My son has Dish Network service and he got a letter from them today. The gist of it is that they say that because of some new federal law, he can receive either distant network stations or local network stations, but not both. If he keeps the local stations he will get all the networks, but he will never be able to go back to the distant stations. If he keeps the distant network stations he can't get ABC because one of the ABC affiliates has a transmitter much closer than the other stations so they would not issue him a waiver. But he could get both east and west coast feeds of NBC, CBS, FOX, etc.
There are a couple of unique things about this market (Grand Rapids/Kalamazoo/Battle Creek). For one thing there are TWO ABC affiliates. One is a UHF in Battle Creek and I am sure he could get a waiver from them. The other is a Grand Rapids station with transmitter north of Grand Rapids, and they are the one that would not grant the waiver. He wonders, if he could get a waiver from the Battle Creek station, would that be enough to allow him to get the distant ABC stations, or would the fact that he can get one of the affiliates bar him from getting the distant stations? I have no idea, but thought maybe someone here might know.
The second thing about this market is that the local stations (especially the NBC and ABC affiliates) are VERY irritating in that they are always interrupting network programming for some stupid local thing that hardly anyone cares about. Even when it's only mildly severe weather they will do on the air live and the local weathermen will do their song-and-dance act. Funny thing is they always manage to go back to the network just about the time the commercials are coming on, then when the commercials are over it seems like the program runs just long enough for you to get interested again and here they come again. I figure if you want to be a network affiliate you should carry the network programming, not interrupt it every chance you get. I wonder if the reason there are two ABC affiliates is because the first one kept screwing around with the network programming (I've never heard of another market with two separate affiliates of the same network, not even owned by the same company).
Anyway, I guess the question is, anyone know of a way he can continue to get the east and west coast feeds and the locals, or at least the distant stations and local ABC short of putting up an outdoor antenna? Did anyone else get a letter like this from Dish? I'm just trying to find out if he has any other options.
There are a couple of unique things about this market (Grand Rapids/Kalamazoo/Battle Creek). For one thing there are TWO ABC affiliates. One is a UHF in Battle Creek and I am sure he could get a waiver from them. The other is a Grand Rapids station with transmitter north of Grand Rapids, and they are the one that would not grant the waiver. He wonders, if he could get a waiver from the Battle Creek station, would that be enough to allow him to get the distant ABC stations, or would the fact that he can get one of the affiliates bar him from getting the distant stations? I have no idea, but thought maybe someone here might know.
The second thing about this market is that the local stations (especially the NBC and ABC affiliates) are VERY irritating in that they are always interrupting network programming for some stupid local thing that hardly anyone cares about. Even when it's only mildly severe weather they will do on the air live and the local weathermen will do their song-and-dance act. Funny thing is they always manage to go back to the network just about the time the commercials are coming on, then when the commercials are over it seems like the program runs just long enough for you to get interested again and here they come again. I figure if you want to be a network affiliate you should carry the network programming, not interrupt it every chance you get. I wonder if the reason there are two ABC affiliates is because the first one kept screwing around with the network programming (I've never heard of another market with two separate affiliates of the same network, not even owned by the same company).
Anyway, I guess the question is, anyone know of a way he can continue to get the east and west coast feeds and the locals, or at least the distant stations and local ABC short of putting up an outdoor antenna? Did anyone else get a letter like this from Dish? I'm just trying to find out if he has any other options.