Radio-Info.com

Radio-Info.com Discussion Boards
Login November 21, 2009, 07:09:02 PM *
Username Password Session Length
 
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register. Did you miss your activation email? Did you forget your password?
:  
   Home   Help Search Login Register  
Pages: 1 2 [3] 4 5 6   Go Down
  Print  
Author Topic: Most network affiliates on a single cable system  (Read 1969 times)
Ultimajock
rimember

Offline Offline

Posts: 1747


« Reply #20 on: November 19, 2008, 03:19:06 AM »


Can anyone name a cable system that carries two stations that simulcast each other?

...Comcast Pima County/Tucson. KUAT/6 and KUAS/27 are both licensed to Tucson but simulcast the same schedule; KUAT's transmitter is on Mount Bigelow, and its signal is blocked in the northwestern part of Tucson by Mount Lemmon, thus KUAS was placed on Tumamoc Hill to cover that gap. KUAT appears on the Comcast analog lineup and KUAS appears on the digital lineup...
Logged

King Daevid MacKenzie
BRNout
rimember

Offline Offline

Posts: 2903

Former Radio/TV guy; now consulting.


« Reply #21 on: November 19, 2008, 11:38:02 AM »

How common is it for a cable system to carry no out of market stations?  In Pensacola, FL we get all the locals (one each of every english network except ION, which never set up shop here) but we don't get APT on Florida cable systems (it is on Dish and OTA) and the Florida PBS station is carried on Alabama cable systems. 
It sure would be nice to get APT to get a choice of PBS stations.  Wonder why they don't ask for must carry in Florida?

It's VERY common for a cable system to carry no out of market stations.  In fact, it even happens in areas where out of market stations are easily received via antenna.   Suffolk County Long Island comes to mind, where Connecticut stations actually come in much better over the air than New York stations, but the county is in the NY DMA and only NY market stations are offered on cable.  Nothing from the Hartford/New Haven market is included - not even WTNH-8 (ABC), which would be the strongest OTA signal in many areas along the north shore. 

As for a PBS station invoking must carry, it won't happen because must carry doesn't apply to PBS stations.  There's a loophole in the cable regs as they pertain to PBS signals.  On the one hand, they're not subject to non-duplicity; on the other, they are not covered by must-carry unless they were carried prior to a certain date (which I can't recall), in which case they may not be dropped. 

I found all this out because Boston's WGBX-44 wasn't carried by certain cable providers in Hillsborough County, NH (in the Boston DMA).  Since we got all of the crap shopping and religious stations from the market (who invoked must carry), why not WGBX?  Well, I asked Adelphia (the provider at the time) and that was the answer - WGBX didn't have must carry status on that system.  It was not carried by Adelphia prior to the magic date, so it is not a must carry signal.  I guess they thought that a third PBS (WGBH and WENH are the others) wasn't needed.

Ironically, the Comcast system for the areas surrounding Nashua (where I lived) were upgraded from their former Adelphia service and WGBX was added.  But, they didn't have to add it - they only did so because of numerous viewer requests.  And, it could still (theoretically) be dropped.

So, the moral of the story is that APB doesn't have the legal standing to invoke must carry.  They can ask the cable provider in Pensacola politely, and so can you.   That's about as much as can be done.  That can work, as shown by my example above. 
Logged
ssetta
rimember

Offline Offline

Posts: 697


« Reply #22 on: November 19, 2008, 12:10:20 PM »

As for a PBS station invoking must carry, it won't happen because must carry doesn't apply to PBS stations.  There's a loophole in the cable regs as they pertain to PBS signals.  On the one hand, they're not subject to non-duplicity; on the other, they are not covered by must-carry unless they were carried prior to a certain date (which I can't recall), in which case they may not be dropped. 

I found all this out because Boston's WGBX-44 wasn't carried by certain cable providers in Hillsborough County, NH (in the Boston DMA).  Since we got all of the crap shopping and religious stations from the market (who invoked must carry), why not WGBX?  Well, I asked Adelphia (the provider at the time) and that was the answer - WGBX didn't have must carry status on that system.  It was not carried by Adelphia prior to the magic date, so it is not a must carry signal.  I guess they thought that a third PBS (WGBH and WENH are the others) wasn't needed.

Ironically, the Comcast system for the areas surrounding Nashua (where I lived) were upgraded from their former Adelphia service and WGBX was added.  But, they didn't have to add it - they only did so because of numerous viewer requests.  And, it could still (theoretically) be dropped.

That's actually very interesting info, because I've noticed that even in the Boston area, the PBS stations that cable systems carry are kind of spotty. Most of the Boston area gets the 3 mentioned above, and some areas get WSBE from Providence. Pretty much everywhere north of Boston gets WENH, and a lot of areas south of Boston get WSBE. I believe WSBE is available in all of Bristol, Plymouth, and Barnstable counties, as well as the 2 islands. However, I remember back in the 90s, I believe WSBE was only available on certain parts of Cape Cod, excluding the outer cape. Believe it or not, I think there is a small area (Quincy, Randolph, Weymouth)...that does not receive WENH or WSBE, which is very unusual in the Boston area.

There are also selected towns that receive all four, but very few. I actually live in Natick, which is one of them. I believe this is because it goes back to the 80s when Natick had its own cable system. Then in the mid-90s when we switched to fiber-optics, we switched over to the Newton/Needham area system. I don't think WSBE was ever offered on that system, but it was offered in Natick. And so, to this day, we still receive WSBE on channel 22, which I think is not used in all other towns on this system. This is only on Comcast, and not on the other options in the area.

I know that Charter Communications in the Worcester area carries WJAR on most of its systems, but does not carry either WENH or WSBE. However, I think WSBE is solely available in the town of Auburn, on channel 15. I wonder if they had a similar situation to Natick. Does anyone know if Auburn's cable system originally evolved from something else? And strangely enough, Shrewsbury's town-owned cable system used to have all 4, but WENH was dropped when WYDN qualified for must-carry. I found it very odd that a cable system would drop a PBS. It would have made more sense to drop WPRI, since I think by that time, Shrewsbury was the only system in Central MA to still have WPRI. I remember talking to someone at Shrewsbury Cable, and he explained that WJAR, WPRI and WSBE were within a certain radius, so they had to be carried. I also remember him saying their original plan was to drop WSBE and keep WENH, which may have made more sense, since WENH is in the Boston market, while WSBE is not. So, I wonder if FCC regulations used to be different back in the day.
Logged
charlestondxman
rimember

Offline Offline

Posts: 340


« Reply #23 on: November 19, 2008, 02:49:40 PM »

Now actually, Walterboro only has the Charleston stations on cable, plus WIS from Columbia. All 3 markets are available OTA. Until the mid 90s, they had all three markets on cable.

Strangely, they have two PBS/ETV stations, WITV and WJWJ, which mostly simulcast each other except for maybe a local newscast and a couple specialty shows on WJWJ.

No other Savannah stations are on the system. Emporia, VA carries all the Hampton Roads (except for Fox) and Richmond stations on their cable system, plus a station from Roanoke Rapids, NC.

Until this August, Pawleys Island (where the hammocks are made, about 20 miles S of Myrtle Beach) had three NBC affiliates on their cable (WIS, WECT, and WCBD), but WIS was dropped after WMBF signed on the air. Strangely, WECT wasn't dropped. They still have two of every network there, except for CW/My.

Most towns in SC outside of the Charleston/Greenville/Myrtle Beach areas carry WIS, and Charlotte stations are carried in a wide part of the state, including WCNC/WMYT in Hartsville.

Logged
RonM
rimember

Offline Offline

Posts: 15


« Reply #24 on: November 20, 2008, 03:41:25 PM »

If I recall correctly, in Montgomery, AL around 1978-1980, from their local TV guide called "Tee Vee Times", which listed Montgomery, Prattville and Wetumpka's cable lineups, Prattville and Wetumpka had multiple network affiliates:  Prattville had 3 ABCs (6 from B'ham, 32 from Montgomery, and 9 from Columbus), 3 CBSs (3 from Columbus, 8 from Selma and 20 from Montgomery) and 2 NBCs (12 from Montgomery and 13 from B'ham).  Wetumpka had 3 CBS (same as above) 2 ABC (9 and 32) and 2 NBC (12 and 13).  Of course, 6 in Birmingham and 20 in Montgomery are now Fox, and 8 in Selma is now Montgomery's CBS.

For some reason, Storer Cable in Montgomery didn't carry any out of market stations, but I do recall that they carried 6 from Birmingham on the PBS channel from about Midnight to 6:00 AM since 6 was one of the few, if not the only, station in Alabama that was on 24/7.
Logged
bpatrick
rimember

Offline Offline

Posts: 5414


« Reply #25 on: November 21, 2008, 08:03:21 AM »

I knew WIS was dropped from the Myrtle Beach
cable when WMBF came on, but I didn't know WECT
was still on.  It should be; it's been the de facto NBC
affiliate there since 1954.

In Athens, GA, in the '70s we had nine network
affiliates:

ABC WJBF/6 Augusta
      WXIA/11 Atlanta (now NBC)
      WLOS/13 Asheville, NC

CBS WAGA/5 Atlanta (now Fox)
      WSPA/7 Spartanburg, SC
      WRDW/12 Augusta

PBS WGTV/8 Athens

NBC WSB/2 Atlanta (now ABC)
      WFBC (now WYFF)/4 Greenville, SC
Logged
rch66
rimember

Offline Offline

Posts: 255


« Reply #26 on: November 21, 2008, 10:28:41 AM »

How common is it for a cable system to carry no out of market stations?  In Pensacola, FL we get all the locals (one each of every english network except ION, which never set up shop here) but we don't get APT on Florida cable systems (it is on Dish and OTA) and the Florida PBS station is carried on Alabama cable systems. 
It sure would be nice to get APT to get a choice of PBS stations.  Wonder why they don't ask for must carry in Florida?

It's VERY common for a cable system to carry no out of market stations.  In fact, it even happens in areas where out of market stations are easily received via antenna.   Suffolk County Long Island comes to mind, where Connecticut stations actually come in much better over the air than New York stations, but the county is in the NY DMA and only NY market stations are offered on cable.  Nothing from the Hartford/New Haven market is included - not even WTNH-8 (ABC), which would be the strongest OTA signal in many areas along the north shore. 

As for a PBS station invoking must carry, it won't happen because must carry doesn't apply to PBS stations.  There's a loophole in the cable regs as they pertain to PBS signals.  On the one hand, they're not subject to non-duplicity; on the other, they are not covered by must-carry unless they were carried prior to a certain date (which I can't recall), in which case they may not be dropped. 

I found all this out because Boston's WGBX-44 wasn't carried by certain cable providers in Hillsborough County, NH (in the Boston DMA).  Since we got all of the crap shopping and religious stations from the market (who invoked must carry), why not WGBX?  Well, I asked Adelphia (the provider at the time) and that was the answer - WGBX didn't have must carry status on that system.  It was not carried by Adelphia prior to the magic date, so it is not a must carry signal.  I guess they thought that a third PBS (WGBH and WENH are the others) wasn't needed.

Ironically, the Comcast system for the areas surrounding Nashua (where I lived) were upgraded from their former Adelphia service and WGBX was added.  But, they didn't have to add it - they only did so because of numerous viewer requests.  And, it could still (theoretically) be dropped.

So, the moral of the story is that APB doesn't have the legal standing to invoke must carry.  They can ask the cable provider in Pensacola politely, and so can you.   That's about as much as can be done.  That can work, as shown by my example above. 

Must-carry does apply to PBS stations, but for Non Commercial Stations (NCE)s, the cable company can reject a 4th PBS station if its considered duplicative to an existing station on the lineup.  Most often PBS member stations know their coverage area and might have a gentlemen's agreement not to pursue new territory, since they operate based on viewer memberships (and they don't want to dilute that), so they rarely do, unlike commercial stations that try to maximize coverage area as far as the DMA boundaries and signal reaches go.

In Philadelphia, that was the case with WHYY and WLVT.    WLVT was the exclusive PBS station on the cable lineups in the Lehigh Valley.   

In the 90's, it was like this:
WHYY 12:  SE PA, So. NJ/Mercer, and Delaware (Philadelphia DMA minus the Lehigh Valley), plus Ocean Co.
WLVT 39:  exclusive in Lehigh Valley (i.e. No other PBS stations carried), SE PA, Poconos region between Allentown and Scranton.

Then around 2000, DirecTV and Dish Net. carried WHYY and offered it throughout Philadelphia market.
DirecTV later added WLVT and offered it throughout Philadelphia market, carrying both WHYY and WLVT.

In 2007, WHYY was added to Service Electric and RCN in Lehigh Valley, though WLVT is on CH.12, and WHYY is on Ch.21.

Other PBS stations from nearby:
NJN - runs a different schedule to avoid duplication between WNET 13 and WHYY 12:  pretty much on cable where an NJN signal reaches, minus the Lehigh Valley, and on DirecTV and Dish Network in NY and Philadelphia market.
WNET (from the NY market)  - on cable in Mercer County, NJ, along with WHYY, NJN.
WITF (from the Harrisburg market) - on cable in Berks County, PA along with WHYY, WLVT.
« Last Edit: November 21, 2008, 10:34:50 AM by rch66 » Logged
rch66
rimember

Offline Offline

Posts: 255


« Reply #27 on: November 21, 2008, 11:11:56 AM »

One boneheaded thing done by DirecTV is they refuse to offer Connecticut Public Television in Fairfield County, CT, even though they already uplink it for the Hartford locals, as DirecTV counts that they already include 3 PBS stations for the New York market, that being WNET WLIW, and independent NCE WNYE. NJN carried for Philadelphia - and NY.   They don't view it locally.   Same applies for Dish Net.   For CPTV, that's a loss of 25% of its CT base.   
« Last Edit: November 21, 2008, 11:14:14 AM by rch66 » Logged
ssetta
rimember

Offline Offline

Posts: 697


« Reply #28 on: November 21, 2008, 02:33:55 PM »

How common is it for a cable system to carry no out of market stations?  In Pensacola, FL we get all the locals (one each of every english network except ION, which never set up shop here) but we don't get APT on Florida cable systems (it is on Dish and OTA) and the Florida PBS station is carried on Alabama cable systems. 
It sure would be nice to get APT to get a choice of PBS stations.  Wonder why they don't ask for must carry in Florida?

It's VERY common for a cable system to carry no out of market stations.  In fact, it even happens in areas where out of market stations are easily received via antenna.   Suffolk County Long Island comes to mind, where Connecticut stations actually come in much better over the air than New York stations, but the county is in the NY DMA and only NY market stations are offered on cable.  Nothing from the Hartford/New Haven market is included - not even WTNH-8 (ABC), which would be the strongest OTA signal in many areas along the north shore. 

As for a PBS station invoking must carry, it won't happen because must carry doesn't apply to PBS stations.  There's a loophole in the cable regs as they pertain to PBS signals.  On the one hand, they're not subject to non-duplicity; on the other, they are not covered by must-carry unless they were carried prior to a certain date (which I can't recall), in which case they may not be dropped. 

I found all this out because Boston's WGBX-44 wasn't carried by certain cable providers in Hillsborough County, NH (in the Boston DMA).  Since we got all of the crap shopping and religious stations from the market (who invoked must carry), why not WGBX?  Well, I asked Adelphia (the provider at the time) and that was the answer - WGBX didn't have must carry status on that system.  It was not carried by Adelphia prior to the magic date, so it is not a must carry signal.  I guess they thought that a third PBS (WGBH and WENH are the others) wasn't needed.

Ironically, the Comcast system for the areas surrounding Nashua (where I lived) were upgraded from their former Adelphia service and WGBX was added.  But, they didn't have to add it - they only did so because of numerous viewer requests.  And, it could still (theoretically) be dropped.

So, the moral of the story is that APB doesn't have the legal standing to invoke must carry.  They can ask the cable provider in Pensacola politely, and so can you.   That's about as much as can be done.  That can work, as shown by my example above. 

Must-carry does apply to PBS stations, but for Non Commercial Stations (NCE)s, the cable company can reject a 4th PBS station if its considered duplicative to an existing station on the lineup.  Most often PBS member stations know their coverage area and might have a gentlemen's agreement not to pursue new territory, since they operate based on viewer memberships (and they don't want to dilute that), so they rarely do, unlike commercial stations that try to maximize coverage area as far as the DMA boundaries and signal reaches go.

In Philadelphia, that was the case with WHYY and WLVT.    WLVT was the exclusive PBS station on the cable lineups in the Lehigh Valley.   

In the 90's, it was like this:
WHYY 12:  SE PA, So. NJ/Mercer, and Delaware (Philadelphia DMA minus the Lehigh Valley), plus Ocean Co.
WLVT 39:  exclusive in Lehigh Valley (i.e. No other PBS stations carried), SE PA, Poconos region between Allentown and Scranton.

Then around 2000, DirecTV and Dish Net. carried WHYY and offered it throughout Philadelphia market.
DirecTV later added WLVT and offered it throughout Philadelphia market, carrying both WHYY and WLVT.

In 2007, WHYY was added to Service Electric and RCN in Lehigh Valley, though WLVT is on CH.12, and WHYY is on Ch.21.

Other PBS stations from nearby:
NJN - runs a different schedule to avoid duplication between WNET 13 and WHYY 12:  pretty much on cable where an NJN signal reaches, minus the Lehigh Valley, and on DirecTV and Dish Network in NY and Philadelphia market.
WNET (from the NY market)  - on cable in Mercer County, NJ, along with WHYY, NJN.
WITF (from the Harrisburg market) - on cable in Berks County, PA along with WHYY, WLVT.


I noticed that certain parts of eastern PA (especially Lehigh Valley) have like two or three different cable providers as options. And I think each of them have a slightly different selection of locals that they offer. I know there's Service Electric, RCN, and Comcast. You would think the one that offers the most is the one that has always been there since the 70s or 80s. So, does anyone know what the original cable provider for Lehigh Valley was?
Logged
milton77
rimember

Offline Offline

Posts: 141


« Reply #29 on: November 23, 2008, 09:46:55 AM »

According to tvguide.com, the cable TV system in Broken Bow, Oklahoma (74728 zip code) carries:

3 ABC (KTBS/KHBS/WFAA)
2 CBS (KWTV/KSLA)
2 NBC (KFOR/KTEN)
3 FOX (KOKH/KMSS/KDFW)
2 CW (KOCB/WPIX)
1 MY Network (KAUT)

Kind of interesting, Broken Bow is in far Southeastern Oklahoma, but manages to carry every Oklahoma City and a few Dallas network affiliates. However, it is in the Shreveport market, I believe.
Logged
Pages: 1 2 [3] 4 5 6   Go Up
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP

Postings on Radio-Info.com are the opinions of the people who post them. Views expressed do not necessarily represent the views of Radio-Info.com or its parent in3 media, inc. In fact many of the views expressed here are just plain wrong. But they are opinions and this site allows us all to discuss those opinions. Any reliance on information posted is done so at the user's own risk. For a detailed look at the rules, regulations and uses of Radio-Info.com please see our TERMS OF SERVICE. 14

Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!
Page created in 1.658 seconds with 18 queries.