Create a waiver process for broadcasters to use ATSC 3.0 distributed transmission systems, rather than loosening rules to allow them, said Microsoft in calls with aides to FCC Commissioners Mike O’Rielly and Geoffrey Starks last week, per a filing in docket 20-74. A draft order on proposed DTS changes has been circulated to eighth-floor offices (see 2010260051). “Given the technical complexity of the issue, it is difficult in a conversation, to discern the full impact of the rule changes,” Microsoft said. Extending a station’s DTS signal beyond its protected contour “would adversely and unnecessarily impact the availability of television white spaces spectrum,” the company said. “Instead couple the current standard with a waiver process to permit coverage of communities located just beyond the protected contour.”
NAB and Public Knowledge back removing a conclusion from the draft order on broadcast internet that the FCC lacks authority to require broadcaster ancillary fees subsidize consumers for buying ATSC 3.0 equipment. “NAB indicated that it does not object to PK’s request that the Commission remove any conclusion regarding PK’s fees proposal,” said NAB and PK in a call last week with an aide to Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel, per a joint filing posted in docket 20-145 Monday. NAB and PK are usually opponents in FCC proceedings. “PK stressed that the Commission’s conclusion was at best premature and at this time it is unnecessary for the Commission to rule on its authority,” the filing said. PK said the same to an aide to Chairman Ajit Pai, said another filing. The draft order should be changed “to simply state that because the NPRM did not consider the issue of FCC authority to create a coupon fund to alleviate consumer costs during an ATSC 3.0 transition, it is premature for the Commission to consider it at this time,” said the group. “Excluding a discussion about the FCC’s authority to create such a fund would alleviate PK's primary objection.”
Pearl TV and its Phoenix Model Market partners scheduled a Jan. 7 livestreamed briefing to provide an update on NextGenTV plans for 2021. Next year “will bring more markets, more TV models, and more services,” said a media alert Friday. The event is four days before CES 2021 opens as an all-virtual show, where additional ATSC 3.0-enabled TV models are expected to be introduced.
Commissioner Mike O’Rielly’s departure from the FCC “looks to be on track for some point next week,” he said Friday in a goodbye email with an accompanying video message sent out to all FCC staff. In the video, O’Rielly said his “FCC end date is soon approaching in the days or weeks ahead.” His office said O’Rielly intends to serve the rest of his term, which could include Thursday’s commissioners’ meeting, depending on the confirmation status of his projected replacement, Nathan Simington. In the video, O’Rielly hinted at a future endeavor involving communications policy or lobbying the agency, and profusely thanked FCC staff. “Commissioners are temporary employees, merely visitors occupying a seat at the institution, until the next person arrives,” he said.
Don't close off options on how to calculate broadcaster ATSC 3.0 datacasting ancillary service fees until such services start being used “and the arrangements between broadcasters and other parties become clearer,” NCTA this week told aides to all FCC commissioners except Chairman Ajit Pai, said an ex parte filing posted in docket 20-145 Thursday. The FCC should "decline at this time to exclude from gross revenue the value of in-kind facility improvements and should refrain from determining how the fee should be calculated in instances where a broadcaster leases spectrum to a third party,” NCTA said. It's “premature” to make any adjustments to the basis for calculating the fee, it said. America’s Public Television Stations “strongly” urges the FCC "to adopt its proposed Broadcast Internet Order to promote innovation, experimentation, and greater use of broadcast television spectrum, including spectrum licensed to public television stations,” said APTS CEO Patrick Butler in a news release Thursday: “The critical importance of Broadcast Internet services has never been clearer than during the pandemic.”
Hearst-owned WMOR-TV Lakeland, Florida, is the host station for five broadcasters that went live Tuesday with ATSC 3.0 signals in Tampa-St. Petersburg, the 12th-largest U.S. TV market, said Pearl TV. Consumers should understand that the NextGenTV "experience" from local stations “will be getting better and better, as more functions and features are added down the road,” said Pearl Managing Director Anne Schelle. Most broadcasters are launching 3.0 services in 1080p, and WMOR is also providing the market’s first HDR video signal. The station is transmitting Dolby Vision HDR, plus HDR10, said a Pearl spokesperson.
President-elect Joe Biden announces he's naming Neera Tanden, Center for American Progress, who "would be the first woman of color and first South Asian American to lead the OMB," and Kate Bedingfield, ex-MPA, White House communications director, a job she did for the Biden-Kamala Harris campaign ... Sinclair’s One Media 3.0 hires So Vang from NAB as vice president-emerging technologies ... BTIG adds Chris Dorn as managing director, Healthcare Investment Banking, where he will focus on healthcare IT and digital health companies.
“The profusion of crystal-clear, widescreen digital HDTV sets in almost every American home and office, we just take for granted today,” former FCC Chairman Richard Wiley told a commemorative industry Zoom call Monday. Wiley chaired the FCC Advisory Committee on Advanced Television Service for 12 years. Saturday was the 25th anniversary of ACATS' final report to the commission, recommending adoption of the Grand Alliance HDTV system as “better than any of the four original” DTV proposals and “superior to any known alternative system.” Wiley doubts ATSC 3.0 “would be possible were it not for the work of the Grand Alliance and the advisory committee,” he said. What “really surprised” Wiley about the Grand Alliance proposal “was how much opposition we got from government and business leaders,” he said. “It all seems still very odd to me,” he said: “Yet all the credit” should go to ACATS and Grand Alliance members “who just continued to plod along and do your work, criticism notwithstanding, and stayed the course and made HDTV a reality.”
Comments are due Dec. 24 on NAB’s petition to clarify how multicast streams of TV stations simulcasting in the ATSC 3.0 transition will be treated under FCC licensing rules, said a public notice Tuesday. NAB wants the FCC to clarify that in such arrangements, the licensee originating the programming, not the host station, is responsible for that content. Some stations have concerns about which station is liable for any potential rule violations, the PN said. Replies are due in docket 16-142 Jan. 25.
Political ad spending in 2024 is likely to exceed 2020's record $8.5 billion, and it's conceivable -- if unlikely -- that spending in the Senate runoff in Georgia alone could reach $1 billion, Gray Television President Pat LaPlatney told the Media Institute. LaPlatney said most projections for the runoff are $200 million, but “it’s 2020; anything can happen.” Numbers that seemed “aggressive” before the 2020 race “have all been exceeded,” he said Monday.