Nielsen’s fourth quarter 2013 cross platform report highlights the dangers of self-reported behaviors in viewing content on mobile phones, TVB said in a press release (http://bit.ly/1e6Wh8j). “It’s clear that consumers do not accurately assess the time they spend with media.” Nielsen changed its methodology for measuring and reporting mobile video based on consumers’ actual behavior as monitored by device meters,” TVB said. Previously, Nielsen relied on claimed behaviors in consumer surveys, TVB said. “The differences are striking not only in comparison to TV, which, based on metered data, reached 155 hours and 32 minutes of Monthly Time Spent, but in the degree of overstatement that consumers report versus actual device monitoring.” This disparity “calls into question many recent studies that have proclaimed the demise of traditional media based on self-reported approximations of time spent with digital devices,” it said.
The FCC Media Bureau issued four notices of apparent liability totaling $46,000 against Icicle Broadcasting, for violations of the commission’s public file rule at four Washington state radio stations, according to documents released Wednesday. KOHO-FM Leavenworth (http://bit.ly/1njoqzj), KZAL(FM) Manson, KOZI(AM) Chelan (http://bit.ly/1qciWIY) and KOZI-FM Chelan were missing reports from their public inspection files for various quarters between 2006 and 2012, the NALs said. The violations were “extensive,” meriting upward adjustments on the stations’ proposed fines, the NALs said. The bureau proposed a fine of $10,000 for KOHO and $12,000 each for the other three stations. KOZI(AM), KOZI-FM and KZAL will also have their license renewal applications granted for four years instead of eight, the NALs said.
Chambers Communications sold ABC Oregon affiliates KEZI, Eugene; KDRV, Medford; and KDKF, Klamath Falls; to Heartland Media. The $29 million acquisition expands Heartland’s holdings to four stations, including NBC affiliate WKTV, Utica, N.Y., Heartland said in a press release.
A SESAC motion for summary judgment was denied in the antitrust case brought by broadcasters against the organization formerly called the Society of European Stage Authors and Composers, according to court documents. The performing rights organization represents composers and music publishers. U.S. District Judge Paul Engelmayer in New York ruled that broadcasters had presented enough evidence for a jury to find that antitrust laws had been violated, though he did reject “plaintiffs’ theories” of a “conspiracy” to inflate license fees “so broad as to embrace all SESAC affiliates,” said the court order. Television Music License Committee is funding the case against SESAC brought by Hoak Media, Meredith and Scripps. TMLC represents “the local television industry in negotiations with ASCAP and BMI,” the other U.S. performing rights organizations, said the release. The broadcasters filed the case in 2009. No trial date has been set, TMLC said. “The court cut through SESAC’s legalistic arguments and found that a jury could find that SESAC’s licensing strategy since 2008 has been to illegally inflate blanket license fees paid by television stations,” said TMLC.
Univision will carry Bounce TV as a multicast channel starting next year on its stations in five major markets: New York, Los Angeles, Dallas, Orlando and Phoenix, Univision said in a press release (http://bit.ly/1q7prwK). The agreement builds on the existing distribution deals in San Francisco, Boston, Miami, Denver, Sacramento, Raleigh, N.C., and Tampa, Fla., Univision said. “Bounce TV has now completed multi-year renewals with all their affiliates."
Joint sales agreements and shared services agreements between Nexstar and Mission Broadcasting have created economies of scale and cost savings “which have enabled Mission’s stations to air an additional 170 hours per week of locally produced news,” Nexstar said in an ex parte filing in docket 10-71 (http://bit.ly/1q2qX34). Some Mission stations wouldn’t broadcast news absent the JSA and SSA relationships, it said. The many hours of broadcasting local sports programming wouldn’t be possible with these relationships, it said. The companies asked the FCC to defer any action relative to JSAs “until a decision on the Comcast/Time Warner [Cable] merger has been reached and its impact fully assessed,” they said. The filing recounted a meeting with Mission and Nexstar executives and FCC staff from all the commissioners’ offices and Media Bureau staff. Attributing JSAs will make it harder for LIN’s WJCL Savannah, Ga., to continue working with WGTS Hardeeville, S.C., wrote WJCL General Manager Les Vann to Commissioner Mignon Clyburn. The letter is part of an ex parte filing (http://bit.ly/1fFwEef). “Proposals regarding shared services agreements could go further and could cause even more harm,” wrote Vann. The FCC seems poised to consider an order that would make it harder for TV stations to enter into JSAs (CD Feb 25 p1).
CBS began dynamic ad insertion capabilities for its on-demand programming. The ads will be delivered through Canoe, an advertising technology company, CBS said in a news release Tuesday (http://bit.ly/1fESXXw). The capability “enables CBS to offer advertisers increased audience reach and the flexibility to easily change advertisements at any time within its on-demand programming,” it said. Dynamic ad insertion allows advertisers more opportunities “to reach key demographics as time shifting through VOD, as well as streaming and DVR, continues to grow,” it said. The addition of the tech is expected to further expand the network’s ability to monetize beyond the “live +3 and live +7 day windows,” it said.
Gannett and affiliated company Sander Media completed the sale of KMOV St. Louis to Meredith Corp., Gannett said in a release (http://tinyurl.com/l8jjtmm). The divestiture was required by the FCC and Department of Justice as a condition for the approval of Gannett’s purchase of Belo (CD Dec 17 p6).
The American Cable Association, Charter Communications, DirecTV and Time Warner Cable made false statements about Gannett in their filings against broadcaster sharing arrangements, Gannett said in an ex parte filing Friday (http://tinyurl.com/kbfgyve). The statements concern retransmission consent negotiations for Belo stations in Phoenix and Tucson and “demonstrate that the [multichannel video program distributors] MVPDs’ assertions in pursuit of their policy objectives should not be taken at face value,” said the Gannett filing. The sharing arrangement in Phoenix “does not provide for any Gannett involvement in retransmission consent negotiations,” Gannett said. Though the agreements for the Tucson stations allow Gannett to act as an “agent” in retrans negotiations, they don’t give Gannett “control” over the proceedings, Gannett said. “The MVPDs’ allegations about Gannett’s purported control over third-party stations and their retransmission consent negotiations in the Phoenix and Tucson markets are utterly false,” Gannett said. “The misstatements betray the MVPDs’ lack of attention to (or intentional mischaracterization of) the facts about which they make claims, which the Commission should take into consideration in evaluating the overall credibility of the MVPDs’ contentions,” Gannett said.
If joint sales agreements (JSAs) and shared service agreements (SSAs) are the most likely way to encourage minority ownership of full-power TV, the FCC should handle such deals on a case-by-case basis in a manner to encourage minority ownership, the National Association of Black Owned Broadcasters told FCC Commissioner Mignon Clyburn in a meeting Wednesday, said an ex parte filing Friday (http://bit.ly/1jG5oS8). The reversal of NABOB’s long-held opposition to such arrangements is caused by “an unfortunate fact,” said the filing -- two of the three full-power TV stations in the nation licensed to African American owners are operating under JSAs and SSAs. “There is no reason to think that the number of African-American owned TV stations is going to increase in the near future without some serious rethinking of the commission’s policies,” NABOB said. To promote diversity of ownership, instead of making JSAs attributable across the board as Chairman Tom Wheeler office is reportedly considering, the commission should review such arrangements on a case-by-case basis, NABOB said. Conditions could be placed on JSAs that would enable licensees to eventually take over the station and operate it without sharing services with a larger company. The conditions could include requirements for progress reports that should show increasing responsibility for the station being transferred to the licensee, and require the JSA to be terminated within five years, NABOB said. “This proposal would not have to replace the Commission’s plan to treat JSAs and SSAs as attributable, but would work to obtain a waiver of the attribution rule for the JSA or SSA operator,” NABOB said. Under the NABOB proposal, existing sharing arrangements that aren’t amended to accommodate the turnover of operations would fall under the attribution rules, and future JSAs and SSAs without provisions for the structured turnover could be denied, NABOB said. The commission could include the NABOB proposal in any public comments on proposed changes to the JSA rules, NABOB said.