FCC chairman Tom Wheeler said Tuesday he will schedule a vote Sept. 30 on getting rid of the FCC's sports blackout rules. The commissioners in December 2013 voted tentatively, and unanimously, to scrap the rules.
In a blog post, Wheeler said the NFL "should no longer be able to hide behind government rules that punish loyal fans."
The rules backstop NFL blackout policies that prevent the importation by cable or satellite operators of distant-signal versions of NFL games blacked out in the home market due insufficient ticket sales.
Without the rules, the NFL can still write those blackouts into their contracts, but Wheeler says the FCC is not going to play along. "Today, we are blowing the whistle on this anti-fan practice," he said.
broadcastingcable.com
In a blog post, Wheeler said the NFL "should no longer be able to hide behind government rules that punish loyal fans."
The rules backstop NFL blackout policies that prevent the importation by cable or satellite operators of distant-signal versions of NFL games blacked out in the home market due insufficient ticket sales.
Without the rules, the NFL can still write those blackouts into their contracts, but Wheeler says the FCC is not going to play along. "Today, we are blowing the whistle on this anti-fan practice," he said.
broadcastingcable.com
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