The BBC released an audio app that “brings together our live and on-demand radio, music and podcasts into a single personalised app for the first time,” blogged the broadcaster Tuesday. “It’s all part of the BBC reinventing itself for a new generation,” it said. “We’ll be adding new functionality and looking for people to feed back.”
Radio broadcasters want a one-month extension on comment deadlines in the FCC’s FM translator interference proceeding (see 1805100057) to allow gathering of more data, said a motion posted Tuesday in docket 18-119 by Beasley Media, the Educational Media Foundation, iHeartCommunications, Radio One, Gradick Communications, Neuhoff and Withers. Comments are due July 6, replies Aug. 6. The broadcasters want the comment deadline moved to Aug. 6, replies due Sept. 5. “The undersigned are working on gathering market-derived data across the radio industry as to the locations of listening to full service FM radio stations based on Nielsen audience data,” they said. “The requested extended Comment period will allow time for this extensive data undertaking, which requires the organization and presentation of the factual record in accessible formats.” The delay won’t hurt the public interest, the companies said. IHeart also requested delay (see 1806250039).
The Incentive Auction Task Force and Media Bureau updated price ranges in the FCC catalog of eligible repacking reimbursement expenses to reflect the annual update of the producer price index by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, said a public notice released Tuesday in docket 16-306. The PPI increased 2.4 percent compared with the previous figure. The new numbers were integrated into the licensing and management system, the PN said. “This update does not require any action on the part of reimbursement-eligible broadcasters and MVPDs.”
The full FCC denied Edward Stolz and Deborah Naiman’s application for review of Media Bureau approval of Entercom buying CBS Radio, said an order Tuesday. The appeal is part of a long effort by Stolz to overturn the deal; the Office of General Counsel has called his filings “repetitious” (see 1805090040). Stolz’s argument on CBS TV stations distorted news is “unadjudicated” and “unsubstantiated,” the order said, and there’s no presumption that an act by one CBS TV station would indicate misconduct at the company or its other stations, the order said. Stolz identifies no "facts that raise questions about CBS’s qualifications to hold the radio station licenses that are the subject of the proposed transfer of control,” the order said.
E.W. Scripps agreed to sell five radio stations in Tulsa to Griffin Communications for $12.5 million, the seller said Monday. It's the first step in an effort to sell all 34 radio stations (see 1801260032), it said. Scripps President Adam Symson expects more sales announcements “soon.” Griffin owns four TV stations in Oklahoma City, the release said, and the deal is expected to close in Q4.
IHeart wants to know what sort of FM listening data would be useful in the FCC proceeding on FM translator interference (see 1805100057), said a filing posted Monday in docket 18-119 on a meeting last week with Media Bureau Audio Division Chief Albert Shuldiner. The radio broadcaster said it's working "on a presentation of the locations of listening to FM radio stations based on Nielsen audience data." IHeart raised the possibility of extending the July 6 comments deadline “given the effort required to obtain and present such data.”
Liberty Media withdrew its proposal to buy a portion of iHeartMedia “after reviewing results which were below expectations and negatively impacted our initial estimates of value,” Liberty said Friday. The offer was reportedly $1.8 billion for 40 percent of the company. “We remain open to future discussions as iHeart proceeds with its reorganization,” the release said. Liberty didn't comment further and iHeart didn’t comment.
The FCC shouldn’t move to relax equal employment opportunity reporting rules until it begins collecting employment data, the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights wrote Chairman Ajit Pai, posted in docket 17-105 Thursday. The requirement for mid-term EEO reports shouldn’t be loosened (see 1805010075) until the FCC “remedies its near 20-year failure to collect industry-wide employment statistics as required by law,” the group said. The agency suspended collection in 2001, and never resumed despite concluding such data collection was legal in 2004, the conference said. “Collecting employment data is central to the FCC’s obligation to ensure nondiscriminatory employment practices and to track the success of its policies." The media modernization effort is “a rush to deregulate without adequately considering how existing regulations serve the public interest and equity,” the letter said. The agency should implement “an automated, searchable, and uniform electronic database” and “adopt a transparent mechanism to trigger mid-term license review” to replace EEO reports the agency proposes to eliminate, it said.
C4 FM booster SSR Communications wants the FCC to grant waivers to allow some stations to upgrade while the notice of inquiry on the proposed new C4 class is pending (see 1806050061), said a filing in docket 18-84 on meetings last week between CEO Matthew Wesolowski, aides to all commissioners, and Media Bureau Audio Division Chief Albert Shuldiner. Broadcasters “have been waiting for such relief” since Wesolowski initially petitioned about the new class in 2013, the broadcaster said. Going through an NOI and then NPRM could mean a year or more before an order could come forth, the company said. “A waiver-based strategy could allow Zone II Class A FM stations fuller coverage in a matter of weeks.” Stations that receive such waivers could provide evidence that the new class wouldn’t cause negative impacts to other broadcasters, the filing said. It recounted Shuldiner saying such waiver requests likely would be held until the comment record ended, and eighth-floor aides encouraged the filing of comments supporting the waiver proposal.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit rejected PMCM’s appeal of FCC rulings preventing its WJLP Middletown Township, New Jersey, from being broadcast on virtual channel 3, said a judgment issued Wednesday and posted the next day by the agency (see 1805170072). “The Court has afforded the issues full consideration and has determined that they do not warrant a published opinion,” the judgment said. “PMCM argues that the FCC misinterpreted the relevant PSIP [program and system information protocol] Standard and arbitrarily assigned virtual channel 33 to WJLP,” the ruling said. “We reject both of these arguments.” FCC interpretation of the rules “controls,” the D.C. Circuit said in an unsigned, four-page ruling: Harms caused by operating on channel 33 are “easily fixable,” it said.