Anyone else find it interesting that all the political debates thus far have been exclusively on Cable?

So far, all of the Republican debates have been aired live, but only on cable networks. Fox News, CNN, Fox News, now MSNBC. I find it curious that in the department of politics, a topic that will eventually have an effect on every American living in the country (and probably a few living outside of the country, to say nothing of legal/illegal aliens in the country and anyone else who has any interest in the United States) isn't being broadcast in a medium that is accessible to all Americans for free?

Yes, it's early in the political season, and it makes some sense that only political junkies are interested in this, thus I doubt it would pull the ratings of The X Factor, or Parks and Rec, but we live in 2011. There is no reason that such a thing couldn't be made available on a digital sub-channel (the local NBC affiliate, KARE, runs 24/7 weather on their sub-channel, though I do know that some NBC affiliates carry Universal Sports, so that could potentially be a problem).

The issue only gets worse if you aren't near a TV. To the best of my knowledge, there will be no terrestrial radio broadcast of the debate either, meaning that the only way to listen if you're not near a TV with cable is a satellite radio.

If you own neither of those, there's the option to live-stream the video via Politico, but that still requires you to have a computer (or a Flash-enabled smartphone), and an Internet connection.

Filed under  //   Cable TV   MSNBC   Politics   TV   Television  

Brief thoughts on the news of the FCC approval of the NBCU/Comcast Merger (not the merger, just the news)

I've found four interesting things about the news of the FCC's approval of the NBC Universal/Comcast merger (not the content of the news, but the news itself):

Popular Coverage:
No one linked to the FCC statements as released online! Not the Associated Press, not ReadWriteWeb, not Ars Technica. Not a very big point, but you'd think that since this information is out there, even the more web-savvy services (like RWW or AT) would at least link out. But this might be pertaining to my next point.

FCC's releases are in proprietary formats.
You can only download the FCC's statements as PDFs (proprietary to Adobe) and as Word DOCs (proprietary to Microsoft). They are not available in RTF, ePub, ODT, TXT, or even HTML. I find it interesting that a governmental comission whose purpose is to ensure that, among other tasks, the airwaves are used in the public's interest chooses to use proprietary formats to distribute their information. Of course, both of these formats are widely understood and there are several applications (even open sourced ones) that can read these formats, but you'd think they would at least use HTML as a more open format that doesn't even require one to have additional software: the ultimate in accessibility.

FCC's releases are available with a permalink, but deeply hidden
The FCC has a "one page" that contains links to all the news releases and statements, but it's hidden in the Office of General Council, and I only discovered it by noticing a small box on the Media Bureau's page (it's not even in the headlines!).You can see them all on several parts of the FCC's page, but there is never any link to the collection of links on the OGC's page.

Fcc_media_bureau_20110118

Click here to download:
FCC,_Media_Bureau_(20110118).pdf (257 KB)
(download)

It's also worth noting that most of the FCC's other pages, like Reboot and the Broadband Plan, are far more modern in terms of design and operation than the FCC's own page. The age of the FCC's website is most clearly seen in the Kids Zone.

The FCC Twitter account hasn't announced anything
The FCC has an official, and verified, Twitter account, but they have not linked to what is probably the most anticipated FCC ruling since the 700 MHz spectrum auction and the National Broadband Plan. This may also be a problem due to the problem noted above: there's no one place to link. In case you're reading this way off in the future (or you can't access it), attached are screenshots (in PNG and PDF) of the Twitter account from about an hour after the announcements were made.

(download)

Notice that most of the posts on their account have little to do with actual policy, so it's likely that there never was any plans to link out to the statements and news release, because it is seen as outside the intended scope of the Twitter account.

 

I'll be doing an actual, fully fledged blog post once I've had a chance to read the actual statements from all the comissioners and make some notes. I've had to convert the documents from DOC to RTF in order to have a good reading experience on my eReader (I could use PDFs on it, but then there are odd line breaks everywhere, which makes it harder to read).

Filed under  //   Comcast   FCC   Merger   NBC   NBC Universal   NBCU   News   Policy   TV   Television  

ivi TV pre-emtively sues big media regarding C&Ds, I predict a loss.

Today it was reported that ivi TV is sueing “Major Media,” claiming that they're not violating copyright: ivi TV sues Big Media, saying "secondary transmission of an over-the-air primary transmission is not an infringement of copyrights in the works contained in the primary transmission." I'm sure Major League Baseball disagrees with this.

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Filed under  //   IPTV   Internet   Law   MLB   TV   ivi   media  

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I'm a video Producer/Director/Editor, with my most recent project having been Bucket Flush (watch the trailer here!). I'm familiar with the tools of the Old/New/Social Media trades, and you can find a portfolio of my work on my website.

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