Comments are due May 22, replies June 3 on Nexstar and WUTV Licensee's proposal to swap channel 32 for 36 for the first company's WNLO Buffalo and 36 for 32 for WUTV Buffalo (see 1904230074), said an FCC Federal Register notice Tuesday on docket 19-118. The change "serves the public interest because it would allow for a more efficient allocation of UHF television channels and resolve significant over-the-air reception problems in WIVB's prior service area," the notice said.
Univision petitioned the FCC to increase its previous declaratory ruling on the percentage of the company that’s allowed to be foreign-owned to allow for internal restructuring, said a Media Bureau public notice Tuesday. In a 2017 declaratory ruling, the agency authorized Univision to be up to 49 percent foreign-owned. Under the terms of the planned restructuring, Mexico-based Univision subsidiary Notivision would acquire 21 percent of U.S.-based subsidiary Univision Radio, the PN said. Under the currently allowed level of foreign ownership, that transaction would subsequently limit available foreign investment in Univision to 28 percent. To create more room, Univision wants the FCC to increase its allowed amount of foreign ownership to 70 percent. “Univision does not seek specific approval for any previously unapproved foreign investors,” the PN said. It started docket 19-132 for the proceeding, saying ex parte procedures cover such a permit-but-disclose proceeding.
Byron Allen-owned content company Entertainment Studios will become a broadcaster through buying Bayou City Broadcasting’s four TV stations in Evansville, Indiana, and Lafayette, Louisiana, said a news release Tuesday. Allen recently partnered with Sinclair in a $10.6 billion deal for regional sports networks (see 1905030059) and is buying the stations through subsidiary Allen Media Broadcasting. Though the deal includes all of Bayou City’s stations, Bayou City CEO Dujuan McCoy will remain in broadcasting through the pending Nexstar/Tribune deal, which if approved will include the sale of divestitures in Indiana to his company Circle City Broadcasting (see 1904080046). Since Allen is a “new entrant” to broadcasting and the deal won’t involve any overlaps, it’s not likely to be held up by regulators, McCoy said in an interview. Since McCoy is staying in the industry, the deal also increases the amount of TV stations with a minority owner, he pointed out. Bayou City's stations are Evansville's WEVV-TV and WEEV and KLAF-LD and KADN-TV in Lafayette, the release said.
HC2 closed its buy of WJFB Lebanon, Tennessee, said broker Patrick Communications Monday. HC2, known for buying up low-power TV stations, bought the full-power station from Radiant Life Ministries for $5.75 million.
Tegna's buying multicast networks Justice and Quest from Cooper Media for $77 million, Tegna said Monday. Tegna already owned portions of the networks but will now acquire the remaining 85 percent, it said. The networks are valued at $91 million. The 24/7 networks reach 87 million U.S. homes and are advertising-supported, the release said. The purchase is intended to capitalize in growth in over-the-air TV audiences, said Tegna CEO Dave Lougee. “Consumer viewing habits are shifting toward over-the-air consumption supplemented by inexpensive over-the-top services.” The deal is expected to close in Q2.
U.S. station deal volume reached $5.1 billion in Q1, said S&P Global Market Intelligence: $236.8 million in radio and $4.86 billion in TV. “This is the largest quarterly deal volume since second quarter 2007." The largest TV deals included Nexstar’s planned $1.32 billion divestitures to E.W. Scripps and Tegna and equity fund Apollo Global Management buying stations from Cox and Northwest Broadcasting at $3.1 billion and $384 million respectively. Cumulus Media's $103 million sale of six radio stations to Educational Media Foundation accounted for much of the radio volume.
The FCC's draft order on FM translator interference could make it “extremely challenging” for large market stations to collect the required number of listener complaints to lodge a valid interference complaint, NAB said in meetings last week with aides to all five FCC commissioners and Media Bureau staff, per a filing posted Friday in docket 18-119. “Very few listeners are motivated to register a complaint about radio interference,” NAB said. Beasley, iHeartMedia and other broadcasters registered similar concerns last week (see 1905010162). The agency should return to the tentative conclusion proposed in the preceding NPRM that a minimum of six complaints would be sufficient, NAB said: If the FCC keeps the population-based complaint minimum, the number should be capped at 25 complaints. Radio executives Bayard Walters of the Cromwell Group and Ed Henson of Henson Media supported the population-based minimums in their own meetings with eighth-floor aides and Media Bureau staff last week, said a filing. “It made sense for the number of required complaints to be significantly different for Campbellsville, Kentucky, and New York City.” They also backed a 48 dBu contour instead of the proposed 45 dBu one, and eliminating the draft order's waiver for interference complaints outside the contour.
Broadcast intervenors repeated their challenges against the standing of the petitioners in the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals case on the 2014 quadrennial review (see 1904300201), while the Multicultural Media Telecom and Internet Council and the National Association of Black Owned Broadcasters jointly chided the FCC for unreasonable delay, in final (in Pacer) and reply (in Pacer) briefs posted through Friday. “Despite this Court’s admonitions and prodding, the Commission has repeatedly avoided promulgating a concrete plan that promotes minority and female broadcast ownership,” MMTC and NABOB said. The petitioners, which also include Prometheus Radio Project and Media Mobilizing Project, “failed to identify any member of their organizations that has standing, much less describe how any member has suffered a concrete and particularized injury,” said (in Pacer) industry intervenors, including NAB, Sinclair and Connoisseur Media. MMTC and NABOB said the FCC unreasonably delayed taking action on a proposal to apply cable procurement rules to broadcasting, which is part of the 2018 QR. The diversity groups also said the agency violated the Administrative Procedure Act with its incubator program by allowing broadcasters to receive rule waivers in “comparable markets.” No party “commented on or advocated a switch to the comparable market definition during the public comment period,” MMTC and NABOB said. The argument that “established broadcasters have an incentive to game the system is entirely speculative” and based on a misunderstanding, the broadcast intervenors said. “Race- and gender- based ownership considerations cannot overwhelm Congress’s specific statutory directive to consider competition.”
Sinclair will buy 21 regional sports networks and Fox College Sports from Disney, which acquired them when it bought most of the assets of 21st Century Fox (see 1901140039), said the companies Friday. The deal has a “total enterprise value” to the RSNs worth $10.6 billion, including the $9.6 billion purchase price, they said. The deal requires DOJ approval, they said. The RSNs changing hands excludes the YES Network, but is “the largest collection of RSNs in the marketplace today, with an extensive footprint that includes exclusive local rights to 42 professional teams” in baseball, basketball and hockey, they said. The RSNs collectively had $3.8 billion revenue and 74 million subscribers in 2018. Sinclair will buy them through a new Diamond Sports Group subsidiary, they said. “While consumer viewing habits have shifted, the tradition of watching live sports and news remains ingrained in our culture,” said Sinclair CEO Chris Ripley. “We are ideally positioned to transfer our skills to deliver and expand our focus on greater premium sports programming.” Antitrust regulators should reject the proposed deal, said America's Communication Association CEO Matt Polka. “Big 4 broadcast network programming and RSN programming are both critical for ACA Connects members,” Polka said. “By jointly negotiating these assets when they serve the same market, Sinclair can raise prices to cable operators for both offerings.”
A look into the FCC’s ATSC 3.0 commercial license application process will be a featured session during ATSC’s 2019 Next Gen TV Broadcast Conference May 29-30, said a preliminary agenda. “The hope is that the FCC will be ready to share more details" about the license application by the end of May, "but regardless we will preview the process,” emailed spokesperson Dave Arland Thursday. Lack of an FCC license application form to commercially deploy 3.0 services is a serious impediment for broadcasters, last month’s NAB Show was told (see 1904100043). The form may come before June, we were told there (see 1904080066). Other sessions planned for the ATSC conference include a “case study” from the Pearl TV-led model-market project in Phoenix on how stations can work with MVPDs in launching 3.0 services. Automotive uses for 3.0, which retiring ATSC President Mark Richer said in Las Vegas was an increasingly hot topic inside his standards organization, will be another conference session, as will a look into “branding plans” for 3.0. “Your Guide to an ATSC 3.0 Station Transition” is the theme of Day 1, “Ramping Up for the 2020 Launch” for Day 2.