The TV Parental Guidelines Monitoring Board hasn’t done anything to make ratings more accurate in the five months since the FCC said the board is “insufficiently accessible and transparent to the public” (see 1905160085), said Parents Television Council President Tim Winter to reporters Tuesday. He promoted PTC research saying violence and profanity in TV shows rated for children has increased over the past decade. After measuring and recording instances of violence and profanity on prime-time network broadcast TV during “sweeps week” in 2017-18, PTC found 28 percent more violence and 43.5 percent more profanity on TV-PG shows in 2017-18 than in 2007-08. “There was over 150% more violence, and 62% more profanity total, on programs rated TV-14,” PTC said. “We are urgently calling on Congress to ensure that the TV content ratings system, and the TV Parental Guidelines Oversight Monitoring Board, is overhauled to improve the accuracy, consistence, transparency and public accountability of the TV ratings,” Winter said. The call to improve the board isn’t intended to control what people watch, said film critic and content ratings supporter Nell Minow to reporters. “We want parents to have the information they need,” said Minow, whose father, then-FCC Chairman Newton Minow, famously called television a “vast wasteland.” The current, industry-controlled board is “fake oversight,” said Penny Nance, CEO of Concerned Women for America. Two of the board’s seats earmarked for non-industry groups are held by what Winter called industry front groups, Entertainment Industries Council and Call for Action. Both groups have boards that include numerous TV industry executives, according to their own websites. “You cannot be the pitcher and the umpire in the same game,” said Minow. Winter wants congressional hearings and symposiums on improving the ratings board to include independent oversight by child behavior experts. “What we have isn’t working,” Winter said. The board and the trade groups that oversee it -- NCTA, NAB and the Motion Picture Association -- didn’t comment.
The FCC Media Bureau is seeking comment on a joint petition from NAB and America’s Public Television Stations proposing relaxing interference rules to make it easier for broadcasters transitioning to ATSC 3.0 to use distributed transmission systems (see 1910040038), said a public notice in Friday’s Daily Digest. Comments are due in docket 16-142 on Nov. 12, replies Nov. 27. The LPTV Spectrum Rights Coalition expressed concern about the proposed changes (see 1910070071).
The FCC Media Bureau granted Leading Media’s request for a foreign ownership declaratory ruling allowing it to buy five Texas radio stations as a subsidiary of Mexico-based company Multimedios, said an order and declaratory ruling in Friday’s Daily Digest. Leading’s petition was unopposed, and DOJ, the Department of Homeland Security and DOD signed off on the request in August (see 1908280054). The declaratory ruling allows Mexican citizens Francisco Antonio Gonzalez Sanchez and Nora Patricia Albuerne de Gonzalez to hold 100 percent of the equity and voting interests in Multimedios.
Requests for modifications that would affect Auction 106 -- the planned April auction of FM construction permits (see 1910100051) -- are frozen, the FCC Media Bureau said in a public notice Friday. “This temporary freeze is designed to promote a more certain and speedy auction process,” the PN said. The freeze includes applications that would modify “any of the vacant non-reserved band FM allotments scheduled for Auction 106,” plus petitions for changes that would affect those allotments or wouldn’t protect those allotments, the PN said. Any filing submitted after Friday’s PN that fits those parameters will be dismissed, the PN said. “This freeze will automatically terminate the day after the filing deadline for post-Auction 106 long form applications.”
The FCC will auction 130 FM construction permits starting April 28, said a Media Bureau and Office of Economics and Analytics public notice. Auction 106 will include 34 permits left over from previous auctions, the PN said. The agency's seeking input on the bidding procedures for the auction, and comments are due Nov. 6, replies Nov. 20.
The FCC Media Bureau didn't renew the license of WRIR-LP Richmond, Virginia, in an order and notice of apparent liability posted Tuesday (see 1910080048).
Status reports filed in the hearing proceeding on licenses owned by Entertainment Media Trust should update the judge (see 1910020037) and not contain arguments, said FCC Administrative Law Judge Jane Halprin in an order posted Thursday in docket 19-156. She granted a motion to strike a status report filed by Donald Samson, bankruptcy trustee for EMT trustee Dennis Watkins. The motion to strike -- filed by another party in the case, Mark Kern -- argued the trustee isn’t a party there, and the report was “instead a substantive legal filing in support of EMT’s pending motion for stay,” the order said. In striking the trustee filing, Halprin rendered moot an Enforcement Bureau response. Halprin last week denied EMT’s motion to stay the ALJ proceeding to allow the stations to be sold as part of a bankruptcy process, but she also put the case on hold pending Media Bureau resolution of an application that would involuntarily transfer EMT’s stations to the trustee. Halprin said status reports should resume in November, by which time the trustee’s place in the proceeding will be clearer.
The FCC Media Bureau granted renewal but proposed a $1,500 forfeiture for a Richmond radio station that failed to file a license renewal application on time, said an order and notice of apparent liability posted Tuesday. Virginia Center for Public Press’ deadline to file for renewal of the license of WRIR-LP was June 3, but it wasn’t filed until July 15, the NAL said. “The Licensee provides no explanation for the untimely filing of the Application.” The bureau adjusted the proposed fine down from $3,000 because the station has a clean record and eventually filed a renewal application.
The deadline for low-power TV stations and TV translators to file for repacking reimbursement was extended to Nov. 14, said an FCC Media Bureau public notice on docket 16-306 Tuesday. The LPTV Spectrum Rights Coalition and National Translator Association requested the extension, the PN said. The original deadline was Oct. 15, and that remains for FM stations seeking repacking reimbursement, the PN said. “The initial 60-day deadline was proving to be too quick a process, with many consulting engineers, legal counsel, and equipment vendors not having enough time to assist all that needed help,“ emailed LPTV Spectrum Rights Coalition Director Mike Gravino. More time should lead to broader participation, he said.
A petition on relaxing interference rules to make it easier for ATSC 3.0 broadcasters to use single frequency networks (see 1910040038) has LPTV Spectrum Rights Coalition President Mike Gravino “very concerned." In an emailed newsletter Monday, Gravino called for a “crowd sourced impact analysis” to gauge the effect of the petition on low-power TV, Class A and TV translator stations. He's seeking information on whether LPTV will be able to benefit from the proposal, whether any efforts have been made to study the effects on LPTV, and what will happen to LPTV stations “displaced” by the signals from distributed transmission systems outside their full-power station’s contour. “During the next two years LPTV will still be moving around, and many with government funding to move,” Gravino emailed us. “While I am very concerned about this Petition, I am open to seeing to how it could benefit us, also.”