NBC Network, O&Os and Affiliates

by Yuan Wang

NBC

NBC Network

NBC Network

The National Broadcasting Company (NBC) is an American commercial broadcasting television network and former radio network headquartered in the GE Building in New York City‘s Rockefeller Center with additional major offices near Los Angeles and in Chicago. NBC is sometimes referred to as the “Peacock Network,” due to its stylized peacock logo, created originally for its color broadcasts.[3]

NBC has 10 owned-and-operated stations and nearly 200 affiliates in the United States and its territories.[1][2]Archival footage from a majority of the NBC owned-and-operated stations is available for perusal and purchase through the NBCUniversal Archives.

New Deals of NBC in 2012

In June, NBC Sports Group had inked a new deal for TV, digital and mobile rights to the Tour de France through 2023[4]. The 10-year contract goes into effect in 2014, extending and expanding NBC’s current deal with the world’s preeminent cycling competition. It also includes coverage of other properties from the Amaury Sports Organization, including the Dakar Rally and the Paris Marathon. 19 of 21 stages of this year’s Tour will air on NBC Sports Network, with coverage averaging more than 13 hours per day, including a nightly three-hour studio show. NBC itself broadcasted stages seven and eight, the first time the Peacock broadcast network had televised the event live.

Aiming to expand its sports brand beyond TV, NBC was returning to its roots in radio.Peacock had created the NBC Sports Radio Network, to launch in September. NBC teamed with content syndicator Dial Global. Rival ESPN has long had a successful national radio franchise, with affiliates all over the country, and NBC saw reaching listeners in their cars — as well as on streaming services on various websites and other digital platforms — as a vital component of conglom growth. Peacock was looking for big returns from the London Olympics.The September radio start would coincide with the beginning of the pro and college football seasons, and NBC was hoping to use pigskin passion to help build a radio fanbase.[5]

In November, NBCUniversal had a new affiliation deal with Suddenlink, the nation’s seventh largest cabler, covering in and out-of-home viewing of NBCU’s cable networks and retransmission for NBC and Telemundo stations. [6]The agreement included expansive rights to carry the 2014 Winter Olympics, on-demand content from NBCUniversal’s cable and broadcast portfolio and accessed to live channels across multiple platforms, called TV Everywhere. Suddenlink’s service is called Suddenlink2GO.

NBC Owned-and-operated Television Stations

NBC Owned Television Stations is the division of NBCUniversal that includes 10 local television stations and their digital channels and websites, as well as a group of out-of-home properties and a production company.  The 10 stations produce and deliver compelling and unique local news, information and entertainment programming to viewers in the communities they serve, which include New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia, San Francisco Bay Area, Dallas-Fort Worth, Washington, D.C., Miami, San Diego and Connecticut, with a goal of connecting to their audiences anytime and anywhere.

NBCUniversal said it’s doubling down on local coverage at its 10 owned-and-operated stations. The conglom’s stations group, NBC Owned Television Stations, will make 130 new hires and produce more local news. Many questioned the probability of NBCU’s continuing commitment to local news in the wake of its merger with Comcast. “Wait a few months” seemed to be the conventional wisdom around the topic. Now, 10 months after the merger’s completion, NBCU is making sure everyone knows whose idea this was. “The new leaders of the company very much believe in the owned television stations division, and they want to see these stations strong again,” said group prexy Valari Staab in a video released online by the company today[7]. NBC O&Os will produce more local news in addition to launching consumer and investigative units in five markets, the company said.

Affiliates

NBC has nearly 200 affiliates in the United States and its territories. This section will focus on what happened between NBC and affiliates in 2012.

After being dumped by the NBC affiliate earlier in June, NBC’s The Playboy Club has found a new home at Salt Lake City’s My Network affiliate, KMYU.[8] The station aired the soapy drama, which stars Eddie Cibrian and Amber Heard in a 1960s-set club where crooners, mob bosses and politicians mingle among Chicago’s elite, in its regular Monday night slot this fall.

In August, GLAAD released a statement about the Salt Lake City affiliate KSL-TV’s decision not to air The New Normal, and GLAAD president Herndon Graddick invited KSL CEO Jeff Simpson to meet with the group.[9] In addition, the show’s star, Ellen Barkin, expressed her concern via Twitter, saying, “Shame on you @kslcom.” Here is GLAAD’s statement: “Same-sex families are a beloved part of American television thanks to shows like Modern Family, Glee and Grey’s Anatomy,” said GLAAD President Herndon Graddick. “While audiences, critics and advertisers have all supported LGBT stories, KSL is demonstrating how deeply out of touch it is with the rest of the country.” “We invite Jeff Simpson to sit down with GLAAD and local LGBT families. We know that if he would, he would see that not only are our families normal, but by citing ‘crude and rude’ content and refusing to affirm LGBT families, KSL and Mr. Simpson are sending a dangerous message to Utah. They should make that right.”

In September 12th, NBC News has sent managers at its affiliated stations an apology for putting them through severe criticism after Today failed to carry the moment of silence the nation observed on Sept. 11, according to a report by the New York Times[10]. However, Steve Capus, president of NBC News, did not apologize for the decision not to show the President and first lady as they called for the moment of silence. Capus also did not issue a public apology and there was no official press release to the media about NBC’s actions.

In September, NBC had ironed out its plans for Election Night coverage at the national and local levels, and had tweaked its model to give affiliates a better opportunity to report on local elections. Partner stations get a one-minute news window coming out of the first commercial pod in each half-hour — typically around 10 minutes into each half-hour — a new development with which most seem pleased. The stations also get six minutes for their reporting and commercials at 0:24 and 0:54 in each hour. The network said it was a prime opportunity for the stations “to associate your anchors and reporters with Brian Williams and the NBC News political coverage team.”[11]

In October, nine NBC affiliates across Ohio was joining up to broadcast a live 60-minute debate between the incumbent, Democratic Senator Sherrod Brown, and challenger, Republican State Treasurer Josh Mandel.[12] The debate takes place Oct. 25 in Cincinnati and will air live at 7 p.m. on Ohio’s NBC affiliates.

 

References

[1] “Company Overview”. NBC Universal. Retrieved March 25, 2008.

[2] “List of United States over-the-air television networks”. Entomology. Retrieved March 25, 2008.

[3] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NBC

[4] http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/486429-NBC_Sports_Group_Extends_Tour_de_France_Deal_Through_2023.php

[5] http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118055320

[6] http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118062479?refCatId=14

[7] http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118045309?refCatId=14

[8] http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118045309

[9] http://www.glaad.org/blog/utah-screening-new-normal-announced-ksl-tv-voices-support-lgbt-families

[10] http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/nbc-news-apologizes-today-wtc-steve-capus-369961

[11] http://www.mediabistro.com/tvspy/london-2012-for-nbc-affiliates-olympics-coverage-means-life-in-the-hollywood-squares-set_b56481

[12] http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/489590-Ohio_NBC_Affiliates_Join_Forces_for_Senate_Debate.php

 

TV Outside of the U.S.

by Yuan Wang

Overview

Since the individual markets outside the U.S. can be difficult to comprehend, the natural assumption is that each country’s system is in some way based upon a U.S. model. Indeed, some systems were originally based upon a U.S. model, but they have since evolved. In some countries, the government or an agency owns and operates the television networks. Some countries permit private networks, but only in partnership with the government.[1]

Therefore, this wiki is geographically segmented in four marketplaces: Canada, Europe, Australia and Asia, and Latin America to explore the recent developments within the international television business in 2012.

Canada

Canada Media Fund

Canada Media Fund

The Canada Media Fund (CMF) champions the creation and promotion of successful, innovative Canadian content and software applications for current and emerging digital platforms through financial support and industry research. Created by Canada’s cable and satellite distributors and the Government of Canada, the CMF’s goal is to connect Canadians to our creative expressions, to each other and to the world.

The CMF provided $358 million to Canadian television and digital media projects in 2011-2012, a six percent increase, from the previous fiscal year. This investment triggered a record-breaking $1.3 billion in activity in Canada’s creative economy.

In addition, the CMF announced many changes in the 2012-2013 guidelines:[2](Changes applicable to all Production Programs)

  • Maximum Contribution for Digital Media Components increased to 75%

Previously, the CMF’s Maximum Contribution for funding a Digital Media Component(s) was 50% of a component’s Eligible Costs. This has now been increased to 75% of Eligible Costs. The dollar amount cap remains unchanged.

  • Rules related to format buys clarified

Foreign format buys with significant Canadian adaptation and creative contribution are eligible for CMF funding. Previously, however, some CMF rules regarding the ownership and control of the project could be interpreted as rendering format buys ineligible. The CMF has now clarified that, while applicants must own all rights (including copyright) and options necessary for the production and its distribution in Canada and abroad, appropriate exceptions for a purchased format will be made on a case-by-case basis.

In respect of Essential Requirement #2, the CMF may not allow, at its sole discretion, a format buy to meet this requirement notwithstanding that it does not receive two CAVCO points for Canadian writer(s) if there are Canadian writers that are significantly involved in the writing such that they obtain writing credits and that Canadians meaningfully control the adaptation of the format.

In respect of Essential Requirement #3, in the case of a format buy, the original owner of the format may not retain approval rights for creative elements and a non-Canadian consultant may be hired to ensure format elements are respected.

Europe

Gamescom

Gamescom

Japan and the United States tend to be though of as the two poles of the video game industry, with Japan seen as the originator and the United States as the current, dominating force. But with Europe’s annual Gamescom event starting, I though it might be a good idea to reflect on how Europe fits into the worldwide video game industry.

Great Britain—Our Neighbors Across the Pond

The games industry predict tax breaks will create more jobs

The games industry predict tax breaks will create more jobs

The United Kingdom is the largest video game market in Europe. Unlike in the United States, video games in the UK have been held up alongside film and television as an important medium worthy of artistic recognition.

The UK is generally regarded as the hub of European game development. Pop over to London and you can find Eidos Interactive, publishiers of the Tomb Raider and Hitman franchises; Rocksteady Studios, creators of Arkham Asylum and Arkham City; and Splash Damage, creators of Enemy Territory: Quake Wars and Brink. Media Molecule, creator of the LittleBigPlanet series and Lionhead Studios, best known for the Fable series are both based in Guildford in Surrey. Rare, the developer of the Viva Pinata, Banjo-Kazooie and Kinect Sports games is located in Twycross, Leicestershire.[3]

In addition, long-awaited tax breaks for the game industry have been announced in the budget.[4] This change has been lobbied for several years and this is a brilliant decision by the government and terrific news for the UK video games industry. The decision will benefit not just the UK games development and digital publishing sector, but also the wider UK economy.

Tax relief for the video games sector should generate and safeguard 4,661 direct and indirect jobs, offer £188m in investment expenditure by studios, increase the games development sector’s contribution to UK GDP by £283m and generate £172m for the Treasury.[5]

However, they still need to go much further than today’s announcement on the creative industries and broadband and take some real action to optimize the full potential of the entire UK tech sector.

France—The Land Of Wine And Assassins

Ubisoft, one of the biggest video game publishers in the world, is based in Rennes, France. They have studios in over two-dozen countries and own some of the biggest franchises in gaming, including Assassin’s Creed, Rayman, and the Rainbow Six, Splinter Cell and Ghost Recon franchises. In the opinion of industry experts Ubisoft “won” E3 2012 with its slate of Wii U launch titles and the announcement of Watch Dogs, which blew audiences away.

The multinational media company Vivendi, which is the majority stakeholder in Activision Blizzard, Inc.; Quantic Dream, the studio behind Heavy Rain and the upcoming Beyond: Two Souls; and Gameloft, one of the largest publishers of mobile games in the world are all based in Paris. Arkane Studios, whose upcoming game Dishonored is at the center of some heavy industry buzz at the moment, is based in Lyon. Major French games industry figures include David Cage from Quantic Dream and Yves Guillemot, CEO of Ubisoft.[6]

Northern and Eastern Europe—Exploring The Gaming Frontier

Scandinavia is home to a bevy of companies you might recognize. EA Digital Illusions Creative Entertainment, also known as DICE, best known for the Battlefield franchise is headquartered in Stockholm, Sweden, Starbreeze Studios, developers of The Darkness and Syndicate, are located in Uppsala, Sweden. Guerilla Games, creators of the Killzone franchise, is based in Amsterdam in the Netherlands and Funcom, the developer of the new MMO The Secret World, is based in Oslo, Norway. Familiar industry names from Scandinavia are Ragnar Tornquist, Creative Director of The Secret World and Patrick Bach, Executive Producer of the Battlefield games.[6]

CCP, developer and publisher of EVE Online and the upcoming DUST 514, is based in Reykjavik, Iceland. Germany is one of the largest European video game markets and the home of Crytek, developer of the CryEngine game technology and the Crysis series, which is headquartered in Frankfurt.

Poland is quickly becoming a force to be reckoned with in European game development. Notable Polish game studios include People Can Fly, developer of Bulletstorm and the upcoming Gears of War: Judgment; Techland, developer of Dead Island; and CD project, developer of The Witcher II: Assassion of Kings. Moving further east the wildly successful Wargaming.net, developer of World of Tanks, was founded in the former Soviet republic of Belarus.

Australia and Asia

Media Access Australia

Media Access Australia

Australia

Free-To-Air TV

Two acts of Parliament, the Broadcasting Services Act 1992(Cth) (BSA) and the Disability Discrimination Act 1992(Cth) (DDA) have driven the growth of captioning on Australian television.[7] When digital television began in 2011, the BSA made it compulsory for networks to caption all programs between 6pm and 10pm, and all news and current affairs programs.

Subsequent to this, a series of agreements between the free-to-air networks, Deaf Australia and the Deafness Forum of Australia, brokered by the Australian Human Rights Commission (AHRC), saw the networks agree to increased caption quotas between 6am and midnight, rising to 85% in 2011.[8] In return for agreeing to these captioning levels, the AHRC granted an exemption to the networks under the DDA with regard to captioning.

This process has now been superseded by further amendments to the BSA which were passed in June 2012. These make it compulsory to caption 90% of programs broadcast between 6am and midnight in 2012, and this will rise to 100% in 2014.[8]

Subscription TV

In June 2012, the Broadcasting Services Act 1992(Cth) (BSA) was amended to include caption quotas for subscription television for the first time.[7]

Prior to this, the introduction of captions and increased levels of captioning on subscription TV have been driven by agreements brokered by the Australian Human Rights Commission (AHRC). In exchange for agreeing to provide minimum levels of captioning, the AHRC had granted subscription TV providers from the provisions of the Disability Discrimination Act 1992(Cth) (DDA). This process has now been superceded by the BSA amendments.[9]

Japan

For the first time, seven major Japanese broadcasters and two Japanese government ministries will come together at MIPCOM to promote new TV format ideas.

The new networking event is designed for the international TV formats community and will be held on the eve of MIPCOM to give formats executives an early start to finding the next hit format for their market.

Japan has for decades inspired some of the world’s most famous formats and Japanese broadcasters, Japan Broadcasting Corporation (NHK), Nippon Television Network Corporation (NTV), TV Asahi Corporation (TV Asahi), Tokyo Broadcasting System Television, Inc. (TBS), TV Tokyo Corporation (TV Tokyo), Fuji Television Network Inc., (Fuji TV) and Asahi Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) together with the Japanese Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications and the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, will be introducing the newest and most spectacular Japanese TV formats to major TV stations and production companies from around the world during the gala dinner.[10]

Japanese broadcasters have been attending MIPCOM individually since the 1980’s, but this is the first time that they will unite into an All-Japan effort. By presenting their formats directly to the executives of leading companies attending MIPCOM, the seven broadcasters hope to see more ideas from Japan converting into big international hits.

China

LeTV

LeTV

On Sept. 9, Jia Yaoting, chairman of LeTV, announced plans to step into the production of smart TV, thereby establishing a complete system, which includes platform, content, terminal, application, and screen. The smart TV, which will be produced by a subsidiary of LeTV, will hit the market in nine months, according to Jia.[11]

The move has elicited widespread suspicion, as critics say LeTV lacks hardware strength as well as the sales channels and marketing experience for smart TV.

In response, Jia Yaoting notes that LeTV is determined to forge a TV ecological system, which covers the licensing of TV channels, setup of LeTV, rollout of the set-top box, and now the production of smart TV.

To demonstrate its determination, LeTV has injected 28.28 million yuan (US$4.46 million) of capital into the subsidiary responsible for smart-TV production. The board of directors of LeTV has resolved to further invest 100 million (US$15.79 million) in the subsidiary within the next 12 months and 500 million – 1.5 billion yuan (US$78.97 million – $236.9 million) in the next one to two years. Meanwhile, the subsidiary will seek partners for the production of smart TV.[11]

Li Yi, vice chairman of China Mobile Internet Industry Alliance, notes that the major blockade for the development of smart TV in China is digital convergence, which will also be the major challenge facing LeTV for its smart-TV plan.

An observer noted that it is still unclear what policy the regulator will adopt concerning the smart-TV program of LeTV. Previously, LeTV was once stopped by the regulator for its set-top box program.

Digital convergence has been progressing rapidly in China since this year. On Sept. 20, Hebei Broadcasting Information Network Group signed a strategic cooperative framework agreement with the Hebei subsidiary of China Mobile Communications Group for pushing digital convergence.

The development of digital convergence has also enabled BesTV, an IPTV (Internet protocol TV) operator, to accelerate its march towards the market. This year, BesTV has completed the upgrading of its various programs, including movie, finance, sports, education, and music. Under IPTV, customers can choose their favorite programs and the operator then determines to roll out the kinds of programs accordingly.

Under the trend of digital convergence, new business opportunities are emerging and more business models are overhauling the structure of the entire industry.

India

The information and broadcasting (I&B) ministry is considering steps to make India a teleport hub enabling the country to become an up-linking and downlinking centre like Hong Kong and Singapore, a ministry official said.[12]

Up-linking and downlinking is the process of sending and receiving signals from a satellite, used for telecasting television programs.

India becoming a teleport hub would be instrumental in attracting accelerated flow of foreign direct investment (FDI). It has state-of –the-art technology and can help move up in the value chain in content generation.

The decision of the government to allow 74 percent FDI in DTH, IPTV, mobile TV et cetera are some of the steps that have been taken in this direction and underscored that those steps would be game changers to make India a digitally happening place.

Latin America

ADRIANA CISNEROS AT MIPCOM: “THE GREATEST CHALLENGE FOR LATIN AMERICA THIS DECADE WILL BE TO CAPITALIZE ON EMERGING OPPORTUNITIES”

ADRIANA CISNEROS AT MIPCOM: “THE GREATEST CHALLENGE FOR LATIN AMERICA THIS DECADE WILL BE TO CAPITALIZE ON EMERGING OPPORTUNITIES”

Latin America’s middle class is growing at the rate of 70 million people per year,[13] this emerging segment of the population is more connected and informed, is increasing its investment in entertainment, and demanding a much more complete experience. In cases such as Colombia, where the middle class nearly doubled in a year, or Peru, where today 56% of its urban population belongs to this segment, demonstrate how the region is being transformed.

Along with the growth of the middle class in the region, new digital media platforms are also revolutionizing the way television content is produced and consumed in Latin America. What’s more, Internet usage in the region is increasing at an impressive rate, 16% in 2011 alone, and it’s currently the third largest mobile market in the world.[14] This opens up vast opportunities for the proliferation and commercialization of television content and its digital extensions.

References

[1]Howard J. Blumenthal, Oliver R. Goodenough. (2006). This Business of Television: Revised and Updated Third Edition. New York: Billboard Books.

[2]http://www.cmf-fmc.ca/news/article/2012/09/cmf-announces-two-changes-regarding-its-experimental-stream/

[3]http://www.redbeemedia.com/news/battle-uk-television-industry-revenue-set-intensify

[4]http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-17464478

[5]http://dcmscommsreview.readandcomment.com/tv/

[6]http://www.g4tv.com/thefeed/blog/post/726851/gamescom-2012-how-europe-fits-into-the-video-game-industry/

[7]http://mediaaccess.org.au/research-policy/australian-access-regulation

[8]http://mediaaccess.org.au/research-policy/australian-access-regulation/television/free-to-air-tv

[9]http://mediaaccess.org.au/research-policy/australian-access-regulation/television/subscription-tv

[10]http://www.noodls.com/view/9118729C9E0B3FEADD3E471328FF64138964571A

[11]http://hdtv.letv.com/

[12]http://www.moneycontrol.com/news/technology/government-to-make-india-teleport-hub_774967.html

[13]http://www.newmediatrendwatch.com/regional-overview/104-latin-america

[14]http://www.ushispanics.com/2012/10/the-challenge-for-latin-america-this-decade-will-be-to-capitalize-on-emerging-opportunities/