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Wikipedia

Duopoly (broadcasting)

A duopoly (or twinstick, referring to "stick" as jargon for a radio tower) is a situation in television and radio broadcasting in which two or more stations in the same city or community share common ownership.

United States

In the United States, the practice of duopolies has been frowned upon when using public airwaves, on the premise that it gives too much influence to one company. However, rules governing radio stations are less restrictive than those for television, allowing as many as eight radio stations under common ownership in the largest U.S. media markets.[1] Ownership of television stations with overlapping coverage areas was normally not allowed in the United States prior to 2002, even those that were not duopolies under the present legal definition, by way of being located in separate albeit adjacent markets; this required broadcasters to apply for cross-ownership waivers in some cases to retain full-power stations based in adjacent markets.[2] Non-commercial educational broadcasters, mainly those that were members of the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), were the only licensees allowed to sign-on or acquire a second television station that did not repeat the parent station's signal in the same market where they already owned a station (some of these acquired stations were originally licensed as commercial outlets).

On August 5, 1999, the Federal Communications Commission voted 4-1 to allow common ownership of two television stations within a single market by one company,[3] so long as eight unique station owners remain in the market once the duopoly is formed, and the four highest-rated stations (based on local monthly viewership reports for the market) remain under separate ownership.[1][4] The FCC only requires the severance of an existing duopoly in which a once lower-rated station falls within the ratings criteria that prohibits such ownership over time if an ownership transaction is under review (such as a piecemeal or group sale of stations, or necessary license transfers during an ownership transaction involving the stations' existing owner); a company is required to sell one of the stations in the duopoly to another licensee if it is no longer compliant with one or both provisions.

Currently, an entity is permitted to own up to two television stations in the same media market if either the service areas of the stations do not overlap, or at least one of the stations is not rated among the top four rated stations in the media market. There is no limit on the number of television stations a single entity may own as long as the stations group collectively reaches no more than 39% of U.S. households.

Once a duopoly is formed, the acquiring company takes over the operations of its new property. The operations of the two stations are usually consolidated into one facility, depending on the size and age of the facility chosen to house their operations. Since the stations involved in the duopoly are not restricted by FCC law from consolidating their operations, duplicative jobs at one of the stations are often terminated as the consolidation takes effect.

News departments are also often consolidated into a singular operation, with anchoring and reporting staffs from the respective stations often being folded into one unit, subject to hiring determinations made by management; anchors and reporters are usually shared between the two stations, though in some cases, certain anchors may be employed to appear only on each station's own newscasts. In some cases (like with WHDH and WLVI in Boston, Massachusetts, when the former's owner Sunbeam Television formed a duopoly with WLVI after purchasing the station from Tribune Broadcasting in 2006), the junior partner's news department is shut down completely, with the senior partner subsequently taking over production of its news content using only their existing staff. In many cases, news programming on a junior partner is structured to avoid direct competition with a senior partner affiliate of either ABC, NBC or CBS (one notable exception involves WTTV and WXIN in Indianapolis, which carry competing morning and evening newscasts as Tribune Broadcasting opted to launch a separate slate of newscasts for WTTV when it became a CBS affiliate in January 2015,[5] rather than shift those seen on sister Fox affiliate WXIN to the station; WXIN and WTTV largely maintain their own anchors, but share a news department and most reporting staff). This situation is uncommon in duopolies involving only Big Three affiliates, as stations affiliated with those networks are more inclined to carry newscasts in overlapping time periods in order to fulfill local programming requirements included in affiliation agreements.

Certain syndicated programs are also shared between the stations, in the form of either same-day repeat airings of programs seen on the one which holds primary rights or separated runs of programs that air on each station, although each station maintains separate syndication inventories as well. The junior partner, unless it is affiliated with a major network, may also be used to carry network (and occasionally, first-run syndicated) programs that the senior partner is unable to broadcast because of long-form breaking news or severe weather coverage or a locally produced special airing in a scheduled program's normal timeslot, or in the case of certain non-prime time network programs, because the senior partner chooses not to carry it on its regular schedule to carry other scheduled programming.

Although the FCC bars common ownership of any of the four major broadcast networks (ABC, NBC, CBS and Fox), it does not prohibit duopolies involving stations affiliated individually with any two of them, unless both are among the four highest-rated in the market at the time of a sale. As such, several Big Four duopolies exist based on certain market conditions that originally allowed them to be formed under the criteria (such as a company having acquired one of the major network stations as a low-rated affiliate of a smaller network prior to an affiliation switch or the ratings of a non-English station placing among the top four over a Big Four network affiliate). While most duopolies are made up of a senior partner that is affiliated with one of the four major networks and an affiliate of a minor network (such as The CW and MyNetworkTV) or an independent station as the junior partner, those in which both stations are major network affiliates typically involve a Fox station (which serves as the junior partner in all but a few instances) and an ABC, CBS or NBC affiliate, with some limited arrangements where two Big Three affiliates are jointly owned or managed.

One of the few markets where two major network duopolies exist in some form is Jacksonville, Florida, where two companies once owned the licenses of the Big Four stations they respectively controlled. In 2000, the Gannett Company, owner of NBC affiliate WTLV, purchased ABC affiliate WJXX,[6] which had struggled in the local ratings since its sign-on in February 1997 (when it took the ABC affiliation from WJKS through a group affiliation deal with the Allbritton Communications Company) due to its status as a relatively new station and issues with signal interference from PBS station WJCT on its Mediacom cable channel slot. The following year, Clear Channel Communications created a legal duopoly involving its existing Fox affiliate WAWS (now WFOX-TV) and WTEV-TV (now WJAX-TV), a UPN affiliate that it had been managing under a local marketing agreement since 1994; WTEV's viewership gradually rose after it became a CBS affiliate in July 2002, putting it in the top four threshold with WAWS, resulting in Newport Television – upon purchasing the Clear Channel television group in 2007 – restructuring the operation as a virtual duopoly by selling WTEV to shell licensee High Plains Broadcasting (WFOX and WJAX are now respectively owned by the Cox Media Group and Bayshore Television, LLC, but remain under common management through JSA/SSA in which WJAX is the junior partner).

The use of digital subchannels has been termed an "instant duopoly," because of the ease by which a single digital station can deliver multiple channels of programming from different networks at the same time. One station can carry four or more standard definition digital channels; multiple high definition feeds typically require too large a bitrate size to be carried on different subchannels of the same station simultaneously without loss of image quality.

Virtual duopolies

Some broadcasting companies have used loopholes to establish duopolies in smaller markets by way of a local marketing agreement, shared services agreement or joint sales agreement; where a station effectively brokers its entire airtime to the owner of another station in the market, which becomes responsible for handling its programming and advertising sales – and in effect, operations. These are termed as "virtual duopolies" as the station's license is held by one company, while its operations are handled by another. Through a 2014 FCC ruling, joint sales agreements in which the senior partner sells a minimum of 15% of the advertising time for its junior partner are counted toward ownership caps.[7]

Some larger broadcasting companies have controversially built business models around the practice, by funding the acquisition of stations by what are effectively shill companies or shell corporations; for example, Sinclair Broadcast Group operates the stations of Cunningham Broadcasting and Deerfield Media under LMAs, JSAs, or SSAs. Nearly all of Cunningham's stock is held by trusts in the name of Sinclair's founders and owners, the Smith family.[8] Similarly, Nexstar Media Group funds the purchase of stations by Mission Broadcasting and Vaughan Media, which forms duopolies with their stations through shared services agreements with a Nexstar station.[9] In some cases, the senior partner may acquire a station's physical assets and intellectual property (such as the station's facilities and programming rights), but spin off the license itself to a shell corporation and enter into an agreement to operate the station, making it the de facto owner, but not the legal owner. Following the purchase, the station's operations and programming are often merged into that of its new parent station.[9][10] Similarly, a company that acquires an existing legal duopoly that is no longer complies with FCC rules on duopoly ownership may spin off the junior partner station's license to a shell, rather than sell one of the stations to a licensee that would also assume operational responsibilities, allowing the restructured duopoly to remain under common operation through a resulting management agreement.

In some cases, the use of an adjacent-market city of license has been used on a secondary station to avoid a limit on the number of stations controlled by the same broadcaster in the same market. Occasionally, those arrangements cross international borders. For instance, radio station WLYK in Cape Vincent, New York in the United States is operated from the Canadian studios of Kingston, Ontario's CIKR-FM, a broadcaster already at the two-station limit in its own market, under an LMA.[11] Broadcasters such as Entravision have often entered into local marketing agreements with Mexican border stations (such as Tecate's XHDTV-TDT for content directed at San Diego).

Failing station waivers

It is also possible to obtain a "failing station waiver," which can exempt a broadcaster from some portion of the existing restrictions on common ownership in order to acquire and operate a station which otherwise would be economically non-viable or would be forced to cease operations.

Requests for failing station waivers have historically met with variable reception; in general, a prospective buyer is on the same wavelength with the FCC on failing-station policies if it can demonstrate to the Commission that:

  • The failing station consistently received less than 4% of all local all-day audience share;
  • the station is in poor financial condition, normally operating at a loss for at least the previous three years;
  • the merger will produce public interest benefits, and;
  • the in-market buyer is the only suitable candidate as a sale to an out-of-market buyer would result in an artificially depressed price.[12]

Waivers under these criteria were granted to sell WASV-TV in Asheville to Media General, owner of CBS affiliate WSPA-TV in that market,[13] and KWBA in Tucson to the Journal Broadcast Group, owner of that market's ABC affiliate KGUN-TV.[14][15] A similar waiver was refused to KNIN-TV in Boise as the station, a CW affiliate at the time the waiver application was filed, appeared to have reasonable prospects of financial break-even without a takeover by Journal-owned ABC affiliate KIVI-TV;[16] that decision was subsequently appealed, with the waiver being granted upon further review (Journal Broadcast Group would eventually be required to sell KNIN in 2014, as the station's financial condition improved enough in its post-2011 existence as a Fox affiliate to make it unsuitable for the E. W. Scripps Company – which was in the process of purchasing Journal's broadcasting unit in a deal in which Journal simultaneously merged with Scripps' publishing unit – to acquire it under a renewed waiver, in addition to the fact that it could not acquire it legally as the market had fewer than eight unique owners[17]).

Low-power TV stations

Low-power and Class A television stations are not subject to ownership caps in the United States, as their broadcast signals do not reach as many homes as full-power stations. In areas with high cable television penetration, this distinction is essentially meaningless. LPTV stations were also exempt from digital television transition requirements imposed on full-service broadcasters upon the June 2009 digital conversion.[18][19]

As such, low-power stations can also be formed to create duopolies; for instance, Weigel Broadcasting maintains triopolies in three markets surrounding the southern part of Lake Michigan (Chicago, Illinois; Milwaukee, Wisconsin; and South Bend, Indiana) using a combination of full-power and low-power television stations. In Chicago, it maintains one full-power signal (CW-affiliated station WCIU-TV) and two low-power stations (MeTV flagship station WWME-CD and independent station WMEU-CD). In Milwaukee, Weigel has two full-power stations (CBS affiliate WDJT-TV and full-power independent station WMLW-TV) and two low-power stations (MeTV station WBME-CD and Telemundo affiliate WYTU-LD, the latter stations of which use subchannels of WDJT as its main conduit for full-power carriage). Weigel also takes advantage of digital subchannel broadcasting heavily in addition to MeTV, it also owns MeTV+, Heroes & Icons, Start TV, Decades, Movies!, and Story Television, all of which air on its stations, in addition to other station groups; the company had also previously executed time share agreements on other subchannels with ethnic broadcasters, and in Milwaukee, a local real estate agency to air programming.

A similar situation exists in Lima, Ohio, where Block Communications controls a quadropoly of stations owned by itself (WLIO, a full-powered NBC affiliate which also carries Fox and MyNetworkTV on a digital subchannel) and low-power stations owned by West Central Ohio Broadcasting, Inc. (which owns ABC affiliate WPNM-LD/WOHL-CD, and CBS affiliate WAMS-LD) under an LMA. One of the latter company's heads, Allan J. Block, is the chairman of Block Communications.[20] The group is the sole over-air provider of secular network television programming in the Lima market, though area cable systems also carry out-of-market affiliates from Toledo, Columbus and Dayton.

Radio stations

As mentioned above, current FCC rules limit the number of radio stations a single entity may own in a certain market. As of May 2020, these are the limitations on radio ownership in a certain market, according to the FCC website:

  • In a radio market with 45 or more stations, an entity may own up to eight radio stations, no more than five of which may be on the same band (AM or FM).
  • In a radio market with between 30 and 44 stations, up to seven stations are allowed under common ownership, no more than four of which could be on AM or FM.
  • In a radio market with between 15 and 29 stations, an entity may own up to six stations, no more than four of which may be on the same band.
  • In a radio market with 14 or fewer radio stations, an entity may own up to five radio stations, of which no more than three of which may be on the same band, as long as the entity does not own more than half of the stations in that market.

Unlike television, there is no limit on the percentage of the population to that an entity may reach.

Canada

Radio

In radio, Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) policy generally allows broadcasters to operate no more than three radio stations in any given market, of which no more than two may be on the same radio band — that is, a company may own two AM stations and an FM station, or two FM stations and an AM station, but may not own three AMs or three FMs. However, in major metropolitan markets where a large number of radio stations are already broadcasting, the limit is increased to four stations with a maximum of two on each band. A company may also exceed these limits if it owns stations broadcasting in both English and French; for instance, in the Montreal media market, Bell Media Radio owns six radio stations, of which two operate in French and four in English.

Television

Officially, CRTC policy mandates that a broadcaster may only own one television station in a particular language in any given market.[21] However, there are two types of exemptions which may be granted:

  1. small markets, in which one or more stations may be in financial jeopardy due to limited advertising revenue;
  2. large markets, in which one or more stations may be in financial jeopardy due to audience fragmentation or the cost of programming rights.

The policy does not prevent companies from owning multiple stations in a market provided that the stations broadcast in different languages. In recent years, this has been interpreted as meaning that a single company may own both an English-language station and one or more multicultural stations with some English-language content, which in itself may be considered a form of "exemption". CBC/Radio-Canada owned-and-operated stations (O&Os) are also often deployed in pairs in major cities on both television and radio, separated only by language. In addition, the policy is not interpreted as preventing a single company from owning both a "commercial" general-interest station and an educational station in the same market, even if the latter airs advertising, as with Access in Alberta.[22]

Although the small and large market exemptions have a financial criterion in common, there are notable differences between the two. A small market twinstick may involve major network affiliates licensed to the same community, and is not obligated to provide distinct local news programming on the two stations, while in a large market the stations must be licensed to serve different communities or different programming niches, and cannot merge their news programming into a single operation. Small market twinsticks commonly share their branding across both stations, while twinsticks in large markets generally do not. As well, while small market twinsticks generally involve private affiliates, major market twinsticks are virtually always owned-and-operated stations of their associated networks or systems.

In a few isolated cases, the CRTC has permitted "triple-sticks", or triopolies, where a single broadcaster operates three stations in a market. These are only possible under unusual circumstances which are discussed as they arise below.

History

Twinsticks were first allowed in 1967, as a way to help expand CTV service to smaller markets. In the original twinstick model, the second station was a rebroadcaster of a CTV station in a larger market, to which the small market's existing CBC affiliate would be granted the advertising sales rights.

As the company's advertising revenue grew, the CTV transmitter would eventually become an originating station in its own right, and in theory would eventually be sold to another broadcaster. However, in many cases the subsequent sale never happened, as the community's economic growth failed to lend itself to competition between multiple television broadcasters. In other markets where the CRTC had licensed competing broadcasters, such as Northern Ontario, twinstick mergers were subsequently allowed to permit the survival of both television stations after similar economic difficulties were encountered.

With the cross-national consolidation of media ownership, nearly all of the original twinstick stations no longer share ownership with their former twin stations. However, the second type of twinstick, involving media consolidation in larger markets, began to arise in the 1990s.

Small markets

Up until February 2010, twinsticks of this type outside of Quebec involved CTV and CBC Television affiliates. Currently both small-market twinsticks in English Canada consist of Global and CTV affiliates.

Within Quebec, twinsticks consist of TVA and V affiliates:

From 1997 to 2002, CTV directly owned several CBC twinstick stations that it had inherited from Baton Broadcasting (CKNC, CHNB, CJIC and CFCL in Northern Ontario, which were part of the MCTV system, and CKBI and CKOS in Saskatchewan); these were sold to the CBC in 2002. Similarly, until August 2008, Cogeco owned three twinsticks in Quebec: CKTV and CFRS in Saguenay, CKSH and CFKS in Sherbrooke and CKTM and CFKM in Trois-Rivières. These twinsticks were dissolved when Radio-Canada decided to acquire its former affiliates (CKTV, CKSH and CKTM), while the V affiliates (CFRS, CFKS and CFKM) were acquired by Remstar Corporation, the new owner of V (then known as TQS).

One "triple-stick" also exists, in which a single company, Télé Inter-Rives, operates all three licensed stations in Rivière-du-Loup: CKRT, CIMT and CFTF. RNC Media also formerly had an effective "triple-stick" in the Abitibi-Témiscamingue region of Quebec, with ownership of CFEM-DT (TVA) and CKRN-DT (Radio-Canada) in the city of Rouyn-Noranda and CFEM-DT (V) in Val-d'Or — although technically licensed to separate cities, in actual practice all three stations served both cities through rebroadcast transmitters. As of 2018, however, CKRN is no longer in operation. These unusual situations arise because of the unique circumstances of francophone television stations in Quebec: with virtually no sources for syndicated programming, the stations are effectively constrained to network programming at virtually all times, meaning that despite being owned by a single company, the stations are still able to meet the guiding principles behind the CRTC's policies on media ownership.

As noted above, historically, twinstick operations were locally owned. With the cross-national consolidation of media ownership in Canada, however, most twinstick operations are now owned by major media conglomerates. The Thunder Bay Television stations (CHFD/CKPR) are the sole remaining locally owned twinstick anywhere in English Canada. The aforementioned Télé Inter-Rives is similarly unique in Quebec, although Quebecor holds a minority stake in the company.

Major markets

In the mid-1990s, the CRTC also began to allow private companies operating in large markets to acquire smaller stations. In all such cases, the twinsticks are permitted because a diversity of broadcast voices already exists in the market,[23] and the stations are normally licensed to serve different communities in the metropolitan market or different programming niches. The stations must also be operated independently of each other, although they are permitted to cross-promote each other's programming. They may also air a very limited amount of common programming, although in practice this privilege is rarely used.

Currently, Bell Media operates twinsticks in three major markets, using the CTV and CTV Two brands:

In addition to these "true" twinsticks, in some areas, Bell Media has taken a twinstick-type approach with two stations deemed to be in adjacent media markets, but which in practice serve both markets. For example, Bell operates both CTV station CKCO-DT in Kitchener, Ontario and CTV Two station CFPL-DT in London, about 100 kilometres (62 mi) away. Both have been carried on the VHF band of basic cable throughout much of southwestern Ontario for several decades. Hence, presumably as a result of this duplicated coverage, their current owner has elected to continue airing distinct programming on both stations (on the other hand, Kitchener is also about 100 km from Toronto; nevertheless both CKCO and Toronto's CFTO operate as CTV stations).

Finally, in some markets, Bell Media operates both a local over-the-air CTV station, and a provincial or regional cable channel that broadcasts CTV Two programming. In Alberta, CTV stations CFCN in Calgary and CFRN in Edmonton co-exist with CTV Two Alberta, which is officially licensed as the provincial educational broadcaster and is therefore technically exempt from the CRTC's common ownership policy[22] (prior to September 2011, CTV Two Alberta also operated over-the-air transmitters in Calgary and Edmonton). In the Maritime Provinces, Bell Media operates both the over-the-air CTV Atlantic group of stations and the cable-only CTV Two Atlantic, which have been jointly owned (under various parent companies) since the latter's launch in 1983.

Previous examples

Canwest operated the CIII/CHCH twinstick in Toronto-Hamilton and the CHAN/CHEK twinstick in Vancouver-Victoria until 2009, under the Global and E! brands. These two sets of twinsticks were separated as a result of E!'s demise in August 2009, with Canwest retaining the Global O&Os (CIII and CHAN) and selling off the E! stations (CHCH and CHEK). Additionally, Canwest previously owned the now-defunct CHCA in Red Deer, which was available on cable and via rebroadcast transmitters in both Calgary and Edmonton, where Canwest respectively already owned CICT and CITV. This was not considered a true twinstick as CHCA was not based in the larger markets, and did not have permission to solicit local advertising in those markets. It did, however, have simultaneous substitution rights.

CHUM Television operated the CITY/CKVR twinstick in Toronto-Barrie and the CKVU/CIVI twinstick in Vancouver-Victoria under the Citytv and A-Channel brands prior to its acquisition by CTVglobemedia in 2006. Following this acquisition, Rogers Media briefly held twinsticks in Vancouver (CKVU and CHNU) and Winnipeg (CHMI and CIIT), formed from its newly acquired Citytv stations and its Omni-branded religious stations; these two sets of twinsticks were dissolved in 2008 following the sales of CHNU and CIIT to S-VOX.

Unlike the situation in smaller markets, this type of "consolidation" twinstick had been increasingly common up to the late 2000s, concurrently with the rise of secondary television systems (such as CH/E! and A-Channel) launched by their parent companies to complement their primary networks or systems (such as Global and Citytv). This trend was partially reversed in 2009 with the demise of E! and the subsequent dissolution of the Global/E! twinsticks.

Multiple languages

In many major markets, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation operates both CBC Television (English) and Ici Radio-Canada Télé (French) stations, as listed below. Prior to the CBC decommissioning all of its television rebroadcasters in 2012, both networks were available over-the-air in numerous other markets not listed below, but one or both of the transmitters was a rebroadcaster of a station originating in a different city; these were not usually considered true twinsticks. Nevertheless, both networks continue to be available as part of the basic programming tier on all cable and satellite providers nationwide.

In Toronto, Edmonton and Calgary, Rogers Media's acquisition of the Citytv system put those stations in twinsticks with the multilingual Omni Television stations. In Toronto, Omni Television has its own twinstick, giving the company a nominal "triple-stick" in that market. The two Omni stations in Toronto each serve different segments of the market's multicultural audience, and thus are also permitted under the language exemption.

In Montreal, Canwest owned both Global station CKMI and multicultural station CJNT until August 2009, when the latter was sold to Channel Zero.

CTV was formerly a part-owner of the francophone V network (formerly TQS) in Quebec, meaning that V's owned-and-operated CFJP in Montreal was a partial twinstick with CTV's CFCF for most of the 2000s. CFCF was, in fact, the original owner of TQS, meaning that the stations were once a true twinstick under the language exemption, although the two stations went through very different sequences of ownership changes after 1995. Bell Media, the owner of CTV, reacquired V in 2020, reuniting CFJP to co-ownership with CFCF.

Triopolies and quadropolies

NBCUniversal formerly owned three full-power stations in Los Angeles, NBC owned-and-operated station KNBC, Telemundo O&O KVEA and Spanish language independent station KWHY-TV, before selling KWHY to the Meruelo Group in January 2011.[24][25] The FCC allows common ownership of three full-power television stations if there are 18 stations that are licensed within the market; as such, Los Angeles and San Francisco are the only two U.S. markets which can legally have a true full-power triopoly,[26] though Sinclair owns a legal de facto triopoly in Salt Lake City with CBS affiliate KUTV, independent station KJZZ-TV, and MyNetworkTV station KMYU.

The Federal Communications Commission otherwise only permits common ownership of three full-power television stations within one market if the tertiary station is licensed under a satellite station waiver (the FCC constitutes a full-power station that is licensed as a satellite as the same entity as its parent station, and therefore does not count them toward market ownership caps). A unique instance exists in Austin, Texas, involving the de facto triopoly of NBC affiliate KXAN-TV, CW affiliate KNVA and MyNetworkTV affiliate KBVO, the latter of which signed on in 1991 as a Llano-based satellite of KXAN to serve western portions of the market where reception of that station's UHF signal was impaired by the hilly terrain within the area. Even though KBVO was converted into a separately programmed station in October 2009 (and therefore no longer acts as a KXAN repeater, even by way of a subchannel), the FCC granted Media General permission to acquire its license under an existing satellite waiver during that company's merger with LIN Media in 2014[27] (without the waiver, Media General/LIN would have been forced to sell either KBVO or KNVA, which would not have been viable in any event, since there are not enough unique full-power station owners in the Austin market to permit a second legal duopoly with an owner of one of the market's three English language major network affiliates and neither would have likely had long-term financial survivability as a standalone station).

In addition, the FCC permits common ownership of three or more television stations if there are low-powered stations that are involved. For example, in the New York media market, a full-power duopoly was formed between WNET and WLIW once the two stations merged their operations with each other in 2003; this would be expanded into a physical quadropoly in early 2018 after WNET's owner acquired WNDT-CD and WMBQ-CD as a result of the FCC's 2017 spectrum incentive auction.[28][29][30] As of 2020, WNET currently owns or operates six television stations in the New York region, two (WNJN and WNJB) of which are owned by Public Media NJ and operated by WNET through the NJTV state network, which replaced the New Jersey Network (NJN) as New Jersey's public television service in July 2011; the New Jersey Public Broadcasting Authority retained the licenses of all of the former NJN stations.[31][32]

In the Salisbury, Maryland TV market (DMA #137) - Draper Holdings Business Trust has a triopoly of major broadcast networks: CBS (WBOC-TV, Full Power), FOX (WBOC-TV DT2, Full Power), and NBC (WRDE-LD). It also owns a Telemundo affiliate (WBOC-LD), along with COZI TV & Antenna TV on subchannels of WRDE-LD & WBOC-LD respectfully.

In 2013, through its acquisition of stations from Newport Television, Nexstar and Mission Broadcasting formed a full-power virtual quadropoly made up of two legal duopolies in Little Rock, Arkansas, consisting of NBC affiliate KARK-TV and MyNetworkTV affiliate KARZ-TV (which Nexstar already owned), and Fox affiliate KLRT-TV and CW affiliate KASN (another existing duopoly that was acquired by Mission). Through the resulting local marketing agreement with Nexstar, the operations of KLRT and KASN were consolidated into KARK/KARZ's facilities; 30 employees were laid off as part of the consolidation.[33] A similar virtual quadropoly in the Mobile, Alabama-Pensacola, Florida market was formed through another acquisition from Newport, this time by Sinclair, consisting of Pensacola-based ABC affiliate WEAR-TV and MyNetworkTV affiliate WFGX (which were both already owned by Sinclair and licensed to the beach community of Fort Walton Beach), and Mobile-based NBC affiliate WPMI and Pensacola-licensed independent station WJTC (owned by Deerfield, and operated by Sinclair under a local marketing agreement). Unlike the quadropoly in Little Rock, Sinclair has not consolidated all four stations into one facility and each duopoly maintains their own studios in different parts of the market (WEAR/WFGX on the Florida side, WPMI/WJTC on the Alabama side). Similarly structured virtual triopolies (many of which are run by Nexstar and Sinclair) also exist in a few markets, in which either an existing owner-operator of a legal duopoly also manages a tertiary station owned by a separate if indirectly related licensee, or owns-operates one station and runs two others that are owned by different licensees.

In Canada, at least one community (Rivière-du-Loup, Quebec) has all three of its local French language stations – CKRT-DT, CIMT-DT and CFTF-DT – under common ownership, however such levels of common ownership are for the most part strongly discouraged by the CRTC unless the stations serve remote communities or separately carry programming in different languages (such as Rogers Media's aforementioned triopoly in Toronto, consisting of the English-language CITY-DT and multicultural stations CFMT-DT and CJMT-DT).

In Mexico, media concentration is endemic and it is not uncommon for as many as four stations to be operated by one entity. Televisa owns four Mexico City stations (XEW, XHTV, XHGC and XEQ) while Azteca, Mexico's second-largest broadcaster, owns three (XHIMT, XHDF and XHTVM). These stations, in turn, feed large numbers of full-power affiliates. The largest Mexican network is the Televisa-owned Canal de las Estrellas, which feeds its programming to more than 100 stations nationwide.

See also

References

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  2. ^ "FCC grant of request for waiver of the duopoly rule for WCAU-TV (Philadelphia) / WNBC (New York City)". Federal Communications Commission. July 25, 1995.
  3. ^ Bill Carter (August 6, 1999). "F.C.C. Eases Limits on TV Station Ownership". The New York Times. Retrieved February 3, 2015.
  4. ^ Cynthia Gorney. (PDF). Carnegie Corporation of New York. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-07-16. Retrieved 2008-11-20.
  5. ^ Anthony Schoetle (August 11, 2014). "CBS affiliation switch means major changes at WTTV". Indianapolis Business Journal. American City Business Journals.
  6. ^ Patton, Charlie (December 13, 1999). "Changing the channel". The Florida Times-Union. Retrieved February 3, 2015.
  7. ^ "FCC Moving The Wrong Way On JSAs". TVNewsCheck. NewsCheckMedia. 2012-12-07. Retrieved September 27, 2014.
  8. ^ Howard Kurtz; Frank Ahrens (October 12, 2004). "Family's TV Clout in Bush's Corner". The Washington Post. p. A1.
  9. ^ a b Brian Stelter. "You Can Change the Channel, but Local News Is the Same". The New York Times. Retrieved 30 May 2012.
  10. ^ Erika Engle (August 20, 2009). "Execs explain TV swap, but some see it as blurry". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Oahu Publications. Retrieved December 30, 2013.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-12-13. Retrieved 2008-11-20.
  12. ^ "FCC application to assign the license for KNIN-TV (CW 9 Caldwell, Idaho) to Journal Broadcast Corp (KIVI-TV)" (DOC). Federal Communications Commission. November 10, 2008. Retrieved January 18, 2023.
  13. ^ (PDF). Federal Communications Commission. January 15, 2002. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 26, 2006. Retrieved November 20, 2008.
  14. ^ Matthew Lasar (June 3, 2008). "Epic fail: FCC gives Tucson a "failing station" TV duopoly". ArsTechica.
  15. ^ David Hatfield (June 6, 2008). "FCC green lights sale of KWBA to KGUN owner". Inside Tucson Business.
  16. ^ . Radio-Television Business Report. November 9, 2008. Archived from the original on July 16, 2011. Retrieved November 20, 2008.
  17. ^ John Eggerton (December 12, 2014). "FCC Okays Scripps/Journal Merger". Broadcasting & Cable.
  18. ^ "Commerce's TV Converter Box Coupon Program Now Accepting Requests to Replace Expired Coupons to Assist More Americans with Transition to Digital TV". National Telecommunications and Information Administration. March 24, 2009. Retrieved January 18, 2023.
  19. ^ "Low Power Television Service". Federal Communications Commission. December 9, 2019. Retrieved January 18, 2023.
  20. ^ . Radio & Television Business Report. November 29, 2008. Archived from the original on June 1, 2009. Retrieved December 1, 2008.
  21. ^ "Decision CRTC 2000-221 (para. 11)". Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission. 2000.
  22. ^ a b . Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission. 2000. Archived from the original on 2008-09-06. Retrieved 2013-04-13.
  23. ^ "Decision CRTC 2000-221 (para. 12)". Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission. 2000.
  24. ^ "FCC decision on transfer of existing Telemundo O&O stations to NBC-Telemundo's TN Acquisition Corp". Federal Communications Commission. 2002.
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  26. ^ "FCC adopts media ownership rules". CNNMoney. June 2, 2003.
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  32. ^ Jensen, Elizabeth (June 6, 2011). "WNET to Oversee New Jersey Public Television". The New York Times.
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duopoly, broadcasting, twinstick, redirects, here, video, game, genre, twin, stick, shooter, duopoly, twinstick, referring, stick, jargon, radio, tower, situation, television, radio, broadcasting, which, more, stations, same, city, community, share, common, ow. Twinstick redirects here For the video game genre see Twin stick shooter A duopoly or twinstick referring to stick as jargon for a radio tower is a situation in television and radio broadcasting in which two or more stations in the same city or community share common ownership Contents 1 United States 1 1 Virtual duopolies 1 2 Failing station waivers 1 3 Low power TV stations 1 4 Radio stations 2 Canada 2 1 Radio 2 2 Television 2 2 1 History 2 2 2 Small markets 2 2 3 Major markets 2 2 4 Previous examples 2 2 5 Multiple languages 3 Triopolies and quadropolies 4 See also 5 ReferencesUnited States EditIn the United States the practice of duopolies has been frowned upon when using public airwaves on the premise that it gives too much influence to one company However rules governing radio stations are less restrictive than those for television allowing as many as eight radio stations under common ownership in the largest U S media markets 1 Ownership of television stations with overlapping coverage areas was normally not allowed in the United States prior to 2002 even those that were not duopolies under the present legal definition by way of being located in separate albeit adjacent markets this required broadcasters to apply for cross ownership waivers in some cases to retain full power stations based in adjacent markets 2 Non commercial educational broadcasters mainly those that were members of the Public Broadcasting Service PBS were the only licensees allowed to sign on or acquire a second television station that did not repeat the parent station s signal in the same market where they already owned a station some of these acquired stations were originally licensed as commercial outlets On August 5 1999 the Federal Communications Commission voted 4 1 to allow common ownership of two television stations within a single market by one company 3 so long as eight unique station owners remain in the market once the duopoly is formed and the four highest rated stations based on local monthly viewership reports for the market remain under separate ownership 1 4 The FCC only requires the severance of an existing duopoly in which a once lower rated station falls within the ratings criteria that prohibits such ownership over time if an ownership transaction is under review such as a piecemeal or group sale of stations or necessary license transfers during an ownership transaction involving the stations existing owner a company is required to sell one of the stations in the duopoly to another licensee if it is no longer compliant with one or both provisions Currently an entity is permitted to own up to two television stations in the same media market if either the service areas of the stations do not overlap or at least one of the stations is not rated among the top four rated stations in the media market There is no limit on the number of television stations a single entity may own as long as the stations group collectively reaches no more than 39 of U S households Once a duopoly is formed the acquiring company takes over the operations of its new property The operations of the two stations are usually consolidated into one facility depending on the size and age of the facility chosen to house their operations Since the stations involved in the duopoly are not restricted by FCC law from consolidating their operations duplicative jobs at one of the stations are often terminated as the consolidation takes effect News departments are also often consolidated into a singular operation with anchoring and reporting staffs from the respective stations often being folded into one unit subject to hiring determinations made by management anchors and reporters are usually shared between the two stations though in some cases certain anchors may be employed to appear only on each station s own newscasts In some cases like with WHDH and WLVI in Boston Massachusetts when the former s owner Sunbeam Television formed a duopoly with WLVI after purchasing the station from Tribune Broadcasting in 2006 the junior partner s news department is shut down completely with the senior partner subsequently taking over production of its news content using only their existing staff In many cases news programming on a junior partner is structured to avoid direct competition with a senior partner affiliate of either ABC NBC or CBS one notable exception involves WTTV and WXIN in Indianapolis which carry competing morning and evening newscasts as Tribune Broadcasting opted to launch a separate slate of newscasts for WTTV when it became a CBS affiliate in January 2015 5 rather than shift those seen on sister Fox affiliate WXIN to the station WXIN and WTTV largely maintain their own anchors but share a news department and most reporting staff This situation is uncommon in duopolies involving only Big Three affiliates as stations affiliated with those networks are more inclined to carry newscasts in overlapping time periods in order to fulfill local programming requirements included in affiliation agreements Certain syndicated programs are also shared between the stations in the form of either same day repeat airings of programs seen on the one which holds primary rights or separated runs of programs that air on each station although each station maintains separate syndication inventories as well The junior partner unless it is affiliated with a major network may also be used to carry network and occasionally first run syndicated programs that the senior partner is unable to broadcast because of long form breaking news or severe weather coverage or a locally produced special airing in a scheduled program s normal timeslot or in the case of certain non prime time network programs because the senior partner chooses not to carry it on its regular schedule to carry other scheduled programming Although the FCC bars common ownership of any of the four major broadcast networks ABC NBC CBS and Fox it does not prohibit duopolies involving stations affiliated individually with any two of them unless both are among the four highest rated in the market at the time of a sale As such several Big Four duopolies exist based on certain market conditions that originally allowed them to be formed under the criteria such as a company having acquired one of the major network stations as a low rated affiliate of a smaller network prior to an affiliation switch or the ratings of a non English station placing among the top four over a Big Four network affiliate While most duopolies are made up of a senior partner that is affiliated with one of the four major networks and an affiliate of a minor network such as The CW and MyNetworkTV or an independent station as the junior partner those in which both stations are major network affiliates typically involve a Fox station which serves as the junior partner in all but a few instances and an ABC CBS or NBC affiliate with some limited arrangements where two Big Three affiliates are jointly owned or managed One of the few markets where two major network duopolies exist in some form is Jacksonville Florida where two companies once owned the licenses of the Big Four stations they respectively controlled In 2000 the Gannett Company owner of NBC affiliate WTLV purchased ABC affiliate WJXX 6 which had struggled in the local ratings since its sign on in February 1997 when it took the ABC affiliation from WJKS through a group affiliation deal with the Allbritton Communications Company due to its status as a relatively new station and issues with signal interference from PBS station WJCT on its Mediacom cable channel slot The following year Clear Channel Communications created a legal duopoly involving its existing Fox affiliate WAWS now WFOX TV and WTEV TV now WJAX TV a UPN affiliate that it had been managing under a local marketing agreement since 1994 WTEV s viewership gradually rose after it became a CBS affiliate in July 2002 putting it in the top four threshold with WAWS resulting in Newport Television upon purchasing the Clear Channel television group in 2007 restructuring the operation as a virtual duopoly by selling WTEV to shell licensee High Plains Broadcasting WFOX and WJAX are now respectively owned by the Cox Media Group and Bayshore Television LLC but remain under common management through JSA SSA in which WJAX is the junior partner The use of digital subchannels has been termed an instant duopoly because of the ease by which a single digital station can deliver multiple channels of programming from different networks at the same time One station can carry four or more standard definition digital channels multiple high definition feeds typically require too large a bitrate size to be carried on different subchannels of the same station simultaneously without loss of image quality Virtual duopolies Edit Some broadcasting companies have used loopholes to establish duopolies in smaller markets by way of a local marketing agreement shared services agreement or joint sales agreement where a station effectively brokers its entire airtime to the owner of another station in the market which becomes responsible for handling its programming and advertising sales and in effect operations These are termed as virtual duopolies as the station s license is held by one company while its operations are handled by another Through a 2014 FCC ruling joint sales agreements in which the senior partner sells a minimum of 15 of the advertising time for its junior partner are counted toward ownership caps 7 Some larger broadcasting companies have controversially built business models around the practice by funding the acquisition of stations by what are effectively shill companies or shell corporations for example Sinclair Broadcast Group operates the stations of Cunningham Broadcasting and Deerfield Media under LMAs JSAs or SSAs Nearly all of Cunningham s stock is held by trusts in the name of Sinclair s founders and owners the Smith family 8 Similarly Nexstar Media Group funds the purchase of stations by Mission Broadcasting and Vaughan Media which forms duopolies with their stations through shared services agreements with a Nexstar station 9 In some cases the senior partner may acquire a station s physical assets and intellectual property such as the station s facilities and programming rights but spin off the license itself to a shell corporation and enter into an agreement to operate the station making it the de facto owner but not the legal owner Following the purchase the station s operations and programming are often merged into that of its new parent station 9 10 Similarly a company that acquires an existing legal duopoly that is no longer complies with FCC rules on duopoly ownership may spin off the junior partner station s license to a shell rather than sell one of the stations to a licensee that would also assume operational responsibilities allowing the restructured duopoly to remain under common operation through a resulting management agreement In some cases the use of an adjacent market city of license has been used on a secondary station to avoid a limit on the number of stations controlled by the same broadcaster in the same market Occasionally those arrangements cross international borders For instance radio station WLYK in Cape Vincent New York in the United States is operated from the Canadian studios of Kingston Ontario s CIKR FM a broadcaster already at the two station limit in its own market under an LMA 11 Broadcasters such as Entravision have often entered into local marketing agreements with Mexican border stations such as Tecate s XHDTV TDT for content directed at San Diego Failing station waivers Edit It is also possible to obtain a failing station waiver which can exempt a broadcaster from some portion of the existing restrictions on common ownership in order to acquire and operate a station which otherwise would be economically non viable or would be forced to cease operations Requests for failing station waivers have historically met with variable reception in general a prospective buyer is on the same wavelength with the FCC on failing station policies if it can demonstrate to the Commission that The failing station consistently received less than 4 of all local all day audience share the station is in poor financial condition normally operating at a loss for at least the previous three years the merger will produce public interest benefits and the in market buyer is the only suitable candidate as a sale to an out of market buyer would result in an artificially depressed price 12 Waivers under these criteria were granted to sell WASV TV in Asheville to Media General owner of CBS affiliate WSPA TV in that market 13 and KWBA in Tucson to the Journal Broadcast Group owner of that market s ABC affiliate KGUN TV 14 15 A similar waiver was refused to KNIN TV in Boise as the station a CW affiliate at the time the waiver application was filed appeared to have reasonable prospects of financial break even without a takeover by Journal owned ABC affiliate KIVI TV 16 that decision was subsequently appealed with the waiver being granted upon further review Journal Broadcast Group would eventually be required to sell KNIN in 2014 as the station s financial condition improved enough in its post 2011 existence as a Fox affiliate to make it unsuitable for the E W Scripps Company which was in the process of purchasing Journal s broadcasting unit in a deal in which Journal simultaneously merged with Scripps publishing unit to acquire it under a renewed waiver in addition to the fact that it could not acquire it legally as the market had fewer than eight unique owners 17 Low power TV stations Edit Low power and Class A television stations are not subject to ownership caps in the United States as their broadcast signals do not reach as many homes as full power stations In areas with high cable television penetration this distinction is essentially meaningless LPTV stations were also exempt from digital television transition requirements imposed on full service broadcasters upon the June 2009 digital conversion 18 19 As such low power stations can also be formed to create duopolies for instance Weigel Broadcasting maintains triopolies in three markets surrounding the southern part of Lake Michigan Chicago Illinois Milwaukee Wisconsin and South Bend Indiana using a combination of full power and low power television stations In Chicago it maintains one full power signal CW affiliated station WCIU TV and two low power stations MeTV flagship station WWME CD and independent station WMEU CD In Milwaukee Weigel has two full power stations CBS affiliate WDJT TV and full power independent station WMLW TV and two low power stations MeTV station WBME CD and Telemundo affiliate WYTU LD the latter stations of which use subchannels of WDJT as its main conduit for full power carriage Weigel also takes advantage of digital subchannel broadcasting heavily in addition to MeTV it also owns MeTV Heroes amp Icons Start TV Decades Movies and Story Television all of which air on its stations in addition to other station groups the company had also previously executed time share agreements on other subchannels with ethnic broadcasters and in Milwaukee a local real estate agency to air programming A similar situation exists in Lima Ohio where Block Communications controls a quadropoly of stations owned by itself WLIO a full powered NBC affiliate which also carries Fox and MyNetworkTV on a digital subchannel and low power stations owned by West Central Ohio Broadcasting Inc which owns ABC affiliate WPNM LD WOHL CD and CBS affiliate WAMS LD under an LMA One of the latter company s heads Allan J Block is the chairman of Block Communications 20 The group is the sole over air provider of secular network television programming in the Lima market though area cable systems also carry out of market affiliates from Toledo Columbus and Dayton Radio stations Edit As mentioned above current FCC rules limit the number of radio stations a single entity may own in a certain market As of May 2020 these are the limitations on radio ownership in a certain market according to the FCC website In a radio market with 45 or more stations an entity may own up to eight radio stations no more than five of which may be on the same band AM or FM In a radio market with between 30 and 44 stations up to seven stations are allowed under common ownership no more than four of which could be on AM or FM In a radio market with between 15 and 29 stations an entity may own up to six stations no more than four of which may be on the same band In a radio market with 14 or fewer radio stations an entity may own up to five radio stations of which no more than three of which may be on the same band as long as the entity does not own more than half of the stations in that market Unlike television there is no limit on the percentage of the population to that an entity may reach Canada EditRadio Edit In radio Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission CRTC policy generally allows broadcasters to operate no more than three radio stations in any given market of which no more than two may be on the same radio band that is a company may own two AM stations and an FM station or two FM stations and an AM station but may not own three AMs or three FMs However in major metropolitan markets where a large number of radio stations are already broadcasting the limit is increased to four stations with a maximum of two on each band A company may also exceed these limits if it owns stations broadcasting in both English and French for instance in the Montreal media market Bell Media Radio owns six radio stations of which two operate in French and four in English Television Edit Officially CRTC policy mandates that a broadcaster may only own one television station in a particular language in any given market 21 However there are two types of exemptions which may be granted small markets in which one or more stations may be in financial jeopardy due to limited advertising revenue large markets in which one or more stations may be in financial jeopardy due to audience fragmentation or the cost of programming rights The policy does not prevent companies from owning multiple stations in a market provided that the stations broadcast in different languages In recent years this has been interpreted as meaning that a single company may own both an English language station and one or more multicultural stations with some English language content which in itself may be considered a form of exemption CBC Radio Canada owned and operated stations O amp Os are also often deployed in pairs in major cities on both television and radio separated only by language In addition the policy is not interpreted as preventing a single company from owning both a commercial general interest station and an educational station in the same market even if the latter airs advertising as with Access in Alberta 22 Although the small and large market exemptions have a financial criterion in common there are notable differences between the two A small market twinstick may involve major network affiliates licensed to the same community and is not obligated to provide distinct local news programming on the two stations while in a large market the stations must be licensed to serve different communities or different programming niches and cannot merge their news programming into a single operation Small market twinsticks commonly share their branding across both stations while twinsticks in large markets generally do not As well while small market twinsticks generally involve private affiliates major market twinsticks are virtually always owned and operated stations of their associated networks or systems In a few isolated cases the CRTC has permitted triple sticks or triopolies where a single broadcaster operates three stations in a market These are only possible under unusual circumstances which are discussed as they arise below History Edit Twinsticks were first allowed in 1967 as a way to help expand CTV service to smaller markets In the original twinstick model the second station was a rebroadcaster of a CTV station in a larger market to which the small market s existing CBC affiliate would be granted the advertising sales rights As the company s advertising revenue grew the CTV transmitter would eventually become an originating station in its own right and in theory would eventually be sold to another broadcaster However in many cases the subsequent sale never happened as the community s economic growth failed to lend itself to competition between multiple television broadcasters In other markets where the CRTC had licensed competing broadcasters such as Northern Ontario twinstick mergers were subsequently allowed to permit the survival of both television stations after similar economic difficulties were encountered With the cross national consolidation of media ownership nearly all of the original twinstick stations no longer share ownership with their former twin stations However the second type of twinstick involving media consolidation in larger markets began to arise in the 1990s Small markets Edit Up until February 2010 twinsticks of this type outside of Quebec involved CTV and CBC Television affiliates Currently both small market twinsticks in English Canada consist of Global and CTV affiliates Lloydminster CITL and CKSA Stingray Group Thunder Bay CHFD and CKPR Dougall Media Within Quebec twinsticks consist of TVA and V affiliates Gatineau CHOT and CFGS RNC Media From 1997 to 2002 CTV directly owned several CBC twinstick stations that it had inherited from Baton Broadcasting CKNC CHNB CJIC and CFCL in Northern Ontario which were part of the MCTV system and CKBI and CKOS in Saskatchewan these were sold to the CBC in 2002 Similarly until August 2008 Cogeco owned three twinsticks in Quebec CKTV and CFRS in Saguenay CKSH and CFKS in Sherbrooke and CKTM and CFKM in Trois Rivieres These twinsticks were dissolved when Radio Canada decided to acquire its former affiliates CKTV CKSH and CKTM while the V affiliates CFRS CFKS and CFKM were acquired by Remstar Corporation the new owner of V then known as TQS One triple stick also exists in which a single company Tele Inter Rives operates all three licensed stations in Riviere du Loup CKRT CIMT and CFTF RNC Media also formerly had an effective triple stick in the Abitibi Temiscamingue region of Quebec with ownership of CFEM DT TVA and CKRN DT Radio Canada in the city of Rouyn Noranda and CFEM DT V in Val d Or although technically licensed to separate cities in actual practice all three stations served both cities through rebroadcast transmitters As of 2018 however CKRN is no longer in operation These unusual situations arise because of the unique circumstances of francophone television stations in Quebec with virtually no sources for syndicated programming the stations are effectively constrained to network programming at virtually all times meaning that despite being owned by a single company the stations are still able to meet the guiding principles behind the CRTC s policies on media ownership As noted above historically twinstick operations were locally owned With the cross national consolidation of media ownership in Canada however most twinstick operations are now owned by major media conglomerates The Thunder Bay Television stations CHFD CKPR are the sole remaining locally owned twinstick anywhere in English Canada The aforementioned Tele Inter Rives is similarly unique in Quebec although Quebecor holds a minority stake in the company Major markets Edit In the mid 1990s the CRTC also began to allow private companies operating in large markets to acquire smaller stations In all such cases the twinsticks are permitted because a diversity of broadcast voices already exists in the market 23 and the stations are normally licensed to serve different communities in the metropolitan market or different programming niches The stations must also be operated independently of each other although they are permitted to cross promote each other s programming They may also air a very limited amount of common programming although in practice this privilege is rarely used Currently Bell Media operates twinsticks in three major markets using the CTV and CTV Two brands Ottawa CJOH and CHRO Toronto Barrie CFTO and CKVR Vancouver Victoria CIVT and CIVIIn addition to these true twinsticks in some areas Bell Media has taken a twinstick type approach with two stations deemed to be in adjacent media markets but which in practice serve both markets For example Bell operates both CTV station CKCO DT in Kitchener Ontario and CTV Two station CFPL DT in London about 100 kilometres 62 mi away Both have been carried on the VHF band of basic cable throughout much of southwestern Ontario for several decades Hence presumably as a result of this duplicated coverage their current owner has elected to continue airing distinct programming on both stations on the other hand Kitchener is also about 100 km from Toronto nevertheless both CKCO and Toronto s CFTO operate as CTV stations Finally in some markets Bell Media operates both a local over the air CTV station and a provincial or regional cable channel that broadcasts CTV Two programming In Alberta CTV stations CFCN in Calgary and CFRN in Edmonton co exist with CTV Two Alberta which is officially licensed as the provincial educational broadcaster and is therefore technically exempt from the CRTC s common ownership policy 22 prior to September 2011 CTV Two Alberta also operated over the air transmitters in Calgary and Edmonton In the Maritime Provinces Bell Media operates both the over the air CTV Atlantic group of stations and the cable only CTV Two Atlantic which have been jointly owned under various parent companies since the latter s launch in 1983 Previous examples Edit Canwest operated the CIII CHCH twinstick in Toronto Hamilton and the CHAN CHEK twinstick in Vancouver Victoria until 2009 under the Global and E brands These two sets of twinsticks were separated as a result of E s demise in August 2009 with Canwest retaining the Global O amp Os CIII and CHAN and selling off the E stations CHCH and CHEK Additionally Canwest previously owned the now defunct CHCA in Red Deer which was available on cable and via rebroadcast transmitters in both Calgary and Edmonton where Canwest respectively already owned CICT and CITV This was not considered a true twinstick as CHCA was not based in the larger markets and did not have permission to solicit local advertising in those markets It did however have simultaneous substitution rights CHUM Television operated the CITY CKVR twinstick in Toronto Barrie and the CKVU CIVI twinstick in Vancouver Victoria under the Citytv and A Channel brands prior to its acquisition by CTVglobemedia in 2006 Following this acquisition Rogers Media briefly held twinsticks in Vancouver CKVU and CHNU and Winnipeg CHMI and CIIT formed from its newly acquired Citytv stations and its Omni branded religious stations these two sets of twinsticks were dissolved in 2008 following the sales of CHNU and CIIT to S VOX Unlike the situation in smaller markets this type of consolidation twinstick had been increasingly common up to the late 2000s concurrently with the rise of secondary television systems such as CH E and A Channel launched by their parent companies to complement their primary networks or systems such as Global and Citytv This trend was partially reversed in 2009 with the demise of E and the subsequent dissolution of the Global E twinsticks Multiple languages Edit In many major markets the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation operates both CBC Television English and Ici Radio Canada Tele French stations as listed below Prior to the CBC decommissioning all of its television rebroadcasters in 2012 both networks were available over the air in numerous other markets not listed below but one or both of the transmitters was a rebroadcaster of a station originating in a different city these were not usually considered true twinsticks Nevertheless both networks continue to be available as part of the basic programming tier on all cable and satellite providers nationwide Edmonton CBXT and CBXFT Montreal CBMT and CBFT Ottawa CBOT and CBOFT Regina CBKT and CBKFT Toronto CBLT and CBLFT Vancouver CBUT and CBUFT Windsor CBET and CBEFT Winnipeg CBWT and CBWFTIn Toronto Edmonton and Calgary Rogers Media s acquisition of the Citytv system put those stations in twinsticks with the multilingual Omni Television stations In Toronto Omni Television has its own twinstick giving the company a nominal triple stick in that market The two Omni stations in Toronto each serve different segments of the market s multicultural audience and thus are also permitted under the language exemption Calgary CKAL and CJCO Edmonton CKEM and CJEO Toronto CFMT CJMT and CITY Vancouver CKVU and CHNMIn Montreal Canwest owned both Global station CKMI and multicultural station CJNT until August 2009 when the latter was sold to Channel Zero CTV was formerly a part owner of the francophone V network formerly TQS in Quebec meaning that V s owned and operated CFJP in Montreal was a partial twinstick with CTV s CFCF for most of the 2000s CFCF was in fact the original owner of TQS meaning that the stations were once a true twinstick under the language exemption although the two stations went through very different sequences of ownership changes after 1995 Bell Media the owner of CTV reacquired V in 2020 reuniting CFJP to co ownership with CFCF Triopolies and quadropolies EditNBCUniversal formerly owned three full power stations in Los Angeles NBC owned and operated station KNBC Telemundo O amp O KVEA and Spanish language independent station KWHY TV before selling KWHY to the Meruelo Group in January 2011 24 25 The FCC allows common ownership of three full power television stations if there are 18 stations that are licensed within the market as such Los Angeles and San Francisco are the only two U S markets which can legally have a true full power triopoly 26 though Sinclair owns a legal de facto triopoly in Salt Lake City with CBS affiliate KUTV independent station KJZZ TV and MyNetworkTV station KMYU The Federal Communications Commission otherwise only permits common ownership of three full power television stations within one market if the tertiary station is licensed under a satellite station waiver the FCC constitutes a full power station that is licensed as a satellite as the same entity as its parent station and therefore does not count them toward market ownership caps A unique instance exists in Austin Texas involving the de facto triopoly of NBC affiliate KXAN TV CW affiliate KNVA and MyNetworkTV affiliate KBVO the latter of which signed on in 1991 as a Llano based satellite of KXAN to serve western portions of the market where reception of that station s UHF signal was impaired by the hilly terrain within the area Even though KBVO was converted into a separately programmed station in October 2009 and therefore no longer acts as a KXAN repeater even by way of a subchannel the FCC granted Media General permission to acquire its license under an existing satellite waiver during that company s merger with LIN Media in 2014 27 without the waiver Media General LIN would have been forced to sell either KBVO or KNVA which would not have been viable in any event since there are not enough unique full power station owners in the Austin market to permit a second legal duopoly with an owner of one of the market s three English language major network affiliates and neither would have likely had long term financial survivability as a standalone station In addition the FCC permits common ownership of three or more television stations if there are low powered stations that are involved For example in the New York media market a full power duopoly was formed between WNET and WLIW once the two stations merged their operations with each other in 2003 this would be expanded into a physical quadropoly in early 2018 after WNET s owner acquired WNDT CD and WMBQ CD as a result of the FCC s 2017 spectrum incentive auction 28 29 30 As of 2020 WNET currently owns or operates six television stations in the New York region two WNJN and WNJB of which are owned by Public Media NJ and operated by WNET through the NJTV state network which replaced the New Jersey Network NJN as New Jersey s public television service in July 2011 the New Jersey Public Broadcasting Authority retained the licenses of all of the former NJN stations 31 32 In the Salisbury Maryland TV market DMA 137 Draper Holdings Business Trust has a triopoly of major broadcast networks CBS WBOC TV Full Power FOX WBOC TV DT2 Full Power and NBC WRDE LD It also owns a Telemundo affiliate WBOC LD along with COZI TV amp Antenna TV on subchannels of WRDE LD amp WBOC LD respectfully In 2013 through its acquisition of stations from Newport Television Nexstar and Mission Broadcasting formed a full power virtual quadropoly made up of two legal duopolies in Little Rock Arkansas consisting of NBC affiliate KARK TV and MyNetworkTV affiliate KARZ TV which Nexstar already owned and Fox affiliate KLRT TV and CW affiliate KASN another existing duopoly that was acquired by Mission Through the resulting local marketing agreement with Nexstar the operations of KLRT and KASN were consolidated into KARK KARZ s facilities 30 employees were laid off as part of the consolidation 33 A similar virtual quadropoly in the Mobile Alabama Pensacola Florida market was formed through another acquisition from Newport this time by Sinclair consisting of Pensacola based ABC affiliate WEAR TV and MyNetworkTV affiliate WFGX which were both already owned by Sinclair and licensed to the beach community of Fort Walton Beach and Mobile based NBC affiliate WPMI and Pensacola licensed independent station WJTC owned by Deerfield and operated by Sinclair under a local marketing agreement Unlike the quadropoly in Little Rock Sinclair has not consolidated all four stations into one facility and each duopoly maintains their own studios in different parts of the market WEAR WFGX on the Florida side WPMI WJTC on the Alabama side Similarly structured virtual triopolies many of which are run by Nexstar and Sinclair also exist in a few markets in which either an existing owner operator of a legal duopoly also manages a tertiary station owned by a separate if indirectly related licensee or owns operates one station and runs two others that are owned by different licensees In Canada at least one community Riviere du Loup Quebec has all three of its local French language stations CKRT DT CIMT DT and CFTF DT under common ownership however such levels of common ownership are for the most part strongly discouraged by the CRTC unless the stations serve remote communities or separately carry programming in different languages such as Rogers Media s aforementioned triopoly in Toronto consisting of the English language CITY DT and multicultural stations CFMT DT and CJMT DT In Mexico media concentration is endemic and it is not uncommon for as many as four stations to be operated by one entity Televisa owns four Mexico City stations XEW XHTV XHGC and XEQ while Azteca Mexico s second largest broadcaster owns three XHIMT XHDF and XHTVM These stations in turn feed large numbers of full power affiliates The largest Mexican network is the Televisa owned Canal de las Estrellas which feeds its programming to more than 100 stations nationwide See also EditTrimulcast Concentration of media ownershipReferences Edit a b FCC revives local television ownership rules Federal Communications Commission August 5 1999 FCC grant of request for waiver of the duopoly rule for WCAU TV Philadelphia WNBC New York City Federal Communications Commission July 25 1995 Bill Carter August 6 1999 F C C Eases Limits on TV Station Ownership The New York Times Retrieved February 3 2015 Cynthia Gorney The Business of News A challenge for journalism s next generation PDF Carnegie Corporation of New York Archived from the original PDF on 2008 07 16 Retrieved 2008 11 20 Anthony Schoetle August 11 2014 CBS affiliation switch means major changes at WTTV Indianapolis Business Journal American City Business Journals Patton Charlie December 13 1999 Changing the channel The Florida Times Union Retrieved February 3 2015 FCC Moving The Wrong Way On JSAs TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia 2012 12 07 Retrieved September 27 2014 Howard Kurtz Frank Ahrens October 12 2004 Family s TV Clout in Bush s Corner The Washington Post p A1 a b Brian Stelter You Can Change the Channel but Local News Is the Same The New York Times Retrieved 30 May 2012 Erika Engle August 20 2009 Execs explain TV swap but some see it as blurry Honolulu Star Bulletin Oahu Publications Retrieved December 30 2013 102 7 The Lake WLYK Archived from the original on 2008 12 13 Retrieved 2008 11 20 FCC application to assign the license for KNIN TV CW 9 Caldwell Idaho to Journal Broadcast Corp KIVI TV DOC Federal Communications Commission November 10 2008 Retrieved January 18 2023 FCC application for assignment of WASV TV Asheville North Carolina PDF Federal Communications Commission January 15 2002 Archived from the original PDF on September 26 2006 Retrieved November 20 2008 Matthew Lasar June 3 2008 Epic fail FCC gives Tucson a failing station TV duopoly ArsTechica David Hatfield June 6 2008 FCC green lights sale of KWBA to KGUN owner Inside Tucson Business Journal Boise duop dropped Radio Television Business Report November 9 2008 Archived from the original on July 16 2011 Retrieved November 20 2008 John Eggerton December 12 2014 FCC Okays Scripps Journal Merger Broadcasting amp Cable Commerce s TV Converter Box Coupon Program Now Accepting Requests to Replace Expired Coupons to Assist More Americans with Transition to Digital TV National Telecommunications and Information Administration March 24 2009 Retrieved January 18 2023 Low Power Television Service Federal Communications Commission December 9 2019 Retrieved January 18 2023 Phipps flips Lima low power cluster Radio amp Television Business Report November 29 2008 Archived from the original on June 1 2009 Retrieved December 1 2008 Decision CRTC 2000 221 para 11 Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission 2000 a b Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2007 165 para 29 Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission 2000 Archived from the original on 2008 09 06 Retrieved 2013 04 13 Decision CRTC 2000 221 para 12 Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission 2000 FCC decision on transfer of existing Telemundo O amp O stations to NBC Telemundo s TN Acquisition Corp Federal Communications Commission 2002 George Szalai January 26 2012 NBC Universal to Sell LA Station KWHY TV to Meruelo The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved October 8 2012 FCC adopts media ownership rules CNNMoney June 2 2003 Consent to Transfer Control of Licenses by Shareholders of Media General Inc and Shareholders of LIN Media LLC to Post Merger Shareholders of Media General Inc Federal Communications Commission December 12 2014 Retrieved February 3 2015 FCC Broadcast Television Spectrum Incentive Auction Auction 1001 Winning Bids PDF Federal Communications Commission April 4 2017 Retrieved November 13 2017 Amendment to a Modification of a Licensed Facility for Digital Class A TV Station Application Licensing and Management System Federal Communications Commission November 6 2017 Retrieved November 13 2017 APPLICATION FOR CONSENT TO ASSIGNMENT OF BROADCAST STATION CONSTRUCTION PERMIT OR LICENSE CDBS Public Access Federal Communications Commission November 9 2017 Retrieved November 13 2017 Gov Christie Selects WNET for NJN Takeover NJN WMGM TV Archived from the original on June 10 2011 Jensen Elizabeth June 6 2011 WNET to Oversee New Jersey Public Television The New York Times Almost 30 Lose Jobs at KARK KLRT as TV Owners Consolidate Arkansas Business January 29 2013 Retrieved January 29 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Duopoly broadcasting amp oldid 1142779228, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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