.)
I just got an e-mail from WNYA today and here it is
Our digital begins at 2:05am this Friday, June 12th. You'll need to rescan your digital converters/tv's to make sure you get us. We will be on digital channel 13, but it will show up as Channel 51.1 on your TV.
Regards,
Duncan Brown
WNYA
sorry if this is a little off topic
I am pretty sure that it will be WNYA on south mountain in Pittsfield going digital - WNYA-CA in Schenectady I think is staying analog for a while. That's going to be tough to get in Rutland, though at least it will be VHF. Sorry.
Here is the email I will be sending to various advertisers:
Bob Furlong, the general manager of CBS6 in Albany, NY has begun an ad campaign in which he is threatening to remove their signal from the Dishnetwork satellite service. Dish and CBS6's parent station Freedom Corp. can not come to terms for carrying CBS6's HD signal. Given that Dish has reached agreement with thousands of stations throughout the US and with channels 10, 13, and 23 in Albany for their HD signal, the fee that Dish has agreed to pay must be reasonable. Given the thousand of broadcasters agreeing to Dish's terms, CBS6's demands must be out of line with the marketpalce. What this disagreement means for Dish subscribers is that we will not be able to watch CBS programming via our satellite service. What it means for you as an advertiser is that your commercials will reach several thousand less customers. I urge you to let channel CBS6 know that this is not in their longterm best interest and that they should come to terms with Dish immediately and keep their signal on the Dishnetwork service. Clearly if they do not, I would think that you would want to command a much lower advertising rate since your commercials will have a much reduced audience, though as a Dishnetwork subscriber, I would urge you to pull your advertising from CBS6 until they reach agreement with Dish.