STATION ADVISORY

Looking At ‘Legal’ Marijuana, CBD Advertising

Pai: White Spaces Await TV/Microsoft Consensus

FCC Chairman Ajit Pai suggested this week that the FCC is awaiting consensus among broadcasters and Microsoft before moving ahead with a proposal on freeing up the “white spaces” between and around post-incentive auction repacked TV channels for wireless broadband. That came in an FCC oversight hearing in the House Communications Subcommittee, where he said he hoped to bring the new white spaces regime to reality soon.

FCC Can’t Say if TV Content Ratings Are Accurate

The industry board overseeing the TV content ratings system has not been sufficiently accessible or transparent, but there is not enough evidence to conclude the ratings are inaccurate because the FCC did not have enough time to make that determination and meet its congressional deadline (It had 90 days to meet that deadline).

BRAND CONNECTIONS

Trump Seeks Evidence Of Social Media Censorship

The White House is trying to collect evidence of social media censorship and account takedowns, including tweets and screenshots of takedown notices. That is according to a tool on the White House website noted by Public Knowledge, which is no fan of the effort, saying it raises constitutional issues.

FCC Delays Review Of Vehicle Comm. Spectrum

FCC Chairman Ajit Pai on Wednesday delayed plans to begin in June a comprehensive review of a valuable band of spectrum reserved for vehicles to communicate with one another. The delay complied with a request from U.S. Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao for more time before the commission takes up the 5.9 GHz matter.

Matsui Working On C-Band Compromise Bill

Rep. Doris Matsui (D-Calif.), co-chair of the Congressional Spectrum Caucus, said Wednesday she is working on a bill, the WIN 5G Act, that would offer a compromise approach to the thorny issue of freeing up C-band spectrum for wireless broadband.

STATION ADVISORY

What Do New Drug Ad Price Disclosures Mean?

Last week, the Department of Health and Human Services adopted a new rule mandating, at some point later this year, that prescription drug advertising on TV contain certain price information. Specifically, HHS will require TV ads for prescription drugs covered by Medicare or Medicaid to include the list price for a month’s supply or for the usual course of therapy, if that price is $35 or more. While some advertising groups argue that this requirement is an unconstitutional infringement on free speech, assuming that the rule goes into effect as planned, what effect will the rule have on TV?

Pai Wants Easier Path To Change Rules

FCC Chairman Ajit Pai put in a plug Wednesday for giving the FCC some fast track broadcast deregulatory authority. In a House Communications Subcommittee FCC oversight hearing, Pai said that the disconnect between a moving marketplace and the “stasis” of FCC rules was the fundamental issue the FCC had with its media ownership rules.

FCC Puerto Rico Hurricane Response Slammed

Free Press has issued a damning report on the FCC’s response to communications outages in Puerto Rico after the September 2017 one-two punch of Hurricanes Irma and Maria. “It’s deeply troubling how little interest the FCC has shown in analyzing what went wrong and using this information to shape its policies on communication rights and public safety,” the group said.

Hill Dems Seek Restart Of FCC Diversity Reporting

RTDNA Condemns Raids On San Francisco Freelance Journalist’s Home, Newsroom

Rep. Golden: STELAR Has Outlived Its Usefulness

Broadcasters have more friends in high places, as in on The Hill, for their effort to sunset the satellite distant signal license, though that is itself a high hill to climb. “It is clear that the distant signal license has outlived its usefulness,” said Rep. Jared Golden in a letter to the leadership of the House Energy & Commerce and Judiciary Committees, which together will consider how and whether to renew the STELAR Act.

ATVA Opposes Apollo Station Purchases

The group says the proposed station buys by Terrier Media, controlled by Apollo Global Management, of properties of Northwest Broadcasting and Cox Broadcasting will “impede competition and diversity and raise prices for consumers.” It urges the FCC to study what it calls “public interest harms” if the deals are approved.

Felicity Huffman To Plead Guilty In College Admissions Scam

BOSTON (AP) — Actress Felicity Huffman is scheduled to plead guilty Monday to allegations she paid $15,000 to rig her daughter’s SAT score as part of a nationwide college admissions […]

Attorney Peter Tannenwald Honored By DC’s WAMU-FM

Conan O’Brien Settles Joke-Theft Lawsuit

SAN DIEGO (AP) — Conan O’Brien has made peace with a man who heckled him not from the crowd but the courts. O’Brien and several co-defendants, including his writing staff, […]

NTIA Chief David Redl Resigns

National Telecommunications and Information Administration chief David Redl resigned abruptly from his position on Thursday, officials confirmed. Redl has been at the helm of the NTIA, the body tasked with advising the Trump administration’s telecom policy within the Department of Commerce, since November 2017.

House Slots FCC Oversight Hearing

The House Energy & Commerce Committee Communications Subcommittee has scheduled an FCC oversight hearing for May 15 at 10 a.m. The subcommittee leadership says all five commissioners —the chairman is also a commissioner — have agreed to testify.

PTC Calls For FCC Hearings on Content Ratings

House Appropriations OKs CPB Funding Boost

The full House Appropriations Committee has proposed to increase funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, approving the recommendation of the Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education and Related Agencies, which last month approved a funding boost of $50 million (or about 15%) to $495 million for fiscal year 2022.

DMA 6: WASHINGTON

Nexstar Sues DirecTV Over Unlaunched Station Fee

Nexstar has sued DirecTV in a New York federal court, claiming breach of contract. At issue is an “unlaunched station fee” that it says DirecTV agreed to pay for not being required to immediately launch Nexstar station WHAG (aka WDVM). The Hagerstown, Md.,, station lost its affiliation with NBC on July 1, 2016.

‘Stranger Things’ Lawsuit Dropped Ahead Of Trial

OTA, Cable, Digital: DOJ Wrong On Ad Competition

At the Justice Department last Friday, broadcasters were joined by Facebook and Comcast Cable in arguing that they all compete with each other for local advertising dollars. Winning that argument is the first step in convincing the DOJ to stop blocking duopolies of network affiliates. “There’s a really high overlap between these media types,” said Marcien Jenckes of Comcast. “Advertisers have shifted focus from this type of media or that type media. They think instead about their overall return on their media spend.”

 

BIA To DOJ: Stations Battle Digital For Ad Dollars

Speaking yesterday on day one of the Department of Justice’s two-day workshop on the local advertising market, BIA Managing Director Rick Ducey said digital media are the fastest growing sector of the market. Digital, he said, will get 40% of the local auto spend this year and nearly 50% by 2023. DOJ is holding the workshop as it reconsiders its policy of blocking duopolies comprising network affiliates in light of changes in the ad market.

 

‘Bones’ Stars Vow To Appeal Judge’s Ruling

In a stunning win for Fox, a California judge on Thursday tossed most of the $179 million that Bones stars Emily Deschanel and David Boreanaz and executive producers Barry Josephson and Kathy Reichs were awarded by an arbitrator earlier this year. Judge Richard Rico has stripped all of the $128 million in punitive damages that Fox was contesting off the award granted by former judge Peter Lichtman in late February.

RTDNA, More Than 100 Other Groups Oppose DHS Surveillance Of Journalists, Others

Actor Rick Schroder Arrested On Suspicion Of Domestic Abuse

MALIBU, Calif. (AP) — Actor Rick Schroder has been arrested on suspicion of domestic violence for the second time in a month. Los Angeles County sheriff’s Deputy Juanita Navarro says […]

NCTA Wants FCC To Tighten Big-Four Ban

The cable trade association says the commission should not only retain its ban on the common ownership of two full-power Big Four network affiliates in the same market, but should also close a “loophole” that allows affiliates to double up by carrying Big Four programming on low-power stations and multicast streams. NCTA such deals give broadcasters an unfair advantage during retrans negotiations.

David Burns Joins Washington’s Lerman Senter

Washington communications law firm Lerman Senter says David Burns has joined the firm, bringing more than 30 years of experience representing communications and media companies. His experience and practice cover […]

DMA 13: SEATTLE

Seattle To Require Closed Captioning For TVs In Bars, Restaurants, Stadiums