The FCC has the authority to designate Fox-owned WTXF-TV Philadelphia for hearing over the false reporting on the 2020 election by its parent company, said the Media and Democracy Project Tuesday in a filing in support of its petition to deny the station’s license renewal. “Designating a hearing on this basis would not be regulation of cable content any more than revoking a convicted felon’s broadcast license would be an intrusion into law enforcement and the judicial system,” said MAD.
Interest is growing in the November window for low-power FM applications, but finding frequencies for would-be LPFMs is going to be difficult, said Prometheus Radio Project Engineering Director Paul Bame and REC Networks founder Michelle Bradley in a Society of Broadcast Engineers webinar Monday. Most inquiries received by Prometheus are coming from groups in highly populated urban areas that are unlikely to have room for new LPFM stations, Bame said: “The cities are tight; most of them are full.”
The FCC hasn’t made an effort to meet the four-year due date for its 2018 quadrennial review, and its arguments that Congress didn’t specify a deadline (see 2308080062) are “a recipe for eternal stasis” and would “justify perpetual delay,” said NAB in a response filing in its mandamus proceeding at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit (docket 23-1120) (see 2304250029). “It is unreasonable for the Commission to have sat on its hands for years.”
The FCC hasn’t made an effort to meet the four-year due date for its 2018 quadrennial review, and its arguments that Congress didn’t specify a deadline (see 2308080062) are “a recipe for eternal stasis” and would “justify perpetual delay,” said NAB in a response filing in its mandamus proceeding at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit (docket 23-1120) (see 2304250029). “It is unreasonable for the Commission to have sat on its hands for years.”
The FCC unanimously approved an FY 2023 regulatory fee order last week that closely resembles the NPRM issued in May.
Softness in the media advertising market appears to be affecting TV broadcasters and tech companies less than other media entities, according to quarterly earnings calls and analysts.
The Regulatory Commission of Alaska unanimously voted at a hybrid meeting Wednesday to make permanent an emergency extension of the state’s universal service program. The Alaska USF sunset date is now June 30, 2026. The emergency regulations otherwise would have ended Oct. 28.
TV broadcasters are seeing increases in commercial advertising, but they have concerns about being compensated for their programming and don’t see big M&A opportunities on the horizon, said Tegna, Gray Television and Sinclair Broadcast executives in those companies’ Q2 earnings calls last week. “Increased competition from technology companies, streaming content providers, and the [broadcasting] networks as well as continued regulatory constraints means that we must transform to remain relevant and to grow impressions and revenue,” said Sinclair CEO Chris Ripley.
The FCC unanimously approved an order and NPRM on digital FM, said an agency news release Tuesday (see 2301130053). The item was on the agenda for commissioners' open meeting Thursday but was instead voted Monday, and a deletion notice was issued. Stemming from petitions filed by NAB and Xperi, the item proposes relaxing restrictions on digital FM power levels to make it easier for more stations to improve their digital FM coverage. The FCC said the proposals in the NPRM would “offer more efficient FM digital operation, increase digital signal coverage and provide a more robust digital signal for reception inside buildings,” though some raised concerns about increased interference. “This would AM-ize the FM band,” said broadcaster Robert McAllan, CEO of Press Communications, referring to the high levels of background interference from multiple sources in the AM band.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit unanimously upheld Friday the Copyright Royalty Board’s ruling on rates for webcast music for 2021-2025, rejecting appeals from NAB, the National Religious Broadcasters Noncommercial Music License Committee and SoundExchange.