FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler likely has the votes to get approved the draft order to tighten restrictions on sharing arrangements and limit joint negotiation of retransmission consent agreements, said several communications attorneys and industry observers in interviews Friday. It’s unlikely that Wheeler would have rolled out the planned regulation on Thursday (CD March 6 p7), several days before the required “white copy” date, without believing he had the Democratic commissioners’ votes needed to pass the rules, the industry observers said. Republican commissioners Mike O'Rielly and Ajit Pai have both indicated that they oppose rule changes to make sharing arrangements attributable, and industry officials said they expect no votes.
An order to make TV-station joint sales agreements (JSAs) attributable for calculating ownership caps and to prohibit joint negotiation in retransmission consent agreements will go on circulation Monday, the FCC said. Also on circulation then will be an FNPRM seeking comment on shared services agreements (SSAs) and FCC ownership policies that kicks off the 2014 quadrennial review of media ownership, the commission also said Thursday. The FNPRM proposes retaining the current dual-network rule and the local radio rule, tentatively concludes that cross-ownership rules for newspapers and TV stations should remain, and asks whether to eliminate rules against newspaper/radio and the radio/TV combinations rule “in favor of reliance on the local radio and local television rules,” a senior commission official told reporters Thursday. Broadcasters criticized the draft order, while pay-TV interests seeking changes to retrans rules cheered it.
A Comcast purchase of Time Warner Cable is unlikely to lead to a resurrection of the horizontal ownership cap limiting the portion of national subscribers a cable company can serve, and any FCC move to bring back such a cap is unlikely to affect the $45 billion deal, said analysts, cable attorneys and public interest groups in interviews. The FCC’s former cap was twice struck down by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, but Comcast raised the issue again when it said the terms of the proposed Time Warner Cable deal would include a voluntary divestiture of 3 million subscribers to stay under the old cap’s 30 percent threshold (CD Feb 14 p3). A Comcast spokeswoman told us Friday that the divestiture is intended to “assuage concerns” about the size of the new company.
Public interest attorney and former Media Access Project head Andrew Schwartzman will join Georgetown’s Institute for Public Representation (IPR) to lead the new Public Interest Communications Law Project, said the Benton Foundation and Georgetown Law in a news release Tuesday. The project is a joint creation of the foundation and school, and Schwartzman will be Benton senior counselor, funded through grants from the Alphawood Foundation, Ford Foundation and the Media Democracy Fund, the release said. Schwartzman’s appointment will “expand IPR’s capacity to provide public representation in such critical areas as the transition of traditional wireline telephone service to broadband (known ’the IP transition'), Universal Service Fund reform, particularly of Lifeline and E-Rate, Diversity of Media Ownership and Spectrum Policy,” he said. Schwartzman will be able to continue as senior adviser to other Washington-based public interest groups, along with his private law practice, the release said. “I have long sought to help create a new generation of public interest advocates able to promote the public’s First Amendment rights to have access to a diverse and vigorous debate on important issues,” said Schwartzman. “This position is an ideal way to continue and extend that mission."
FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler’s Office is working on a new draft of the proposed critical information needs (CIN) study criticized in a recent op-ed by Commissioner Ajit Pai (CD Feb 12 p15), an agency official told us Wednesday. Wheeler’s office has been reviewing the draft since late 2013, the official said.
A plan for proposed changes to the rules governing joint service agreements (JSAs) by FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler’s office has been shared only with the offices of his fellow Democratic commissioners, Jessica Rosenworcel and Mignon Clyburn, said several FCC officials. Republican commissioners Mike O'Rielly and Ajit Pai were “kept out of the loop,” one FCC official said. It’s not uncommon for a chairman’s office to work on items without giving a heads-up to commissioners of the opposing party, several former FCC officials said. It can breed animosity, one former eighth-floor official said. Such partisan inclusion in the drafting process was said to have happened under then-Chairman Julius Genachowski, as staff developed conditions to allow Comcast to buy control of NBCUniversal (CD Jan 18/11 p1).
The specter of changes to the FCC’s rules for joint sales agreements among TV station owners could complicate its response to public interest objections to Gannett’s $2.73 billion purchase of Belo, said broadcast attorneys in interviews Friday. Gannett and two companies with which it is involved in such arrangements responded Friday to an application for review filed last month by Free Press and Georgetown University’s Institute for Public Representation. The public interest application for review “invites the Commission to remove any certainty that the Commission’s ownership rules (and presumably other rules, as well) will be enforced in a fair and uniform way,” said Tucker Operating Co. It and Sander Media are the two companies involved in sharing agreements with Gannett under the Belo deal.
Amazon Studios announced Thursday 10 new pilot shows available on Prime Instant Video in the U.S. and LOVEFiLM in the U.K. Amazon will use viewer feedback as one factor in deciding which series move on to full-season production for exclusive viewing by Amazon Prime members, it said. Drama pilots include hourlong shows from creators Chris Carter (The X-Files), Eric Overmyer (The Wire, Treme) and Michael Connelly (Harry Bosch). Half-hour comedy pilots were created by writer and producer Roman Coppola (Moonrise Kingdom), actor and musician Jason Schwartzman (Saving Mr. Banks), writer and director Alex Timbers, filmmaker Paul Weitz, writer Jill Soloway (Six Feet Under) and executive producers Ice Cube and Michael Strahan, Amazon said. Kids shows on the pilot list come from creators Duane Capizzi (Transformers Prime), Josh Selig (Wonder Pets), Angela Santomero (Blue’s Clues), Arland DiGirolamo (Sketchy) and Geoff Barbanell (Kickin’ It), it said. With previous pilots, Amazon customers submitted “thousands” of reviews within the first few days of launch, and more than 80 percent of reviews received 4 and 5 stars, said Roy Price, director-Amazon Studios.
Amazon Studios announced Thursday 10 new pilot shows available on Prime Instant Video in the U.S. and LOVEFiLM in the U.K. Amazon will use viewer feedback as one factor in deciding which series move on to full-season production for exclusive viewing by Amazon Prime members, it said. Drama pilots include hour-long shows from creators Chris Carter (The X-Files), Eric Overmyer (The Wire, Treme) and Michael Connelly (Harry Bosch). Half-hour comedy pilots were created by writer and producer Roman Coppola (Moonrise Kingdom), actor and musician Jason Schwartzman (Saving Mr. Banks), writer and director Alex Timbers, filmmaker Paul Weitz, writer Jill Soloway (Six Feet Under) and executive producers Ice Cube and Michael Strahan, Amazon said. Kids shows on the pilot list come from creators Duane Capizzi (Transformers Prime), Josh Selig (Wonder Pets), Angela Santomero (Blue’s Clues), Arland DiGirolamo (Sketchy) and Geoff Barbanell (Kickin’ It), it said. With previous pilots, Amazon customers submitted “thousands” of reviews within the first few days of launch, and more than 80 percent of reviews received 4 and 5 stars, said Roy Price, director-Amazon Studios.
Amazon Studios announced Thursday 10 new pilot shows available on Prime Instant Video in the U.S. and LOVEFiLM in the U.K. Amazon will use viewer feedback as one factor in deciding which series move on to full-season production for exclusive viewing by Amazon Prime members, it said. Drama pilots include hourlong shows from creators Chris Carter (The X-Files), Eric Overmyer (The Wire, Treme) and Michael Connelly (Harry Bosch). Half-hour comedy pilots were created by writer and producer Roman Coppola (Moonrise Kingdom), actor and musician Jason Schwartzman (Saving Mr. Banks), writer and director Alex Timbers, filmmaker Paul Weitz, writer Jill Soloway (Six Feet Under) and executive producers Ice Cube and Michael Strahan, Amazon said. Kids shows on the pilot list come from creators Duane Capizzi (Transformers Prime), Josh Selig (Wonder Pets), Angela Santomero (Blue’s Clues), Arland DiGirolamo (Sketchy) and Geoff Barbanell (Kickin’ It), it said. With previous pilots, Amazon customers submitted “thousands” of reviews within the first few days of launch, and more than 80 percent of reviews received 4 and 5 stars, said Roy Price, director-Amazon Studios.