Looking back on DTV, I cannot find specific increases, but what I have seen are direct increases of 6% each year.
Actually it was worse than a shell game. Because at Year 0 of the freeze, they started the Year 1 increase already. So instead of paying a Year 0 rate, then Year 1 rate (a couple bucks more), then Year 2 rate (a few more bucks), we paid the Year 1 rate for the first and second years!I remember when Dish did the "no increase" thing and read about what DirecTV did at the same time. What Iceberg posted is what I recall happened.... Dish just played a shell game. Unless you joined Dish and quit within a 2-year window, it was a marketing gimmick.
That is exactly how it went down. That was pointed out, right here on this website, when it happened....Actually it was worse than a shell game. Because at Year 0 of the freeze, they started the Year 1 increase already. So instead of paying a Year 0 rate, then Year 1 rate (a couple bucks more), then Year 2 rate (a few more bucks), we paid the Year 1 rate for the first and second years!
Dish: We didn't raise your rates.
Customer: Yes you did, right before you "froze" them you raised them two years worth.
But in other news, what does this have to do with Sinclair?
I agree. I think they need to go to the old rules where (paraphrasing from my generally faulting memory), one owner couldn't own more than one station in a market, nor in a certain percentage (10%?) of markets.Honestly, the FCC and Congress need to make a new law to limit the amount of TV stations and affiliate group can own. Sinclair should NOT be allowed to own 121 stations. It's just too many to deal with in one big contract and it puts more pressure on the TV provider to give in to Sinclair's greedy demands.
Let them own them all. The law should be a free for all for ownership... but if a company owns more than 1 station, they aren't allowed to charge a carriage rate to cable/sat companies.I agree. I think they need to go to the old rules where (paraphrasing from my generally faulting memory), one owner couldn't own more than one station in a market, nor in a certain percentage (10%?) of markets.
I have a spreadsheet at home that I kept of all my Directv bills from 2010-2014 that I could verify the info. But nowhere near home for a whileLooking back on DTV, I cannot find specific increases, but what I have seen are direct increases of 6% each year.
Ice, will you email me that whenever you have an opportunity. I didn't start watching them til about 2012, and am just curious. Not trying to be in a pissing match.I have a spreadsheet at home that I kept of all my Directv bills from 2010-2014 that I could verify the info. But nowhere near home for a while
But I know D* went up $2 or $3 a year. One year the DVR fee went up too
let them own how many they want. Honestly some of the stations they bought were horribly being run before that and I'm sure some of the smaller market stations would have gone under.Honestly, the FCC and Congress need to make a new law to limit the amount of TV stations and affiliate group can own. Sinclair should NOT be allowed to own 121 stations. It's just too many to deal with in one big contract and it puts more pressure on the TV provider to give in to Sinclair's greedy demands.
companies did that for YEARS. Create shell companies or have a high up official own a separate stationAs for the other 32 stations that are supposedly owned by Cunningham and Deerfield media, well, there's been some evidence that those 2 companies are just shell companies that Sinclair owns so they bypass FCC ownership rules.
Well if you are going to fine Sinclair, then do it to all the other companies who did it too.There have been complaints in the past about this and the FCC should force Sinclair to sell these stations to other affiliate groups and probably even fine Sinclair for trying to break the rules.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cunningham_Broadcasting
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deerfield_Media
The rule is still in place. One owner cannot own more than one of the Big 4 in a market (unless they have more than 8 stations in the market). But again companies are getting around the rules. Gray buys the assets of a station, shuts it down and then moves the programming to a subchannel on its owned station. They did it in Nebraska (moved NBC to a subchannel on CBS), North Dakota (Fox in the west and CBS in the east to the NBC), Wisconsin (moved FOX in Wausau to the CBS) or they buy a low powered station and moved it there (Gray in Wausau). LP stations dont count towards the rule. Thats why the same people in Jonesboro, AR got FOX and CBS on 2 LP stations in a couple months.I agree. I think they need to go to the old rules where (paraphrasing from my generally faulting memory), one owner couldn't own more than one station in a market, nor in a certain percentage (10%?) of markets.
Actually it was worse than a shell game. Because at Year 0 of the freeze, they started the Year 1 increase already. So instead of paying a Year 0 rate, then Year 1 rate (a couple bucks more), then Year 2 rate (a few more bucks), we paid the Year 1 rate for the first and second years!
Dish: We didn't raise your rates.
Customer: Yes you did, right before you "froze" them you raised them two years worth.
But in other news, what does this have to do with Sinclair?