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- 02-23-2010 11:57 PM #11
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If you dont have the full slate of locals in your market they will be able to import the neighboring locals
University of Minnesota-Duluth Bulldogs mens hockey team
Defending National Champions
current number 3 in the country (but doesnt mean much honestly)
number 3 in the pairwise (this means everything...top 15 teams get in the tourney)
Life is good
- 02-23-2010 11:57 PM # ADS
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- 02-24-2010 12:08 AM #12
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I've already got my LILs on DirecTV. For example, if I could buy The New York Times in my hometown, why not getting New York or Los Angeles TV stations on satellite? Unfortuantely, the law saids no. That ticks me off. I wished that House of Representives and the Senate would find better solutions to resolve this issue. I think that the STELA law is also unfair as well. This is the USA! I believe in freedom of choice. But the NAB has taken away our freedom of choice. It feels like socialism.
My parents are D* subscribers since 2009 with Choice Xtra package w/ Greenville, SC locals. DirecTV H23/600 (my room), DirecTV H21/200 (living room), 2 D* SD recievers (one in my dad's room and my brother's room).
- 02-24-2010 02:33 AM #13
It may feel like socialism, but it is capitalism. Powerful private enterprise is buying, through lobbying and campaign contributions, legal protection for an antiquated business model.
Hey if you had a business and you could leverage the legislature to keep your customers your captives, wouldn't you?
- 02-24-2010 11:55 AM #14
SatelliteGuys Regular
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It's Feudalism. Most of now are just serfs slaving for the lord of the manor.
- 02-24-2010 12:04 PM #15
SatelliteGuys Junkie
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I'll start this diatribe again...
Remove the SHVERA, the SHVIA and the SHVA, all of the legislation, and this is what broadcast TV you get on satellite:
Nothing.
And here is why...I am a newsstand in Omaha. I have an agreement with the New York Times, where they provide me newspapers to sell. I am selling copyrighted material, for which the copyright was paid to the content owner.
Originally Posted by shkarter1985
As the owner of a newstand in Omaha, can I sell videotaped copies the WCBS' programming, such as the WCBS newscast, and sell it without the permission of WCBS?
And in that same vein, as the owner of a satellite company, can I copy WCBS programming and retransmit is on my satellite signal without WCBS' permission?
Those people which believe their "freedom of choice" is limited by the law have no idea what the actual issues are.
- 02-24-2010 01:30 PM #16
In fairness w have a case of conflicting interests. There are the interests of the copyright holders and those of viewers who want more choices. Unfortunately the interest that the courts define as a "right' is the interest of the copyright holder. the law does not recognize any "right' to watch TV from outside your local area.
in this case it is not just WCBS who does not want their signal broadcast but also the local CBS affiliate who has exclusive rights to CBS programming in their area. They don't want you watching "Two and a Half Men from the NY station. they want your eyeballs watching their signal and the local ads that they sell on those CBS programs.
But this whole debate has been structured strangely. A repeal of SHVERA would as Mr. Bimson says mean there would be NO broadcast TV on satellite. So all of the threads and petitions caklling for the repeal of the law would be counterproductive. And I too don't get the allusion to socialism. How is the enforcement of copyright rights related to socialism?
- 02-24-2010 01:36 PM #17
but in parts of some DMA's the "local" ads are useless. Good example is here in Minneapolis.
The Minneapolis DMA stretches from Iowa almost the the Canadian border. Thats a helluva big DMA. Folks in the northern part of the DMA could care less what "Suburban Chevy" in SW suburbs of Minneapolis are carrying because they're not going to drive 200 miles to buy a car
Using CBS as your example, here in Mpls sat viewers get shafted (as do advertisers). We have 3 CBS stations in the DMA
WCCO...the mothership
KCCO in West Central MN
KCCW in Northern MN
all show the same programming but KCCO/KCCW have different local commercials than WCCO does. Technically KCCO/KCCW are satellite stations of WCCO. Folks with cable get either KCCO or KCCW if they are outside of WCCO area but sat folks only get WCCO. My uncle gets KCCO on cable but would get WCCO on satellite. Considering most of that area is rural, the local advertisers are losing money.
Also where our cabin is (Lake Mille Lacs) its 120 miles to Minneapolis but 85 to Duluth. They use to be in the Duluth DMA but about 6 years ago they changed them to the Mpls DMA for some odd reason (considering the county had translator stations from Duluth)
It should be like cable....if they can pick it up OTA then it should be available to the market.University of Minnesota-Duluth Bulldogs mens hockey team
Defending National Champions
current number 3 in the country (but doesnt mean much honestly)
number 3 in the pairwise (this means everything...top 15 teams get in the tourney)
Life is good
- 02-24-2010 03:00 PM #18
- 02-24-2010 09:58 PM #19
- 02-25-2010 11:03 AM #20
Local ads may be useless to you but it is likely that the local station selling them see it differently. BTW I am not saying that this is fair or perfect just describing the status quo.
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