The FCC proceeding on its Commercial Advertisement Loudness Mitigation Act isn’t considered likely to lead to rule changes, but increased enforcement and warnings to licensees could be in the cards, said broadcast and cable attorneys. The FCC acted quickly to begin an examination after the act’s originator, Rep. Anna Eshoo, D-Calif., criticized lack of enforcement. The agency has authority to enforce the rule, Rosenworcel told reporters Thursday. Comments on the rules are due June 3 (see 2105070058).
Switching Sinclair’s KBOI-TV Boise to Channel 20 (see 2104270084) would let it take advantage of better propagation of UHF signals and “prospective advantages of UHF broadcasting using the ATSC 3.0 standard,” said Sinclair comments posted Wednesday in FCC docket 21-156.
Channel 6 low-power TV broadcasters face “financial and logistical pressure” from the coming July 13 deadline for LPTV stations to go digital and FCC silence on an LP-6 proposal based on ATSC 3.0, said LP-6 broadcaster George Flinn in a filing posted Thursday to docket 03-185. The deadline appears to require the channel 6 stations cease analog audio broadcasts -- receivable on FM radios -- that are their primary content, and stations propose offering the radio signal as an ancillary service and broadcasting video over ATSC 3.0 (see 2104300063). It isn’t clear if that idea will be acceptable to the Media Bureau. “Time is truly of the essence since FCC guidance is critical to the build-out path that must be taken (and the financial outlay which must be incurred),” Flinn said: The matter should get "expedited consideration.”
Broadcast advertising improved and station owners see opportunities in sports betting and ATSC 3.0 but little chance of relaxed ownership rules anytime soon, they said in Q1 calls last week. “What a difference 10 weeks makes,” said Cumulus CEO Mary Berner of the COVID-19 recovery. “We are optimistic for gradual, but continued progress throughout the balance of the year as macroeconomic conditions progress, said Entravision CEO Walter Ulloa.
Gray Television agreed to buy Meredith’s 17 TV stations for $2.7 billion, they announced (see here and here) Monday. This includes one overlapping market where Gray plans to divest a station, it won’t put Gray over national ownership limits, and it isn’t expected to hit regulatory snags, broadcast attorneys and analysts said in interviews. Expected to be completed in Q4, the deal would make Gray No. 2 broadcaster by revenue. It would give Gray access to larger markets and leaves room for more acquisitions, making the company a “super-broadcaster,” said Noble Capital Markets' Michael Kupinski.
It isn't clear what the FCC will decide on the July 13 DTV switch and channel 6 low-power TV stations, leaving some in industry guessing, they said in recent interviews. These LPTV outlets call themselves LP6 stations, while opponents call them “Franken-FMs.” These small stations seek to continue offering analog radio signals as an ancillary service while broadcasting video in ATSC 3.0.
Revised FCC rules for distributed transmission systems take effect May 24, said a Media Bureau public notice in Monday’s Daily Digest. The changes loosen interference requirements to make it easier for broadcasters to employ the technology -- also called single frequency networks -- which is widely considered important to realize ATSC 3.0’s potential (see 2101190078).
The Patent and Trademark Office approved CTA’s second deadline extension request on filing a statement of use (SOU) for the association’s NextGenTV logo as a certification mark on ATSC 3.0-compliant TVs, agency records show. CTA has until Oct. 21 to file the SOU and is entitled to three more deadline extension requests of six months each. It must file by April 21, 2023, the third anniversary of the logo’s notice of allowance, or risk abandonment of the application. PTO requires the SOU as a final condition for issuing a registration certificate to prevent applicants from intentionally hoarding trademarks with no plan to deploy them commercially. CTA told us six months ago that it anticipated filing for no additional extensions because NextGenTVs were prevalent on the market and the logo was plainly in commercial use (see 2010270018). “We don’t anticipate further delays in the PTO process," said Brian Markwalter, CTA senior vice president-research and standards, when asked Wednesday about CTA's apparent reversal. The association is glad the NextGenTV logo "is now in the market -- and we expect sales of these products to grow exponentially," he said.
Fraunhofer and Sinclair will partner to bring the Digital Radio Mondiale “framework” to the ATSC 3.0 suite of TV standards, said the companies Tuesday. The collaboration aims to bring DRM listeners “a seamless and full-featured digital radio experience across all broadcast platforms” on fixed home receivers and mobile and automotive reception devices, they said. Fraunhofer owns the trademark to DRM’s xHE-AAC next-generation audio codec and is a licensor in the xHE-AAC patent pool that Dolby-affiliated Via Licensing created in 2016. Dolby AC-4 and MPEG-H are the designated 3.0 audio codecs for TV services in North America and South Korea, respectively. ATSC signed an agreement last month with the Telecommunications Standards Development Society, India on deploying 3.0 broadcast services to mobile devices in India (see 2103290016). Sinclair has made no secret of its ambitions to bring 3.0 reception to mobile devices and is sourcing receiver chips from India's Saankhya Labs (see 1908070024)
Pearl TV Managing Director Anne Schelle “absolutely” expects one more TV brand to join LG, Samsung and Sony on ATSC 3.0-enabled NextGenTV by the end of 2021, with a fifth brand to follow in 2022’s first quarter, she told us, though nondisclosure agreements bar Schelle from discussing specifics. She’s “hopeful” the year-end product will be announced at October’s NAB Show, and the Q1 product at CES 2022 in January, she said. The “scale that we’re starting to see” in 3.0’s rollout is what’s pulling the additional TV brands into NextGenTV, including the “broadcast push on transitioning stations,” said Schelle. “We’ll have over 65% of households covered by the end of this year, and we’re continuing to drive investment.”