Counterpoint: The Seattle Times Got It Wrong
The Seattle Times and its publisher, Frank Blethen, have long styled themselves as crusaders for independent journalism and freedom of the press. So, it’s both discordant and disappointing that a recent editorial in The Times called for heavy-handed federal government intervention to limit media companies’ ability to acquire and run more TV stations.
The cable group tells the FCC that the $90 million purchase of eight stations uses joint sales agreements to sidestep FCC ownership regulations that bar ownership of two of the top four rated TV stations in a market.
A new report from the media watch dog group Free Press accuses the Federal Communications Commission of turning a blind eye toward media consolidation in the television industry. The study — “Cease to Resist: How the FCC’s Failure to Enforce Its Policies Created a New Wave of Media Consolidation” — scrutinizes several major TV station owners including Sinclair Broadcast Group and Nexstar and says they are using “shady tactics” to build “national media empires.”
FCC Mulls Hard 39% Cap On TV Ownership
A well-placed industry source tells TVNewsCheck that the commission is working on a rulemaking that could eliminate the UHF discount used in caclulating a group’s coverage total, capped at 39% of U.S. TV homes. Such a move could impact Sinclair, which is near the 39% cap, but sources also say that current station portfolios may be grandfathered.
FCC Chief Backs Ownership Delay Request
FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski today gave his support to a request by the Minority Media and Telecommunications Council to delay the commission’s review of its ownership rules until MMTC can submit a study on possible impacts of changes. “In this heavily-litigated area where a strong record is particularly important, I believe this is a sensible approach to moving forward and resolving the issues raised in this proceeding,” Genachowski said.
The Minority Media and Telecommunications Council wants the commission to delay a decision on its media ownership rules review for at least a couple of months, while an MMTC-sponsored study looks into what impact FCC crossownership rules have on minority ownership.
When CBS torpedoed CNET’s planned “best of show” award for Dish’s Hopper, it may have also blown to bits broadcasters’ best chance for looser media ownership rules at the FCC. In a letter filed Tuesday with the FCC, public interest group Public Knowledge says CBS’s actions demonstrate unequivocally why the agency should ditch its proposal to loosen the rules, currently under review.
FCC Sets Ownership Comments Dates
The comment and reply comment dates have been set for the FCC’s Notice of Proposed Rulemaking in the congressionally-mandated Quadrennial Regulatory Review of the FCC’s broadcast ownership rules. Comments are due on March 5 and reply comments are due on April 3.
The FCC will propose modestly changing its media-ownership rules, FCC officials said today, although the agency will keep most of its limitations in place. The agency’s proposed new regulations would loosen the ban on companies owning a TV station and newspaper in the top 20 markets,
Broadcasters are urging the Supreme Court to loosen restrictions that prevent companies from owning newspapers, radio stations and television stations in the same market.
In a blow to Tribune Co. as its seeks to emerge from bankruptcy proceedings, the media company may be forced to divest broadcast or newspaper operations in several markets, including Chicago, following a federal appeals court decision Thursday. The decision overturned part of the FCC’s 2008 revamp of U.S. media ownership rules that made it easier to own a newspaper and a broadcast outlet in the same market.