This guy has a dog in the hunt so just ignore his support for his employers.
Let's take it easy on the regulation talk. Not many things are made better by the government stepping in to create winners and losers IMO. This is broadcast TV after all and in most cases an antenna will get you back to having access to your local station for a fairly modest one time cost. And there are plenty of other avenues nowadays to enhance your viewing experience by purchasing items such as the aforementioned Recast DVR (full disclosure, I recently purchased one of these and got rid of the locals from Dish and so far I am very pleased with it). I work in the Engineering department of a public TV network and while we don't typically have these types of retransmission disputes, I can assure everyone here that running a TV station is a very expensive proposition just from an operational standpoint let alone the programming costs. Commercial broadcasters have begun to figure retransmission fees into their business models by necessity in many cases. I'm not giving them a pass by any stretch since they have found a backdoor way to charge for the public airwaves but I'm saying that I can see both sides of this argument.
I agree that we don't necessarily need more regulation, but they need to fix the currently broken regulations that favor the station owners, most of which are not small companies any more, let alone non-profits. As things get more profitable for large companies like Sinclair, and companies like Comcast need to pay down the debt from their megamergers, the people who are paying for the product end up paying a lot more. The regulations need to updated to deal with the new realities. Businesses evolve and adapt to the status quo and optimize themselves to maximize profits. In a sense, they take advantage of the situation they are presented with. To prevent them from having too much power over the market, rules need to be added/removed/changed from time to time. As they are using public resources (airwaves), it is the government's job to do that, hopefully with the lightest touch necessary and with the public's interest in mind -- not just the broadcasters and/or MVPDs. I'd be perfectly fine with the regulations reverting to the original spirit of the public interest broadcast licenses. Making gobs of money for investors on the backs of people who just want local news, weather, and traffic doesn't really jibe with that idea.
I've been reading this forum for years and certainly didn't expect to be snarkily piled on to for simply making a comment which I began by stating was simply my opinion! I never said that I supported what has been going on with the channel blackouts for financial leverage, only that I understand they have adjusted their business models to reflect the realities of the broadcast television business today! I really have "no dog in this hunt", if anyone who jumped on me would simply read where I stated that I work for a public TV network and understand what it takes to run a TV station from an operational standpoint since my job entails seeing the bills every month that it takes to run TV stations.
Ironically enough, for everyone who pines for the good old days of regulation, back in the 70's , 80's and 90's ownership of a TV station, especially one that was run with expenses kept as low as possible (which, by the way included low pay for many employees and poor maintenance of technical facilities which then led to a far lower quality product) was nearly a license to print money. And owners back then most assuredly did. The difference being that there weren't as likely to be stockholders to answer to for many of them, but there was an owner capitalizing on his initial investment (or inheritance). But they had their Cadillac, Mercedes and other high dollar vehicles of the time, country club memberships, second or third homes, extensive vacations along other far more nefarious ways to spend money (remember this was the 70's, 80's and 90's so draw your own conclusions) while putting as little as possible back into the product. If anyone remembers back then there was also nowhere near the amount of competition for potential eyeballs there is now. I'm a thirty +year veteran of broadcast radio and TV so don't even get me started on how great it was when a 'little guy' was the owner of the station.
Enough of this, I'll go back to just reading this board now. I don't pretend to have all the answers but I thought I would throw another perspective out there since I'm a career broadcaster but apparently many on here wish to rant, complain and demand government action rather than even considering there are two sides to the discussion so I will keep that in mind.
run with expenses kept as low as possible (which, by the way included low pay for many employees and poor maintenance of technical facilities which then led to a far lower quality product) was nearly a license to print money. And owners back then most assuredly did. The difference being that there weren't as likely to be stockholders to answer to for many of them, but there was an owner capitalizing on his initial investment (or inheritance). But they had their Cadillac, Mercedes and other high dollar vehicles of the time, country club memberships, second or third homes, extensive vacations along other far more nefarious ways to spend money (remember this was the 70's, 80's and 90's so draw your own conclusions) while putting as little as possible back into the product
I've been reading this forum for years and certainly didn't expect to be snarkily piled on to for simply making a comment which I began by stating was simply my opinion! I never said that I supported what has been going on with the channel blackouts for financial leverage, only that I understand they have adjusted their business models to reflect the realities of the broadcast television business today! I really have "no dog in this hunt", if anyone who jumped on me would simply read where I stated that I work for a public TV network and understand what it takes to run a TV station from an operational standpoint since my job entails seeing the bills every month that it takes to run TV stations.
Ironically enough, for everyone who pines for the good old days of regulation, back in the 70's , 80's and 90's ownership of a TV station, especially one that was run with expenses kept as low as possible (which, by the way included low pay for many employees and poor maintenance of technical facilities which then led to a far lower quality product) was nearly a license to print money. And owners back then most assuredly did. The difference being that there weren't as likely to be stockholders to answer to for many of them, but there was an owner capitalizing on his initial investment (or inheritance). But they had their Cadillac, Mercedes and other high dollar vehicles of the time, country club memberships, second or third homes, extensive vacations along other far more nefarious ways to spend money (remember this was the 70's, 80's and 90's so draw your own conclusions) while putting as little as possible back into the product. If anyone remembers back then there was also nowhere near the amount of competition for potential eyeballs there is now. I'm a thirty +year veteran of broadcast radio and TV so don't even get me started on how great it was when a 'little guy' was the owner of the station.
Enough of this, I'll go back to just reading this board now. I don't pretend to have all the answers but I thought I would throw another perspective out there since I'm a career broadcaster but apparently many on here wish to rant, complain and demand government action rather than even considering there are two sides to the discussion so I will keep that in mind.
Glad to hear from someone in the business. It is a different world now. As an old radio engineer/broadcaster, I also enjoyed the old days. But you are right, pay was not very good. But we were kids and never thought about it at the time.. We were happy to have that job. As a society we are spoiled today. We were happy with a few OTA stations. Now, most people have to have everything and everything costs money.
I've been reading this forum for years and certainly didn't expect to be snarkily piled on to for simply making a comment which I began by stating was simply my opinion! I never said that I supported what has been going on with the channel blackouts for financial leverage, only that I understand they have adjusted their business models to reflect the realities of the broadcast television business today! I really have "no dog in this hunt", if anyone who jumped on me would simply read where I stated that I work for a public TV network and understand what it takes to run a TV station from an operational standpoint since my job entails seeing the bills every month that it takes to run TV stations.
Ironically enough, for everyone who pines for the good old days of regulation, back in the 70's , 80's and 90's ownership of a TV station, especially one that was run with expenses kept as low as possible (which, by the way included low pay for many employees and poor maintenance of technical facilities which then led to a far lower quality product) was nearly a license to print money. And owners back then most assuredly did. The difference being that there weren't as likely to be stockholders to answer to for many of them, but there was an owner capitalizing on his initial investment (or inheritance). But they had their Cadillac, Mercedes and other high dollar vehicles of the time, country club memberships, second or third homes, extensive vacations along other far more nefarious ways to spend money (remember this was the 70's, 80's and 90's so draw your own conclusions) while putting as little as possible back into the product. If anyone remembers back then there was also nowhere near the amount of competition for potential eyeballs there is now. I'm a thirty +year veteran of broadcast radio and TV so don't even get me started on how great it was when a 'little guy' was the owner of the station.
Enough of this, I'll go back to just reading this board now. I don't pretend to have all the answers but I thought I would throw another perspective out there since I'm a career broadcaster but apparently many on here wish to rant, complain and demand government action rather than even considering there are two sides to the discussion so I will keep that in mind.
There is no need for any regulation. Simply return to the logical, fair, reasonable and constitutional system outlined in Fortnightly. Zero retransmission $$ for broadcasters.
Any poor struggling Big Media company who cannot make it on the windfall it makes from ad revenue alone is welcome to sign their FCC granted monopoly over to me.
Local TV should be free.