Thank you for that and the other sticky "scrolling message".Iceberg said:made this a sticky for a while
It should help!
Thank you for that and the other sticky "scrolling message".Iceberg said:made this a sticky for a while
SimpleSimon said:Thank you for that and the other sticky "scrolling message".
It should help!
That explains it.Iceberg said:jergen
there is some different pricing for grandfathered subs out there
4.99-grandfathered rate
8.99-locals/supers grandfathered rate or distans/supers grandfathered rate
everyone else pays 5.99 for Sueprs
they reached an agreement a while backjergenf said:That explains it.
Second question, why isn't DirectTV effected by the Sinclair price increase?
Or have they (or their customers) already aggreed to this?
nope. If they take down the Sinclair locals, if you have a FOX, CBS, ABC or NBC affected, you will probably get a $1 per net lost discount until they come back. When we lost CBS (Viacom), I got a $1 discount for the 3 days it was gone (no prorating)Third is Dishnet going to offer the customers the option for those channels, example locals w/o sinclair $4.99 versus local with sinclair $6.99 or higher ?
You need to get your facts straight. It's not the KIND of spectrum that determines whether it's free or auctioned; it's WHEN it was assigned. Back when most radio and TV stations first went on the air (1960's or earlier), license slots were "given away" by the FCC--first through hearings to determine which applicant would act more in the "public interest", then later through lotteries. The same is true of D*'s 101 slot, E*'s 119 slot, and most wireless spectrum in the 850-MHz "cellular" band.iKramerica said:And as for "no taxpayer money" going to Sinclair, that is a shell game. The government SELLS bandwidth to other industries, but television networks get to use that bandwidth for free (outside of paying for licenses). The amount these companies should be paying is in the BILLIONS. And the government gave the digital bandwidth away for free as well to "encourage" stations to convert. They will later take back the VHF/UHF spectrum and auction it to other industries (though this date keeps getting pushed back as companies like Sinclair hold off on digital conversion)
So, if a company isn't required to pay billions of dollars to the government that other industries are required to pay, that is lost money that must be made up for in public taxes, and thus Sinclair has indirect taxpayer funding.
Tech27 said:By jumping ship because these ***holes are greedy will only contribute to their cause. Anyone effected by this should cause a stink by complaints to the stations they are losing...and make it very clear to them that under no circumstances are they going to give in (cancel Dish).
MustangLX89 said:You've got several options...
The fact is Sinclair CAN charge because if what they were doing was illegal the FCC would be all over them.
gilber said:I saw the same message (same wording!!) this morning in our local Raleigh-Durham WB station.
Is your local WB owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group? This sounds more like a dispute between Sinclair and Dish...
If that's the case, and without knowing the details of the dispute, my initial sympathies are with Dish... After all, these (Sinclair) are the jerks that are preventing most digital cable companies in the country from carrying the HDTV signal of their owned local stations, trying to extort them for money...