rtv6gm.com
rtv6gm.com
Don Lundy
Nov
19
5:07 PM

$10 (or less) Monthly Cable Bill A Possibility

Here’s an interesting twist to the claim from cable companies that since broadcasters provide their signals over the air for free, the cable companies shouldn’t have to pay for them. 

U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont) is about to introduce legislation requiring cable, satellite, and other paid TV companies to provide local TV signals by offering a “lifeline service”, similar to that offered by telephone companies.  The basic service would be at a reduced cost and provided indefinitely to people who lose over-the-air TV service as a result of the digital transition next February. Sanders sought support for the bill in a letter last week that was circulated to other senators.

The Vermont Independent isn’t pushing the carriers to charge nothing to the customers, but he is pushing for a nominal amount.  The bill calls for pricing at $10 a month or less, similar to Comcast’s recently announced DTV transition promotion that expires after one year.  “We may go lower,” a Sanders aide said.

By having the bill require a cheap basic package “indefinitely,” Sanders would mean “until the end of time, a long period of time,” his aide said.  “There’s no point in going and doing the legislation if we’re just going to match what Comcast is already doing,” the aide said.

“Regardless of one’s ability to pay, it is unfair to ask consumers who lose their TV reception to pay for what they previously received for free,” Sanders said. “Because the federal government was responsible for mandating this DTV transition, I believe it is the federal government’s duty, along with a wide-range of industry partners, to ensure that our constituents are held harmless.”

The Sanders aide said the bill would establish the criteria for determining who had lost free TV signals and is thus eligible to buy a lifeline service that consisted solely of local TV signals. Money remaining from the federal government’s $1.5 billion converter box coupon program might be used to cover a portion of equipment installation costs, the aide added.

A spokesman for the National Cable & Telecommunications Association declined to comment.  No kidding.

Don Lundy
Nov
18
7:01 PM

NCAA Taking One from NFL Playbook

Last March, I suggested that, when it came to dealing with ticket scalpers, the NFL ought to look to the NCAA.

Now, it looks that the NCAA is following the NFL’s lead, not on ticket scalping, but on moving their product over to pay services.  The deal they’re making with ESPN will move the football Bowl Championship Series over to the pay cable service.  And off of free television.

The college “championship” games, once available to all of America via free over-the-air broadcast television, now will be seen only by the part of America that can afford to pay for it.  This is in the vein of the NFL’s trend to move more of their games to pay cable with the Monday night deal on ESPN and the creation of the NFL Network.

ESPN will pay a half billion dollars starting in 2011 for a four-year deal that puts the Fiesta, Orange and Sugar Bowl games on cable and satellite.  That’s 25% more than the deal that Fox, which was the incumbent, was willing to pay.  And, it’s nearly 50% more than Fox paid in the last round.

Look for more of this trend.  Paying for watching amateur sports.  And getting commercials too.

Don Lundy
Nov
6
3:31 PM

New Rule: Phone Company Must Recycle Directories

New Rule (with a nod to Bill Maher):  the companies publishing phone directories have to pick up the old editions when they toss a bundle of new ones on your lawn.

Yesterday, I came home to a bundle of four, count ‘em, four, phone books in an orange plastic wrapper tossed onto my driveway.  This “delivery” came a couple of weeks after reading a notice in the newspaper that I could recycle my old phone books by driving them across town.

No!  If your going to litter my property with new editions, you’ve got to be responsible for picking up the outdated versions.  Now, if the phone books were something I wanted and had requested, I can see being responsible for recycling.

But, they aren’t.  And, they haven’t been for years.  The white pages and Yellow Pages are an anachronistic holdover from days gone by, from the days before cell phones and the Internet.

I’m sure a few folks still use the directories but it’s time for the phone company to quit providing one to every home.  It’ll save them money, it’s good for the environment and it will put the responsiblity for recycling in the right place.

Don Lundy
Nov
1
1:06 AM

6News’ DTV Test Reveals Confusion Still Out There

It’s certainly not a scientific sample.  But the results coming out of 6News’ DTV Test Thursday evening indicate there’s still a lot of misinformation out there.

And, a lot of it seems to have come from stores trying to sell digital TVs and cable systems trying to get customers to upgrade to their digital packages.  We attempted during the 5, 6 and 7pm newscasts to put more information about the digital transition out there.  We conducted simulated tests that had folks watching 6News over the air see a special message while the regular newscast was in progress.

The message directed them to a phone number and a panel of employees trained in answering their  questions.

Time constraints and the complexity of the questions may have left some viewers with unanswered questions.  Those with questions were directed to a special e-mail box: dtvanswers@6news.com

As we move towards Feburary 17 of next year, we’ll continue a strong campaign to provide information so viewers will be ready to receive the digital only broadcasts.