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Local marketing agreement

In North American broadcasting, a local marketing agreement (LMA), or local management agreement, is a contract in which one company agrees to operate a radio or television station owned by another party. In essence, it is a sort of lease or time-buy.

Under Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulations, a local marketing agreement must give the company operating the station (the "senior" partner) under the agreement control over the entire facilities of the station, including the finances, personnel and programming of the station. Its original licensee (the "junior" partner) still remains legally responsible for the station and its operations, such as compliance with relevant regulations regarding content. Occasionally, a "local marketing agreement" may refer to the sharing or contracting of only certain functions, in particular advertising sales. This may also be referred to as a time brokerage agreement (TBA), local sales agreement (LSA), management services agreement (MSA), or most commonly, a joint sales agreement (JSA) or shared services agreement (SSA). JSAs are counted toward ownership caps for television and radio stations.[1][2] In Canada, local marketing agreements between domestic stations require the consent of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), although Rogers Media has used a similar arrangement to control a U.S.-based radio station in a border market.

The increased use of sharing agreements by media companies to form consolidated, "virtual" duopolies became controversial between 2009 and 2014, especially arrangements where a company buys a television station's facilities and assets, but sells the license to an affiliated third-party "shell" corporation, who then enters into agreements with the owner of the facilities to operate the station on their behalf. Activists have argued that broadcasters were using these agreements as a loophole for the FCC's ownership regulations, that they reduce the number of local media outlets in a market through the aggregation or outright consolidation of news programming, and allow station owners to have increased leverage in the negotiation of retransmission consent with local subscription television providers. Station owners have contended that these sharing agreements allow streamlined, cost-effective operations that may be beneficial to the continued operation of lower-rated and/or financially weaker stations, especially in smaller markets.[3]

In 2014 under chairman Tom Wheeler, the FCC began to increase its scrutiny regarding the use of such agreements—particularly joint sales—to evade its policies. On March 31, 2014, the commission voted to make joint sales agreements count as ownership if the senior partner sells 15% or more of advertising time for its partner, and to ban coordinated retransmission consent negotiations between two of the top four stations in a market. Wheeler indicated that he planned to address local marketing and shared services agreements in the future. The change in stance also prompted changes to then-proposed acquisitions by Nexstar Media Group and Sinclair Broadcast Group, who, rather than use sharing agreements to control them, moved their existing programming and network affiliations to digital subchannels of existing company-owned stations in the market, or a low-power station (which are not subject to ownership caps), and then relinquished control over the original stations by selling their licenses to third-parties, such as minority-owned broadcasters.

History and background

Due to the FCC's limits on station ownership at the time (which prevented the common ownership of multiple radio stations), local marketing agreements in radio, in which a smaller station would sell its entire airtime to a third-party in time-buy, were widespread between the 1970s and early 1990s.[4] These alliances gave larger broadcasters a way to expand their reach, and smaller broadcasters a means of obtaining a stable stream of revenue.[4] In 1992, the FCC began allowing broadcasting companies to own multiple radio stations in a single market. Following these changes, local marketing agreements largely fell out of favor for radio, as it was now possible for broadcasters to simply buy another station outright rather than lease it – consequentially triggering a wave of mass consolidation in the radio industry.[4] However, broadcasters still used local marketing agreements to help transition acquired stations to their new owners.[4]

The first local marketing agreement in North American television was formed in 1991, when the Sinclair Broadcast Group purchased Fox affiliate WPGH-TV in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. As Sinclair had already owned independent station WPTT (now MyNetworkTV affiliate WPNT) in that market, which would have violated FCC rules which at the time had prohibited television station duopolies, Sinclair decided to sell the lower-rated WPTT to the station's manager Eddie Edwards, but continued to operate the station through an LMA (Sinclair eventually repurchased the station – then assigned the call letters WCWB – outright in 2000, after the Federal Communications Commission began permitting common ownership of two television stations in the same market, creating a legal duopoly).[5]

Sinclair's use of local marketing agreements would lead to legal issues in 1999, when Glencairn, Ltd. (since restructured as Cunningham Broadcasting) announced that it would acquire Fox affiliate KOKH-TV in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma from Sullivan Broadcasting; Glencairn subsequently announced plans to sell five of its 11 existing stations that were operated by Sinclair under LMAs to that company outright. As the family of Sinclair Broadcast Group founder Julian Smith controlled 97% of Glencairn's stock assets (which remains the case under its Cunningham structure) and the company was to be paid with Sinclair stock in turn for the purchases, KOKH and Sinclair-owned WB affiliate KOCB (now a CW affiliate) would effectively constitute a duopoly in violation of FCC rules. The Rainbow/PUSH coalition (headed by Jesse Jackson) filed challenges against the sale with the FCC, citing concerns over a single company holding two broadcast licenses in a single market and argued that Glencairn was masquerading as a separate minority-owned company (Edwards, who served as Glencairn's president, is African American) when it was really an arm of Sinclair that the company used to gain control of the stations through LMAs.[6][7] After the FCC updated its media ownership rules to allow a single company to own two television stations in the same market in August 1999, Sinclair restructured the deal to acquire KOKH outright. In 2001, the FCC issued a $40,000 fine against Sinclair for illegally controlling Glencairn.[8]

In 1999, the FCC modified its media ownership rules to count LMAs formed after November 5, 1996 that cover more than 15% of the broadcast day toward the ownership limits for the brokering station's owner.[9] Even still, the related joint sales and shared services agreement structures became increasingly common during the 2000s; these outsourcing agreements proliferated between 2011 and 2013, when station owners such as Sinclair and the Nexstar Broadcasting Group began expanding their portfolios by acquiring additional stations in an effort to drive scale as well as to gain leverage in retransmission consent negotiations with cable and satellite television providers.

Uses

Consolidation

The most common use of an LMA in television broadcasting is to create a "virtual duopoly", where the stations operated under the agreement are consolidated into a single entity. The operations of the stations can be streamlined for cost-effectiveness through the sharing of resources, such as facilities, advertising sales, personnel and programming.[10] Many broadcasters that engage in the practice believe that such agreements are beneficial to the survival of television stations – especially in smaller markets, where the overall audience reach is considerably less than that of markets that are centered upon densely populated metropolitan areas, and the cost savings achieved through the consolidation of resources and staff may be necessary to fund a station's continued operation.[10][11]

Sharing agreements may also be used as a loophole to control television stations in situations where it is legally impossible to own them outright. For instance, FCC regulations only allowed a single company to own more than one full-powered television station in a given market if there are at least eight distinct station owners, and also prohibits the ownership of two or more of the four highest-rated stations (based on total day viewership) in a market. An LMA or similar agreement does not affect the ownership of the station's license, meaning that they do not require the approval of the FCC to establish, and the two stations are still legally considered separate operations from a licensing standpoint.[11] Both Tribune Media and the Gannett Company were required to use shared services agreements as a similar loophole to take control of certain stations in their respective 2013 purchases of Local TV and Belo, as they did not have exemptions to the FCC's newspaper cross-ownership restrictions in the affected markets.[12][13] Both companies have since spun out their publishing arms as independent companies; the Tribune Publishing Company and Gannett Company. Tegna, who holds the former Gannett's broadcasting and digital media properties, re-acquired the licenses for most of the affected stations following the split.[14][15] On November 16, 2017, under the Trump administration, the FCC voted in favor of removing the requirement for a market to still have eight distinct station owners in order to allow duopolies, but the prohibition of owning two of the top four stations in a market remains.[16]

Broadcasters could also collect carriage fees for the stations they operate under sharing agreements on behalf of their owner, often bundling its carriage agreements with those of stations they own outright. This could, especially in LMAs between two stations affiliated with the "major" networks, allow the broadcaster to charge higher fees for retransmission consent to television providers for carrying the stations, which could result in smaller cable companies not being able to afford the higher fees imposed. Cable television providers advocated barring sharing agreements between television stations for this particular reason. In the United States, the FCC no longer allows broadcasters to collude with one another in negotiating retransmission consent fees.[3][10][11]

Operation on behalf of a third-party owner

Although the majority of LMAs involve the outsourcing of one television station's operations to another, occasionally, a company may operate a station under an LMA, JSA or SSA even if it does not already own a station in that market. One example occurred in December 2013, when the Louisiana Media Company (owned by New Orleans Saints and New Orleans Hornets owner Tom Benson) entered into a shared services agreement with Raycom Media to run the former company's Fox affiliate in New Orleans, Louisiana, WVUE-DT; while Louisiana Media Company retained the station's ownership and license, other assets were assumed by Raycom, which owns stations in markets adjacent to New Orleans (including Baton Rouge, Jackson, Biloxi, Lake Charles and Shreveport) but not within New Orleans itself. Benson had received offers from Raycom and others to buy the station, but was not prepared to sell WVUE outright.[17][18] On April 4, 2017, Raycom acquired the station for $51.8 million.[19]

Foreign control of broadcast outlets

LMAs can also allow companies to control foreign stations from outside of their respective country; Canadian media company Rogers Media uses a joint sales agreement to operate Cape Vincent, New York radio station WLYK as a station targeting the nearby Canadian market of Kingston, Ontario, where it owns CKXC-FM and CIKR-FM. Rogers owns a 47% stake in WLYK's licensee, Border International Broadcasting.[20][21]

Similarly, Entravision Communications Corporation controls XHDTV-TDT, a Tijuana, Mexico-based station owned by Televisora Alco, which operates as an English-language station serving the border market of San Diego.[22]

Effects of LMAs

 
The studio facilities shared by WBFF and WNUV in Baltimore; WBFF owner Sinclair Broadcast Group operates WNUV, which is owned by Cunningham Broadcasting.

Public interest organizations have disapproved of the use of LMAs for virtual duopolies that circumvent the FCC's rules due to their effects on the broadcasting industry, particularly the results of consolidation through the irregular use of LMAs.[10][11] In markets where duopolies are not legally possible, a company may elect to form one by purchasing a station's "non-license" assets (such as their physical facilities, programming rights, and other intellectual property), and selling the license itself to a third-party "sidecar" company (which is often affiliated with the purchaser), which in turn, enters into an LMA or a similar agreement with the senior partner. The FCC only recognizes ownership of television stations by the ownership of their license and facility ID, and not by the ownership of these "non-license" assets; this means that the senior partner becomes the de facto owner and operator of the station, but the sidecar is still the legal owner.[10][11][23] Although the FCC determines a sidecar firm to be an independent entity from the company using it to outsource station operations for licensing purposes, the Securities and Exchange Commission does not make such a designation, requiring reports on sidecars to be included in a broadcaster's financial statements.[24][25]

Both Sinclair and Nexstar became infamous for their frequent use of sidecars as part of their expansion and consolidation tactics, partnering with companies like Cunningham Broadcasting, Deerfield Media, Mission Broadcasting, and even each other in the case of former virtual duopolies in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania between Sinclair-owned CBS affiliate WHP-TV and Nexstar-owned CW affiliate WLYH-TV (which ended in 2015 amid Sinclair's acquisition of Allbritton Communications, which saw WHTM-TV sold to Media General to avoid conflicts with WHP, and WYLH's license sold to Howard Stirk Holdings),[26][27] and Rochester, New York between Nexstar-owned CBS affiliate WROC-TV and Sinclair-owned Fox affiliate WUHF (which ended in January 2014 after Deerfield Media acquired ABC affiliate WHAM-TV).[10][11][28]

While not to the same, wide extent as Sinclair and Nexstar, some broadcasters have similar business relationships with specific sidecar companies as partners for these agreements:

Effects on programming

The stations partnered through a sharing agreement may also consolidate their programming operations: local newscasts on the junior partner in the LMA, if it operated a separate news department before the LMA's formation, may be rescheduled or scaled back to prevent direct competition with newscasts airing on the station acting as the senior partner (the latter aspect is less common with LMAs involving only stations affiliated with one of the three largest broadcast television networks). The stations may share news-gathering resources, but maintain separate news telecasts that are differentiated by their on-air presentation, anchors, and overall format, with varying degrees of autonomy;[39] in these cases, a seemingly separate newscast on the brokered station in the duopoly may ultimately consist of repackaged news content from the other station.[11] Alternatively, the stations may consolidate their news programming under a single joint brand.[23][40]

Redundant staff members are often laid off as part of the consolidation process, and the sharing of news content reduces the number of unique editorial voices in the market. This in particular is one of the caveats of pushes to ban outsourcing agreements by media consolidation critics, who also suggest that LMAs result in a decreased amount of local news coverage on the brokered station.[10][11][41]

Depending on how the outsourcing agreement is structured, as well as how the brokered station is programmed, how the stations are consolidated and the amount of news programming featured on the brokered station may vary, for example:

  • In October 2008, Tribune Broadcasting and Local TV LLC consolidated the operations of their respective CW and Fox affiliates in Denver and St. Louis, resulting from a groupwide management agreement between both companies.[42][43] In Denver, CW affiliate KWGN-TV moved into Fox affiliate KDVR's facilities in the Speer neighborhood; while in St. Louis, Fox affiliate KTVI – despite being the senior partner in the LMA with CW affiliate KPLR – moved into the latter station's Maryland Heights studios. Both cities were (and still are) top-25 markets, making Denver and St. Louis the largest where any English-language stations were involved in an LMA; however, both cities had enough stations to allow a legal duopoly (this was not possible with KPLR and KTVI as both were among the four highest-rated stations in St. Louis at the time, placing ahead of ratings-challenged ABC affiliate KDNL-TV), and were large enough to support at least four television news operations (Denver had five and St. Louis had four news-producing stations prior to the formation of the LMA).[42]
KWGN and KPLR moved The CW's primetime lineup one hour later (to 8:00 p.m.) than the network-recommended timeslot, and shifted their evening newscasts to 7:00 p.m. (weekend editions of the evening newscasts were discontinued with the move; KPLR has since expanded its 7:00 p.m. newscast to Saturday and Sunday evenings) to avoid competing with KDVR and KTVI's 9:00 p.m. newscasts; KWGN retained its weekday morning newscast (which competes directly with KDVR's morning newscast), but canceled its 5:30 p.m. – and later, 11:00 a.m. – newscasts. In contrast, KPLR (which had run a primetime newscast for much of its history) eventually added hour-long midday and late afternoon newscasts.[44][45][46][47][48] The two LMA arrangements became legal duopolies in December 2013, once Tribune finalized its acquisition of Local TV.[49][50]
  • In 2009, Raycom Media (owner of Honolulu-based NBC and MyNetworkTV affiliates, KHNL and KFVE) announced it would take over the operations of local CBS affiliate KGMB (then owned by MCG Capital Corporation), giving it control of three of the television stations in Hawaii. The deal was a complex arrangement which involved trading the non-license assets of KFVE (such as its call sign, programming, and network affiliation) for those of KGMB (effectively placing the station under Raycom ownership, but using KFVE's license, signal, and virtual channel 5), and taking over KFVE (which moved to the channel 9 license owned by MCG Capital) under a shared services agreement. Due to its nature, the swap was not a transaction that would require the intervention of the FCC, aside from the changing of call signs. The three stations were then folded into a shared news operation branded as Hawaii News Now. An estimated 68 positions from a total of 198 from the three stations would be eliminated as part of the agreement.[23][40] On November 20, 2013, MCG Capital filed to sell KFVE to the aforementioned American Spirit Media.[51] Following the acquisition of Raycom by Gray Television, KFVE's license was sold to Nexstar, who relaunched the station as a sister to its Fox affiliate KHON-TV.[52][53][54]
  • In 2010, the operations of Schurz Communications-owned NBC affiliate WAGT in Augusta, Georgia were taken over by Media General-owned ABC affiliate WJBF-TV. Both stations were consolidated into new, high-definition capable facilities constructed on the site of a former Barnes & Noble store, with separate studios for each station, and a third, shared studio. Despite the consolidation, the two stations aimed to maintain some autonomy from each other: both WAGT and WJBF maintained their own on-air identities, newsrooms, and sales departments within the facility. While the newscasts on both stations did share some "factual" video content, they were otherwise produced independently of each other. However, upon the consolidation, most of WAGT's managerial staff were dismissed and other employees were reassigned to different positions.[39][55][56] The agreement was unwound after Gray's purchase of the station, but briefly reinstated following legal action by Media General.[57] After the injunction was struck down, Gray re-assumed control of WAGT on March 28, 2016, adding 5:30 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. newscasts exclusive to the station, with the remainder simulcast from WRDW.[58][59]
  • In 2010, Nexstar announced a new joint news operation under the Eyewitness News title for its consolidated cluster in Utica/Rome, New York, which consists of Nexstar-owned Fox and MyNetworkTV affiliates WFXV and WPNY-LP, and Mission-owned ABC affiliate WUTR. Unlike the other examples, neither station had a pre-existing newscast at the time; WUTR's original news department was closed in 2003 by previous owner Clear Channel Communications as a cost-saving measure, and WFXV had never aired local news programming at all. Its slate included early and late evening newscasts on WUTR, an encore of WUTR's evening newscast on WPNY, and a 10:00 p.m. newscast on WFXV with a fast-paced format targeting younger demographics. The station's executive vice president, Steve Merren (who had come from NBC affiliate WKTV, which had the sole television news operation in the market prior to the formation of Nexstar's news operation) believed that it "[was] important that the community has another source of news. We have one newspaper and one news station and the community could benefit from another voice."[60][61][62]
  • In Evansville, Indiana, Mission Broadcasting acquired then-independent station WTVW (now a CW affiliate) in 2011 with its former owner Nexstar Broadcasting retaining operational duties under an SSA. WTVW consolidated news operations with ABC affiliate WEHT, for which Nexstar traded WTVW to Mission in exchange for acquiring WEHT from Gilmore Broadcasting Corporation, and had its newscast output reduced through the reductions of its weekday morning newscast from four hours to two and its 6:00 p.m. newscast – except on Sundays, where it remained one hour – from one hour to 30 minutes (leaving only a two-hour morning newscast, half-hour noon and 6:30 p.m. newscasts and an hour-long newscast at 9:00 p.m.). Both stations were then folded into a shared news operation branded as Eyewitness News.[63][64]
  • In November 2011, in the Tucson, Arizona, market, Belo relinquished the operations of its Fox and MyNetworkTV duopoly KMSB and KTTU to Raycom Media. Operations of the two stations, along with production of KMSB's 9:00 p.m. newscast, were assumed by Raycom's CBS station KOLD-TV. Belo Media Operations president Peter L. Diaz touted that the consolidation would result in "better produced, increased news programming for the Tucson market," citing Raycom's addition of a locally produced morning newscast to KMSB, and the upgrade of KMSB's news programming to high definition as part of the transition. Although ruling out the need to do so in other markets, Diaz noted that the agreements "[allowed] us to increase our news product that we couldn't afford to do otherwise." The consolidation resulted in layoffs for almost all of the two stations' employees, aside from advertising sales staff, which remained employed by Belo but worked from KOLD's facilities.[65] The acquisition of Belo by Gannett in 2013 had few effects on the virtual triopoly; although the stations' licenses were sold to third-parties to satisfy newspaper cross-ownership restrictions, Raycom still operates the stations, but their sales departments remained operated by Gannett.[66] The licenses were, in turn, sold to Tegna—the spin-out of Gannett's broadcasting division, in December 2015.[14]
  • The 2012 sale of Newport Television led to the formation of two full-power virtual quadropolies. In Little Rock, Arkansas, Nexstar and Mission Broadcasting formed a virtual quadropoly consisting of two duopolies; NBC station KARK-TV and MyNetworkTV station KARZ-TV (owned by Nexstar), along with Fox station KLRT-TV and CW station KASN (owned by Mission, operated by Nexstar under a local marketing agreement). All four stations were consolidated into KARK's facilities; 30 employees were laid off as part of the consolidation.[67] As a result, KLRT reduced its weeknight 5:00 p.m. newscast from one hour to 30 minutes (limiting it to the 5:30 half-hour) and dropped its 10:00 p.m. newscast, while adding a two-hour weekday morning newscast and retaining its existing hour-long newscast at 9:00 p.m.[67]
Sinclair formed a similar arrangement in Mobile, Alabama between its existing Pensacola duopoly of ABC affiliate WEAR-TV and MyNetworkTV affiliate WFGX, and the newly acquired Mobile duopoly of NBC affiliate WPMI and independent station WJTC (owned by Deerfield Media). However, the stations were not consolidated, and maintain their own studio facilities, news departments and staff. WEAR and WPMI also produce competing 9:00 p.m. newscasts for their respective duopoly partners.[68][69][70]

Reaction and government action

In February 2001, Clear Channel Communications subsidiary Citicasters was fined $25,000 for its use of time brokerage agreements and litigation for unlawfully controlling Youngstown, Ohio area radio station WBTJ (101.9 FM, now WYLR); the company had also been the target of complaints for using KFJO (FM) to rebroadcast KSJO after it had nominally sold KFJO to minority-owned interests.[71][72][73][74]

In 2009, the Media Council of Hawaii complained to the FCC about Raycom's Hawaii News Now operation, stating that it would "directly reduce the diversity of local voices in a community by replacing independent newscasts on the brokered station with those of the brokering station." In response, the FCC stated it would begin to investigate into the matter.[11][23]

In 2011, after temporarily losing its Fox affiliation for WFFT-TV to a subchannel of WISE-TV due to a reverse compensation dispute, Nexstar (ironically, given its use of similar practices in other markets)[11] filed an antitrust lawsuit against the station's managing partner, Granite Broadcasting, arguing that it had built a monopoly on local advertising sales by having effective control of the outlets for five major networks (ABC and MyNetworkTV on WPTA, and NBC, Fox, and The CW on WISE-TV; owned by Malara Broadcast Group and operated under agreements by Granite).[75] The lawsuit was settled in February 2013 via mutual agreement, after which the Fox affiliation was given back to WFFT.[76]

Acquisitions

Gannett acquisition of Belo

 
Belo Tower in Dallas, Texas.

Gannett Company's 2013 acquisition of Belo was opposed by organizations such as the American Cable Association and Free Press, due to Gannett's plans to use LMAs and two shell companies owned by former Belo and Fisher Communications executives (respectively, Sander Media and Tucker Operating Co.) to dodge FCC newspaper cross-ownership restrictions in Louisville, Phoenix, Portland, Oregon and Tucson. Although Gannett contended that the arrangements were legal, Free Press president Craig Aaron stated that "the FCC shouldn't let Gannett break the rules. Media consolidation results in fewer journalists in the newsroom and fewer opinions on the airwaves. Concentrating media outlets in the hands of just a few companies benefits only the companies themselves." The deal would have given Gannett a virtual triopoly in Phoenix, consisting of its NBC station KPNX, independent station KTVK and CW affiliate KASW. In Tucson, Fox affiliate KMSB and MyNetworkTV affiliate KTTU were already operated by Raycom Media's CBS affiliate KOLD-TV under a shared services agreement established under Belo ownership, but Gannett would still handle advertising sales for the stations.[66]

In December 2013, the U.S. Department of Justice blocked Gannett from using an agreement with Sander Media to operate CBS affiliate KMOV in St. Louis alongside its own NBC station KSDK, and ordered Gannett to sell KMOV. Even though Gannett planned to operate KMOV separately from KSDK, the Department ruled the agreement to be a violation of antitrust law, as it would reduce competition for advertising sales.[77] Following the closure of the Belo purchase, Meredith Corporation announced a deal to purchase KMOV, along with KTVK and KASW. As Meredith would have a duopoly between KTVK and its Phoenix CBS affiliate KPHO-TV, KASW was to be sold to SagamoreHill Broadcasting and operated by Meredith under an LMA.[12][66][78] As a result of the FCC's scrutiny on any new station sharing agreements, on October 23, 2014, Meredith would backtrack on this plan and instead sell KASW to the Nexstar Broadcasting Group, which would operate the station independently of KTVK and KPHO.[79]

Following Gannett's split into independent broadcasting and publishing companies, Tegna, Inc.—the owner of Gannett's stations following the split, bought back the licenses to the Sander Media stations, placing them back under its full control.[14]

Sinclair acquisition of Allbritton

As part of its planned acquisition of Allbritton Communications, Sinclair originally planned to sell its existing stations in three markets – Charleston, South Carolina, Birmingham, Alabama and Harrisburg, Pennsylvania – where Allbritton already owned stations, but continue to operate them under local marketing agreements. WABM and WTTO in Birmingham and WHP-TV in Harrisburg were to be sold to Deerfield Media, and WMMP in Charleston was to be sold to Howard Stirk Holdings–a broadcasting company owned by conservative pundit Armstrong Williams.[80] Howard Stirk Holdings was first established in 2013 with its acquisition of two conflicting stations in Sinclair's earlier acquisition of Barrington Broadcasting.[81]

In December 2013, FCC Video Division Chief Barbara Kreisman sent a letter demanding information from the Sinclair Broadcast Group on the financial aspects of its "sidecar" operations, and warned that in the three aforementioned markets, "the proposed transactions would result in the elimination of the grandfathered status of certain local marketing agreements and thus cause the transactions to violate our local TV ownership rules."[80] It was asserted that the deal might only be legal if the affected stations were operated under shared services agreements.[80][82] Sinclair restructured the deal in March 2014, choosing to sell WHP-TV, WMMP and WABM, and terminate an SSA with the Cunningham-owned Fox affiliate WTAT in Charleston to acquire the Allbritton-owned stations in those markets (WCIV, WHTM-TV and WBMA-LD, while also creating a new duopoly between the ABC and CW affiliates in Birmingham), as well as foregoing any operational or financial agreements with the buyers of the stations being sold to other parties.[83][84]

In May 2014, Sinclair disclosed in an FCC filling that it was unable to find buyers for the three affected stations, requiring changes to its transaction.[85] In Harrisburg, Sinclair chose to retain WHP-TV, and divest WHTM to Media General.[86] However, in Charleston and Birmingham, the company proposed to shut down stations entirely (rather than selling them to other buyers that would also handle their operational responsibilities) so it could maintain legal duopolies; surrendering the licenses for WCIV and the full-powered repeaters of WBMA-LD (WJSU and WCFT), and moving their ABC programming to Sinclair's existing stations WMMP and WABM respectively – which would shift their existing MyNetworkTV programming to digital subchannels.[85] After nearly a year of delays, Sinclair's deal to acquire Allbritton was approved by the FCC on July 24, 2014.[87]

FCC limits on joint sales agreements for television stations

In response to criticism of the virtual duopolies and sharing agreements, the FCC began to consider potential changes to address these loopholes. In March 2013, the Commission first tabled a proposal that would make joint sales agreements count the same as ownership.[88]

In January 2014 town hall meeting, FCC chairman Tom Wheeler disclosed that he planned to place more scrutiny on the use of LMA-style agreements and shell companies, stating that "there were a couple of references in a couple of recent decisions in which we've said that we're going to do things differently going forward on what were called these shell corporations." Later that month, it was reported that the FCC had placed all pending acquisitions involving the use of shell companies on hold, so the Commission could discuss changes to its policies. Among the deals affected by this decision included the aforementioned Sinclair/Allbritton purchase.[89][90]

On March 6, 2014, the FCC announced that it would hold a vote on March 31 on a proposal to ban joint sales agreements involving television stations outright, making them attributable to FCC ownership limits if the senior partner sells 15% or more of advertising time of a competing junior partner station in the JSA; the ban applies to both existing sharing agreements under such a structure as well as pending station transactions that include a JSA. Station owners would be given a two-year grace period to unwind or modify joint sales agreements in violation of the policy; coordinated retransmission consent negotiations between two of the four highest-rated stations in a single market would also be barred under the proposal. Wheeler also proposed an expedited process to review joint sales agreements on a case-by-case basis, granting a waiver of the rules if a broadcaster can prove a particular joint sales agreement arrangement serves the public interest.[91][92]

On March 12, 2014, the FCC Media Bureau released a notice that it would further analyze television station transactions that include sharing agreements, particularly those that include a purchase option that "may counter any incentive the licensee has to increase the value of the station, since the licensee may be unlikely to realize that increased value."[93] Under the new provisions, broadcasters must demonstrate in their transaction applications as to how such deals would serve the public interest.[93] The National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) – which, along with station groups such as Sinclair Broadcast Group, have disapproved of the proposal to ban JSAs – presented a compromise proposal, in which the brokered licensee in a sharing agreement would retain control over at least 85 percent of the station's programming, maintain at least 70 percent of ad sales revenue and "maintain at least 20 percent of station value in the license itself".[94] FCC commissioner Ajit Pai, and Gordon Smith, president of the NAB, were also opposed to the new rules on joint sales agreements, believing that they would discourage the ownership of television stations by minority-owned companies.[87][95] Tom Wheeler, however, proposed the restrictions in the hopes of encouraging more women and minorities to own stations, due to the ongoing consolidation in the television industry through company mergers and sharing agreements.[96]

On March 31, 2014, the FCC voted 3–2 to approve the proposed ban on joint sales agreements and voted 5–0 to approve the proposed ban on coordinated retransmission consent negotiations between two of the four highest-rated stations within a given market; the JSA ban went into effect on June 19, 2014.[97] Under the restrictions, the FCC would rule on waivers to maintain select existing JSAs within 90 days of the application's filing. The FCC also began a request for comment on policies to address other agreements, such as shared services agreements.[2][3][98] The prohibition on television JSAs had been proposed as early as 2004, a year after the FCC voted to treat JSAs between radio stations as duopolies. Despite this fact, broadcasting companies criticized the ban, accusing the Commission of using it as a move to encourage participation in a spectrum incentive auction then set to occur in 2015, and stating that the ban would place them at a disadvantage during retransmission consent negotiations with pay television providers.[99][100]

On December 19, 2015, as a rider to the federal budget, the grace period for unwinding or modifying existing JSAs was extended to 10 years.[101] On May 25, 2016, the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit struck down the restrictions on joint sales agreements, ruling that the FCC cannot manipulate its ownership rules without "[in] the previous four years, [fulfilling] its obligation to review [the] rule and determine whether it is in the public interest".[102] On November 16, 2017, under the Trump administration, the FCC voted in favor of no longer having JSAs attributable to ownership.[16]

Divestment and subchannel consolidation of stations

The increased scrutiny being imposed by the FCC regarding local marketing, shared services, and joint sales agreements have led to more drastic measures by broadcasting companies attempting to use them in acquisitions; in 2014, two broadcasting companies declared intents to shut acquired stations down entirely and consolidate their programming onto existing stations through multicasting, rather than attempting to use sidecars and sharing agreements or selling them to other parties that would assume full responsibility of their day-to-day operations.[103][104]

In May 2014, Sinclair informed the FCC that it was unable to find buyers for WABM or WMMP – the company's MyNetworkTV stations in Birmingham, Alabama, and Charleston, South Carolina, that it planned to sell in its purchase of Allbritton Communications. In Birmingham, the company proposed surrendering the licenses of WCFT-TV and WJSU-TV – the two full-powered satellites of ABC affiliate WBMA-LD, converting WABM into a full-powered satellite of WBMA-LD – and moving its existing MyNetworkTV programming to a digital subchannel of WABM (although the WBMA-LD simulcast was placed on WABM's subchannel instead while MyNetworkTV programming was retained on its main channel). Similarly, in Charleston, Sinclair planned to surrender WCIV's license and move its ABC affiliation and programming to WMMP. In both cases, Sinclair believed that its own stations had superior technical facilities than those of the stations it intends to surrender.[85][104] Sinclair was able to retain WBMA-LD in any event as the FCC does not impose any ownership limits on low-power stations.[105]

On June 13, 2014, Gray Television announced that it would shutter six stations and consolidate existing programming onto subchannels of Gray-owned stations in their respective market. Unlike Sinclair, however, Gray stated that it would sell the licenses of the shuttered stations to minority-owned broadcasters in collaboration with the Minority Media and Telecommunications Council – under the condition that they would operate them independently from other stations in the market, and without the use of any sharing agreements. All six of the stations were owned by companies other than Gray, but their non-license assets are either owned by Gray, or were operated by stations now owned by Gray under agreements. Gray would operate the affected stations under LMAs until the sales and consolidation are complete. Aside from one, most of the stations involved in these changes were related to Gray's acquisition of stations from Hoak Media. Three of these stations were immediately shut down the same day, while the remainder remained operated by Gray until the sales were completed.[103][106][107] Gray announced buyers for the stations on August 27, 2014.[108]

The six stations affected by Gray's move included:

  • KHAS-TV (Hastings/Lincoln, Nebraska), previously owned by Hoak. On June 13, 2014, KHAS-TV was shut down and its NBC programming was moved to the primary channel of KSNB-TV (channel 4). Gray had bought KSNB under a failing station waiver to form a duopoly with CBS station KOLN/KGIN, and operated the station as a MyNetworkTV/MeTV affiliate with local programming focused on central Nebraska; this existing programming was moved to KSNB-DT2 upon the transition.[109][110] On August 27, 2014, the station was sold to Legacy Broadcasting.[108] On May 21, 2018, Gray agreed to acquire KNHL from Legacy Broadcasting for $475,000, becoming a satellite station of KSNB-TV.[111]
  • KNDX/KXND (Bismarck/Minot, North Dakota), owned by Prime Cities Broadcasting, which asked the FCC to dismiss the sale of the stations to Excalibur Broadcasting (a sidecar owned by former Gray executive Don Ray),[32] which would have made them sisters to the NBC North Dakota chain being acquired from Hoak by Gray.[112] Gray acquired the stations' non-license assets on May 1, 2014;[113] both stations were then taken off the air on June 13, 2014, with Fox programming being moved to subchannels of the NBC North Dakota stations (KMOT, KQCD-TV and KFYR-TV).[107] On August 27, 2014, the stations were sold to Legacy Broadcasting.[108]
  • KXJB-TV and KAQY (Fargo, North Dakota and Columbia/Monroe, LouisianaEl Dorado, Arkansas), both owned by Parker Broadcasting and operated by Hoak (now Gray) stations. Both were originally to be sold to Excalibur Broadcasting.[113] On August 27, 2014, KXJB-TV was sold to Major Market Broadcasting, and KAQY to Legacy Broadcasting.[108]
  • KJCT (Grand Junction, Colorado), acquired by Excalibur in August 2013 from News-Press & Gazette Company, and taken over by Gray-owned KKCO following the acquisition.[32] On August 27, 2014, the station was sold to Chang Media Group, and was later re-launched as Cozi TV station KGBY.[108][114]

Following the approval of Sinclair's purchase of Allbritton, commissioner Ajit Pai further criticized the FCC's new policies and its endorsement of Sinclair's proposal to shut down stations to comply with them. Describing the three Allbritton stations as being "victims" of the "crackdown" against joint sales agreements, he stated regarding WCIV that "apparently the Commission believes that it is better for that station to go out of business than for Howard Stirk Holdings to own the station and participate in a joint sales agreement with Sinclair. I strongly disagree. And so too, I'll bet, would consumers in Charleston."[87] In September 2014, Sinclair backtracked on its original plans, and reached deals to sell WCIV, WCFT and WJSU's license assets to Howard Stirk Holdings for $50,000 each and lease them studio space, pending FCC approval. Unlike Howard Stirk Holdings' other stations, they are operated and programmed independently, and Sinclair did not enter into any agreements to operate the stations on Stirk's behalf.[115][116][117][118]

In Quincy Newspapers' acquisition of Granite Broadcasting's remaining stations, the acquisition was briefly re-structured to have Malara Broadcast Group—which served as a virtual duopoly partner for Granite with WISE-TV (NBC) Fort Wayne and KDLH-TV Duluth (CBS), retain the stations and their current agreements with WPTA and KBJR-TV in lieu of having them sold to SagamoreHill Broadcasting. The acquisition was restructured in July 2015 to, again, have SagamoreHill Broadcasting acquire the two stations, but have their current SSAs wound down within nine months. Following the end of the SSA, the two stations retained The CW as independently run stations, with their remaining affiliations moved to subchannels of KBJR and WPTA.[119][120][121] Quincy similarly wound down an SSA in Peoria, Illinois with Sinclair-owned WHOI by trading its South Bend Fox affiliation (previously held by WSJV-TV) to Sinclair (where it moved to a subchannel of WSBT-TV), in exchange for WHOI's ABC and CW affiliations, which moved to subchannels of WEEK-TV.[122][123] In 2018, Quincy re-purchased WISE and KDLH, under an assertion that both stations were not within the top 4 of their respective markets.[124][125]

WAGT dispute

 
Outside Television Park, the facilities which were shared by WJBF and WAGT.

In February 2016, Gray Television acquired Schurz Communications' stations, including Augusta, Georgia's WAGT. As Gray could not own both WAGT and its existing CBS affiliate WRDW-TV as a legal duopoly, Gray proposed the sale of WAGT's broadcast spectrum during the incentive auction, and for WAGT to go silent upon completion of the deal so the company would not be running more than one of the top four stations in the market.[126] Gray also requested special temporary authority for WAGT's signal to be replaced on its existing technical facilities and UHF channel 30 by the co-owned low-power station, WRDW-CD; low-power stations are not subject to ownership caps and restrictions on duopolies.[105][127]

The FCC, however, required that Gray continue to operate WAGT as a separate station through the end of the auction, and not enter into any joint sales agreements.[126] Upon the closure of the sale, Gray unwound the shared services and joint sales agreements that Schurz had established with WJBF-TV and Media General, and replaced its previous news programs with simulcasts from WRDW.[128][129] Gray also accused WJBF of "[refusing] to agree to a smooth transition of personnel [from WAGT]", as WAGT's employees fall under the employment of Media General due to the SSA.[130]

On February 26, 2016, Media General obtained a preliminary injunction against Gray for violating the SSA and JSA, which required that Gray return control of WAGT to Media General, and forbade Gray from selling WAGT in the spectrum incentive auction. The company accused Gray of using the spectrum auction and sale of the station to exit the agreements illegitimately, as they were to last through 2020, and apply to any future owner of WAGT. Gray attempted to block the injunction by arguing that its actions were required in order to comply with the FCC's prohibition of joint sales agreements, but was denied.[131][132] Media General took back control of WAGT on March 7, 2016.[57]

On March 10, 2016, FCC Deputy General Counsel David Gossett announced that the Commission would investigate Media General's actions as possibly being in violation of Section 310(d) of the Communications Act. Gossett argued that by legally blocking Gray's participation in the spectrum auction, Media General had "[sought] injunctive relief that interferes with a licensee's ultimate control of a station". He also stated that the FCC could consider a license revocation hearing against Media General under Section 312 of the Communications Act.[133][134] On March 23, 2016, the Supreme Court of Georgia struck down the injunction without addressing the litigation, and Gray took back control of WAGT.[135] On July 13, 2016, Media General was issued a $700,000 fine by the FCC.[136] WAGT's spectrum sold for $40,763,036.[137]

DirecTV lawsuit

In March 2023, DirecTV sued Nexstar Media Group, alleging that it was conspiring with the sidecar companies Mission Broadcasting and White Knight Broadcasting to manipulate retransmission fees for its stations. The company, which had been in a carriage dispute with Mission and White Knight since October 2022, stated that the companies "effectively relinquished decision-making authority to Nexstar, which has served as the ringleader of a conspiracy to harm competition and violate the antitrust laws."[138]

Internationally

Canada

Local marketing agreements are effectively prohibited under the regulations of the CRTC, which require that all broadcast undertakings be "operated in fact by the licensee itself".[139] Rogers Media and Newcap Broadcasting maintained a joint sales agreement pertaining to CHNO-FM in Sudbury, Ontario, but community interests and the lobby group Friends of Canadian Broadcasting presented substantial evidence to the CRTC that in practice, the agreement was a de facto LMA, going significantly beyond advertising sales into program production and news-gathering. In early 2005, the CRTC ordered the agreement to cease.[140]

For a time, CKEY-FM in Fort Erie, Ontario had a JSA with Citadel Communications to handle advertising sales for the station under a revenue sharing agreement, integrating it with its cluster in nearby Buffalo, New York. In an associated agreement, the station also contracted Citadel employees to produce some of its programming. Due to the structure of this JSA, and because the aforementioned programming was overseen by local producers, the CRTC deemed that the agreement did not equate to a transfer of effective control of the station to Citadel, and thus complied with its regulations (taking greater issue with the amount of locally-reflective programming carried by the station).[141][139]

Rogers Media holds a time-brokerage agreement with CBC Television to air Hockey Night in Canada on the network as part of its exclusive rights to the National Hockey League, in order to maintain the long-running franchise and the league's presence on CBC. In exchange for assigning commercial advertising time to Rogers, the CBC does not pay a rights fee, and also receives advertising time for its own programming during Hockey Night broadcasts. The CBC also initially received payments for use of some of its staff and its Toronto studios.[142] To legally assign responsibility to Rogers, the broadcasts are considered to be the programming of a CRTC-licensed television network owned by Rogers' Sportsnet subsidiary, which has an affiliation with all of CBC Television's stations. Despite the legal nature of this arrangement, the broadcasts still contain CBC Television continuity and branding.[143]

Philippines

In 2008, the Filipino Associated Broadcasting Company leased its airtime to the Malaysian broadcaster Media Prima (through the local subsidiary MPB Primedia) similar to an LMA – with MPB Primedia providing entertainment programming, and ABC handling news programming and operations. Soon afterward, ABC and Media Prima were sued by rival media company GMA for attempting to use the partnership to skirt laws requiring domestic ownership of broadcasters. In response, ABC's media relations head Pat Marcelo-Magbanua reiterated that the subsidiary was a Filipino company which was self-registered and Filipino-run.[144] The concerns became moot in 2010, when Media Prima announced it would divest its ownership in the network to PLDT's broadcasting subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings.[145]

Throughout the last week of June 2011, several plugs with the statement "Si Pangga, Dreaming!" were heard on the then-Interactive Broadcast Media-owned DWET-FM (106.7 mHz, then licensed in Quezon City), which had just ended its broadcast under the previous smooth jazz format "Dream FM". Later on, it was revealed that Ultrasonic Broadcasting System, a radio network owned by the SYSU Group of Companies, has started operating the station under LMA as contemporary MOR "Energy FM on Dream 106.7" (later changed to "106.7 Energy FM" once the station's eventual sale to UBS was completed).

The term "airtime lease" is also used by other media entities, particularly those from larger media companies that has a lack of obtaining its broadcast franchise from the Congress, while others are owned by various herbal supplement manufacturers. Only Brigada Mass Media Corporation and Bandera News Philippines operate a handful of radio stations under the same method.

See also

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local, marketing, agreement, north, american, broadcasting, local, marketing, agreement, local, management, agreement, contract, which, company, agrees, operate, radio, television, station, owned, another, party, essence, sort, lease, time, under, federal, com. In North American broadcasting a local marketing agreement LMA or local management agreement is a contract in which one company agrees to operate a radio or television station owned by another party In essence it is a sort of lease or time buy Under Federal Communications Commission FCC regulations a local marketing agreement must give the company operating the station the senior partner under the agreement control over the entire facilities of the station including the finances personnel and programming of the station Its original licensee the junior partner still remains legally responsible for the station and its operations such as compliance with relevant regulations regarding content Occasionally a local marketing agreement may refer to the sharing or contracting of only certain functions in particular advertising sales This may also be referred to as a time brokerage agreement TBA local sales agreement LSA management services agreement MSA or most commonly a joint sales agreement JSA or shared services agreement SSA JSAs are counted toward ownership caps for television and radio stations 1 2 In Canada local marketing agreements between domestic stations require the consent of the Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission CRTC although Rogers Media has used a similar arrangement to control a U S based radio station in a border market The increased use of sharing agreements by media companies to form consolidated virtual duopolies became controversial between 2009 and 2014 especially arrangements where a company buys a television station s facilities and assets but sells the license to an affiliated third party shell corporation who then enters into agreements with the owner of the facilities to operate the station on their behalf Activists have argued that broadcasters were using these agreements as a loophole for the FCC s ownership regulations that they reduce the number of local media outlets in a market through the aggregation or outright consolidation of news programming and allow station owners to have increased leverage in the negotiation of retransmission consent with local subscription television providers Station owners have contended that these sharing agreements allow streamlined cost effective operations that may be beneficial to the continued operation of lower rated and or financially weaker stations especially in smaller markets 3 In 2014 under chairman Tom Wheeler the FCC began to increase its scrutiny regarding the use of such agreements particularly joint sales to evade its policies On March 31 2014 the commission voted to make joint sales agreements count as ownership if the senior partner sells 15 or more of advertising time for its partner and to ban coordinated retransmission consent negotiations between two of the top four stations in a market Wheeler indicated that he planned to address local marketing and shared services agreements in the future The change in stance also prompted changes to then proposed acquisitions by Nexstar Media Group and Sinclair Broadcast Group who rather than use sharing agreements to control them moved their existing programming and network affiliations to digital subchannels of existing company owned stations in the market or a low power station which are not subject to ownership caps and then relinquished control over the original stations by selling their licenses to third parties such as minority owned broadcasters Contents 1 History and background 2 Uses 2 1 Consolidation 2 2 Operation on behalf of a third party owner 2 3 Foreign control of broadcast outlets 3 Effects of LMAs 3 1 Effects on programming 4 Reaction and government action 4 1 Acquisitions 4 1 1 Gannett acquisition of Belo 4 1 2 Sinclair acquisition of Allbritton 4 2 FCC limits on joint sales agreements for television stations 4 3 Divestment and subchannel consolidation of stations 4 4 WAGT dispute 4 5 DirecTV lawsuit 5 Internationally 5 1 Canada 5 2 Philippines 6 See also 7 ReferencesHistory and background EditDue to the FCC s limits on station ownership at the time which prevented the common ownership of multiple radio stations local marketing agreements in radio in which a smaller station would sell its entire airtime to a third party in time buy were widespread between the 1970s and early 1990s 4 These alliances gave larger broadcasters a way to expand their reach and smaller broadcasters a means of obtaining a stable stream of revenue 4 In 1992 the FCC began allowing broadcasting companies to own multiple radio stations in a single market Following these changes local marketing agreements largely fell out of favor for radio as it was now possible for broadcasters to simply buy another station outright rather than lease it consequentially triggering a wave of mass consolidation in the radio industry 4 However broadcasters still used local marketing agreements to help transition acquired stations to their new owners 4 The first local marketing agreement in North American television was formed in 1991 when the Sinclair Broadcast Group purchased Fox affiliate WPGH TV in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania As Sinclair had already owned independent station WPTT now MyNetworkTV affiliate WPNT in that market which would have violated FCC rules which at the time had prohibited television station duopolies Sinclair decided to sell the lower rated WPTT to the station s manager Eddie Edwards but continued to operate the station through an LMA Sinclair eventually repurchased the station then assigned the call letters WCWB outright in 2000 after the Federal Communications Commission began permitting common ownership of two television stations in the same market creating a legal duopoly 5 Sinclair s use of local marketing agreements would lead to legal issues in 1999 when Glencairn Ltd since restructured as Cunningham Broadcasting announced that it would acquire Fox affiliate KOKH TV in Oklahoma City Oklahoma from Sullivan Broadcasting Glencairn subsequently announced plans to sell five of its 11 existing stations that were operated by Sinclair under LMAs to that company outright As the family of Sinclair Broadcast Group founder Julian Smith controlled 97 of Glencairn s stock assets which remains the case under its Cunningham structure and the company was to be paid with Sinclair stock in turn for the purchases KOKH and Sinclair owned WB affiliate KOCB now a CW affiliate would effectively constitute a duopoly in violation of FCC rules The Rainbow PUSH coalition headed by Jesse Jackson filed challenges against the sale with the FCC citing concerns over a single company holding two broadcast licenses in a single market and argued that Glencairn was masquerading as a separate minority owned company Edwards who served as Glencairn s president is African American when it was really an arm of Sinclair that the company used to gain control of the stations through LMAs 6 7 After the FCC updated its media ownership rules to allow a single company to own two television stations in the same market in August 1999 Sinclair restructured the deal to acquire KOKH outright In 2001 the FCC issued a 40 000 fine against Sinclair for illegally controlling Glencairn 8 In 1999 the FCC modified its media ownership rules to count LMAs formed after November 5 1996 that cover more than 15 of the broadcast day toward the ownership limits for the brokering station s owner 9 Even still the related joint sales and shared services agreement structures became increasingly common during the 2000s these outsourcing agreements proliferated between 2011 and 2013 when station owners such as Sinclair and the Nexstar Broadcasting Group began expanding their portfolios by acquiring additional stations in an effort to drive scale as well as to gain leverage in retransmission consent negotiations with cable and satellite television providers Uses EditConsolidation Edit The most common use of an LMA in television broadcasting is to create a virtual duopoly where the stations operated under the agreement are consolidated into a single entity The operations of the stations can be streamlined for cost effectiveness through the sharing of resources such as facilities advertising sales personnel and programming 10 Many broadcasters that engage in the practice believe that such agreements are beneficial to the survival of television stations especially in smaller markets where the overall audience reach is considerably less than that of markets that are centered upon densely populated metropolitan areas and the cost savings achieved through the consolidation of resources and staff may be necessary to fund a station s continued operation 10 11 Sharing agreements may also be used as a loophole to control television stations in situations where it is legally impossible to own them outright For instance FCC regulations only allowed a single company to own more than one full powered television station in a given market if there are at least eight distinct station owners and also prohibits the ownership of two or more of the four highest rated stations based on total day viewership in a market An LMA or similar agreement does not affect the ownership of the station s license meaning that they do not require the approval of the FCC to establish and the two stations are still legally considered separate operations from a licensing standpoint 11 Both Tribune Media and the Gannett Company were required to use shared services agreements as a similar loophole to take control of certain stations in their respective 2013 purchases of Local TV and Belo as they did not have exemptions to the FCC s newspaper cross ownership restrictions in the affected markets 12 13 Both companies have since spun out their publishing arms as independent companies the Tribune Publishing Company and Gannett Company Tegna who holds the former Gannett s broadcasting and digital media properties re acquired the licenses for most of the affected stations following the split 14 15 On November 16 2017 under the Trump administration the FCC voted in favor of removing the requirement for a market to still have eight distinct station owners in order to allow duopolies but the prohibition of owning two of the top four stations in a market remains 16 Broadcasters could also collect carriage fees for the stations they operate under sharing agreements on behalf of their owner often bundling its carriage agreements with those of stations they own outright This could especially in LMAs between two stations affiliated with the major networks allow the broadcaster to charge higher fees for retransmission consent to television providers for carrying the stations which could result in smaller cable companies not being able to afford the higher fees imposed Cable television providers advocated barring sharing agreements between television stations for this particular reason In the United States the FCC no longer allows broadcasters to collude with one another in negotiating retransmission consent fees 3 10 11 Operation on behalf of a third party owner Edit Although the majority of LMAs involve the outsourcing of one television station s operations to another occasionally a company may operate a station under an LMA JSA or SSA even if it does not already own a station in that market One example occurred in December 2013 when the Louisiana Media Company owned by New Orleans Saints and New Orleans Hornets owner Tom Benson entered into a shared services agreement with Raycom Media to run the former company s Fox affiliate in New Orleans Louisiana WVUE DT while Louisiana Media Company retained the station s ownership and license other assets were assumed by Raycom which owns stations in markets adjacent to New Orleans including Baton Rouge Jackson Biloxi Lake Charles and Shreveport but not within New Orleans itself Benson had received offers from Raycom and others to buy the station but was not prepared to sell WVUE outright 17 18 On April 4 2017 Raycom acquired the station for 51 8 million 19 Foreign control of broadcast outlets Edit See also Border blaster LMAs can also allow companies to control foreign stations from outside of their respective country Canadian media company Rogers Media uses a joint sales agreement to operate Cape Vincent New York radio station WLYK as a station targeting the nearby Canadian market of Kingston Ontario where it owns CKXC FM and CIKR FM Rogers owns a 47 stake in WLYK s licensee Border International Broadcasting 20 21 Similarly Entravision Communications Corporation controls XHDTV TDT a Tijuana Mexico based station owned by Televisora Alco which operates as an English language station serving the border market of San Diego 22 Effects of LMAs Edit The studio facilities shared by WBFF and WNUV in Baltimore WBFF owner Sinclair Broadcast Group operates WNUV which is owned by Cunningham Broadcasting Public interest organizations have disapproved of the use of LMAs for virtual duopolies that circumvent the FCC s rules due to their effects on the broadcasting industry particularly the results of consolidation through the irregular use of LMAs 10 11 In markets where duopolies are not legally possible a company may elect to form one by purchasing a station s non license assets such as their physical facilities programming rights and other intellectual property and selling the license itself to a third party sidecar company which is often affiliated with the purchaser which in turn enters into an LMA or a similar agreement with the senior partner The FCC only recognizes ownership of television stations by the ownership of their license and facility ID and not by the ownership of these non license assets this means that the senior partner becomes the de facto owner and operator of the station but the sidecar is still the legal owner 10 11 23 Although the FCC determines a sidecar firm to be an independent entity from the company using it to outsource station operations for licensing purposes the Securities and Exchange Commission does not make such a designation requiring reports on sidecars to be included in a broadcaster s financial statements 24 25 Both Sinclair and Nexstar became infamous for their frequent use of sidecars as part of their expansion and consolidation tactics partnering with companies like Cunningham Broadcasting Deerfield Media Mission Broadcasting and even each other in the case of former virtual duopolies in Harrisburg Pennsylvania between Sinclair owned CBS affiliate WHP TV and Nexstar owned CW affiliate WLYH TV which ended in 2015 amid Sinclair s acquisition of Allbritton Communications which saw WHTM TV sold to Media General to avoid conflicts with WHP and WYLH s license sold to Howard Stirk Holdings 26 27 and Rochester New York between Nexstar owned CBS affiliate WROC TV and Sinclair owned Fox affiliate WUHF which ended in January 2014 after Deerfield Media acquired ABC affiliate WHAM TV 10 11 28 While not to the same wide extent as Sinclair and Nexstar some broadcasters have similar business relationships with specific sidecar companies as partners for these agreements Raycom Media had a similar business relationship with American Spirit Media in markets such as Toledo Ohio where American Spirit Media purchased Fox affiliate WUPW from LIN Media in 2012 with that station s operations being taken over by CBS affiliate WTOL 29 On the other hand two Raycom owned Fox stations WFLX in West Palm Beach and KNIN TV in Boise are managed by Scripps WPTV and KIVI TV respectively 30 31 Gray Television is affiliated with the sidecar Excalibur Broadcasting owned by former Gray executive Don Ray 32 Gray acquired Raycom Media in 2019 giving it control of the American Spirit Media stations There were exceptions including WUPV and KYOU TV which Raycom acquired outright in advance of the purchase WUPW Toledo whose SSA was included in the sale of parent station WTOL to Tegna due to Gray s existing ownership of WTVG 33 and WFXG Augusta which was sold to Lockwood Broadcast Group due to Gray s existing WRDW TV WAGT CD duopoly 34 Granite Broadcasting operated virtual duopolies in Fort Wayne Indiana and Duluth Minnesota with the sidecar Malara Broadcast Group The stations were later sold to Quincy Media and SagamoreHill Broadcasting with Quincy temporarily operating SagamoreHill s stations under an SSA In Fort Wayne Quincy acquired the previous junior partner Malara s ABC affiliate WPTA with SagamoreHill taking NBC affiliate WISE TV instead 35 News Press amp Gazette Company is affiliated with the sidecar VistaWest Media for stations such as KIDK which was previously taken over by NPG under Fisher Communications ownership and KCOY TV under Cowles Publishing Company ownership Both companies are based in St Joseph Missouri 36 37 38 Effects on programming Edit The stations partnered through a sharing agreement may also consolidate their programming operations local newscasts on the junior partner in the LMA if it operated a separate news department before the LMA s formation may be rescheduled or scaled back to prevent direct competition with newscasts airing on the station acting as the senior partner the latter aspect is less common with LMAs involving only stations affiliated with one of the three largest broadcast television networks The stations may share news gathering resources but maintain separate news telecasts that are differentiated by their on air presentation anchors and overall format with varying degrees of autonomy 39 in these cases a seemingly separate newscast on the brokered station in the duopoly may ultimately consist of repackaged news content from the other station 11 Alternatively the stations may consolidate their news programming under a single joint brand 23 40 Redundant staff members are often laid off as part of the consolidation process and the sharing of news content reduces the number of unique editorial voices in the market This in particular is one of the caveats of pushes to ban outsourcing agreements by media consolidation critics who also suggest that LMAs result in a decreased amount of local news coverage on the brokered station 10 11 41 Depending on how the outsourcing agreement is structured as well as how the brokered station is programmed how the stations are consolidated and the amount of news programming featured on the brokered station may vary for example In October 2008 Tribune Broadcasting and Local TV LLC consolidated the operations of their respective CW and Fox affiliates in Denver and St Louis resulting from a groupwide management agreement between both companies 42 43 In Denver CW affiliate KWGN TV moved into Fox affiliate KDVR s facilities in the Speer neighborhood while in St Louis Fox affiliate KTVI despite being the senior partner in the LMA with CW affiliate KPLR moved into the latter station s Maryland Heights studios Both cities were and still are top 25 markets making Denver and St Louis the largest where any English language stations were involved in an LMA however both cities had enough stations to allow a legal duopoly this was not possible with KPLR and KTVI as both were among the four highest rated stations in St Louis at the time placing ahead of ratings challenged ABC affiliate KDNL TV and were large enough to support at least four television news operations Denver had five and St Louis had four news producing stations prior to the formation of the LMA 42 KWGN and KPLR moved The CW s primetime lineup one hour later to 8 00 p m than the network recommended timeslot and shifted their evening newscasts to 7 00 p m weekend editions of the evening newscasts were discontinued with the move KPLR has since expanded its 7 00 p m newscast to Saturday and Sunday evenings to avoid competing with KDVR and KTVI s 9 00 p m newscasts KWGN retained its weekday morning newscast which competes directly with KDVR s morning newscast but canceled its 5 30 p m and later 11 00 a m newscasts In contrast KPLR which had run a primetime newscast for much of its history eventually added hour long midday and late afternoon newscasts 44 45 46 47 48 The two LMA arrangements became legal duopolies in December 2013 once Tribune finalized its acquisition of Local TV 49 50 In 2009 Raycom Media owner of Honolulu based NBC and MyNetworkTV affiliates KHNL and KFVE announced it would take over the operations of local CBS affiliate KGMB then owned by MCG Capital Corporation giving it control of three of the television stations in Hawaii The deal was a complex arrangement which involved trading the non license assets of KFVE such as its call sign programming and network affiliation for those of KGMB effectively placing the station under Raycom ownership but using KFVE s license signal and virtual channel 5 and taking over KFVE which moved to the channel 9 license owned by MCG Capital under a shared services agreement Due to its nature the swap was not a transaction that would require the intervention of the FCC aside from the changing of call signs The three stations were then folded into a shared news operation branded as Hawaii News Now An estimated 68 positions from a total of 198 from the three stations would be eliminated as part of the agreement 23 40 On November 20 2013 MCG Capital filed to sell KFVE to the aforementioned American Spirit Media 51 Following the acquisition of Raycom by Gray Television KFVE s license was sold to Nexstar who relaunched the station as a sister to its Fox affiliate KHON TV 52 53 54 In 2010 the operations of Schurz Communications owned NBC affiliate WAGT in Augusta Georgia were taken over by Media General owned ABC affiliate WJBF TV Both stations were consolidated into new high definition capable facilities constructed on the site of a former Barnes amp Noble store with separate studios for each station and a third shared studio Despite the consolidation the two stations aimed to maintain some autonomy from each other both WAGT and WJBF maintained their own on air identities newsrooms and sales departments within the facility While the newscasts on both stations did share some factual video content they were otherwise produced independently of each other However upon the consolidation most of WAGT s managerial staff were dismissed and other employees were reassigned to different positions 39 55 56 The agreement was unwound after Gray s purchase of the station but briefly reinstated following legal action by Media General 57 After the injunction was struck down Gray re assumed control of WAGT on March 28 2016 adding 5 30 p m and 7 00 p m newscasts exclusive to the station with the remainder simulcast from WRDW 58 59 In 2010 Nexstar announced a new joint news operation under the Eyewitness News title for its consolidated cluster in Utica Rome New York which consists of Nexstar owned Fox and MyNetworkTV affiliates WFXV and WPNY LP and Mission owned ABC affiliate WUTR Unlike the other examples neither station had a pre existing newscast at the time WUTR s original news department was closed in 2003 by previous owner Clear Channel Communications as a cost saving measure and WFXV had never aired local news programming at all Its slate included early and late evening newscasts on WUTR an encore of WUTR s evening newscast on WPNY and a 10 00 p m newscast on WFXV with a fast paced format targeting younger demographics The station s executive vice president Steve Merren who had come from NBC affiliate WKTV which had the sole television news operation in the market prior to the formation of Nexstar s news operation believed that it was important that the community has another source of news We have one newspaper and one news station and the community could benefit from another voice 60 61 62 In Evansville Indiana Mission Broadcasting acquired then independent station WTVW now a CW affiliate in 2011 with its former owner Nexstar Broadcasting retaining operational duties under an SSA WTVW consolidated news operations with ABC affiliate WEHT for which Nexstar traded WTVW to Mission in exchange for acquiring WEHT from Gilmore Broadcasting Corporation and had its newscast output reduced through the reductions of its weekday morning newscast from four hours to two and its 6 00 p m newscast except on Sundays where it remained one hour from one hour to 30 minutes leaving only a two hour morning newscast half hour noon and 6 30 p m newscasts and an hour long newscast at 9 00 p m Both stations were then folded into a shared news operation branded as Eyewitness News 63 64 In November 2011 in the Tucson Arizona market Belo relinquished the operations of its Fox and MyNetworkTV duopoly KMSB and KTTU to Raycom Media Operations of the two stations along with production of KMSB s 9 00 p m newscast were assumed by Raycom s CBS station KOLD TV Belo Media Operations president Peter L Diaz touted that the consolidation would result in better produced increased news programming for the Tucson market citing Raycom s addition of a locally produced morning newscast to KMSB and the upgrade of KMSB s news programming to high definition as part of the transition Although ruling out the need to do so in other markets Diaz noted that the agreements allowed us to increase our news product that we couldn t afford to do otherwise The consolidation resulted in layoffs for almost all of the two stations employees aside from advertising sales staff which remained employed by Belo but worked from KOLD s facilities 65 The acquisition of Belo by Gannett in 2013 had few effects on the virtual triopoly although the stations licenses were sold to third parties to satisfy newspaper cross ownership restrictions Raycom still operates the stations but their sales departments remained operated by Gannett 66 The licenses were in turn sold to Tegna the spin out of Gannett s broadcasting division in December 2015 14 The 2012 sale of Newport Television led to the formation of two full power virtual quadropolies In Little Rock Arkansas Nexstar and Mission Broadcasting formed a virtual quadropoly consisting of two duopolies NBC station KARK TV and MyNetworkTV station KARZ TV owned by Nexstar along with Fox station KLRT TV and CW station KASN owned by Mission operated by Nexstar under a local marketing agreement All four stations were consolidated into KARK s facilities 30 employees were laid off as part of the consolidation 67 As a result KLRT reduced its weeknight 5 00 p m newscast from one hour to 30 minutes limiting it to the 5 30 half hour and dropped its 10 00 p m newscast while adding a two hour weekday morning newscast and retaining its existing hour long newscast at 9 00 p m 67 Sinclair formed a similar arrangement in Mobile Alabama between its existing Pensacola duopoly of ABC affiliate WEAR TV and MyNetworkTV affiliate WFGX and the newly acquired Mobile duopoly of NBC affiliate WPMI and independent station WJTC owned by Deerfield Media However the stations were not consolidated and maintain their own studio facilities news departments and staff WEAR and WPMI also produce competing 9 00 p m newscasts for their respective duopoly partners 68 69 70 Reaction and government action EditIn February 2001 Clear Channel Communications subsidiary Citicasters was fined 25 000 for its use of time brokerage agreements and litigation for unlawfully controlling Youngstown Ohio area radio station WBTJ 101 9 FM now WYLR the company had also been the target of complaints for using KFJO FM to rebroadcast KSJO after it had nominally sold KFJO to minority owned interests 71 72 73 74 In 2009 the Media Council of Hawaii complained to the FCC about Raycom s Hawaii News Now operation stating that it would directly reduce the diversity of local voices in a community by replacing independent newscasts on the brokered station with those of the brokering station In response the FCC stated it would begin to investigate into the matter 11 23 In 2011 after temporarily losing its Fox affiliation for WFFT TV to a subchannel of WISE TV due to a reverse compensation dispute Nexstar ironically given its use of similar practices in other markets 11 filed an antitrust lawsuit against the station s managing partner Granite Broadcasting arguing that it had built a monopoly on local advertising sales by having effective control of the outlets for five major networks ABC and MyNetworkTV on WPTA and NBC Fox and The CW on WISE TV owned by Malara Broadcast Group and operated under agreements by Granite 75 The lawsuit was settled in February 2013 via mutual agreement after which the Fox affiliation was given back to WFFT 76 Acquisitions Edit Gannett acquisition of Belo Edit Belo Tower in Dallas Texas Gannett Company s 2013 acquisition of Belo was opposed by organizations such as the American Cable Association and Free Press due to Gannett s plans to use LMAs and two shell companies owned by former Belo and Fisher Communications executives respectively Sander Media and Tucker Operating Co to dodge FCC newspaper cross ownership restrictions in Louisville Phoenix Portland Oregon and Tucson Although Gannett contended that the arrangements were legal Free Press president Craig Aaron stated that the FCC shouldn t let Gannett break the rules Media consolidation results in fewer journalists in the newsroom and fewer opinions on the airwaves Concentrating media outlets in the hands of just a few companies benefits only the companies themselves The deal would have given Gannett a virtual triopoly in Phoenix consisting of its NBC station KPNX independent station KTVK and CW affiliate KASW In Tucson Fox affiliate KMSB and MyNetworkTV affiliate KTTU were already operated by Raycom Media s CBS affiliate KOLD TV under a shared services agreement established under Belo ownership but Gannett would still handle advertising sales for the stations 66 In December 2013 the U S Department of Justice blocked Gannett from using an agreement with Sander Media to operate CBS affiliate KMOV in St Louis alongside its own NBC station KSDK and ordered Gannett to sell KMOV Even though Gannett planned to operate KMOV separately from KSDK the Department ruled the agreement to be a violation of antitrust law as it would reduce competition for advertising sales 77 Following the closure of the Belo purchase Meredith Corporation announced a deal to purchase KMOV along with KTVK and KASW As Meredith would have a duopoly between KTVK and its Phoenix CBS affiliate KPHO TV KASW was to be sold to SagamoreHill Broadcasting and operated by Meredith under an LMA 12 66 78 As a result of the FCC s scrutiny on any new station sharing agreements on October 23 2014 Meredith would backtrack on this plan and instead sell KASW to the Nexstar Broadcasting Group which would operate the station independently of KTVK and KPHO 79 Following Gannett s split into independent broadcasting and publishing companies Tegna Inc the owner of Gannett s stations following the split bought back the licenses to the Sander Media stations placing them back under its full control 14 Sinclair acquisition of Allbritton Edit As part of its planned acquisition of Allbritton Communications Sinclair originally planned to sell its existing stations in three markets Charleston South Carolina Birmingham Alabama and Harrisburg Pennsylvania where Allbritton already owned stations but continue to operate them under local marketing agreements WABM and WTTO in Birmingham and WHP TV in Harrisburg were to be sold to Deerfield Media and WMMP in Charleston was to be sold to Howard Stirk Holdings a broadcasting company owned by conservative pundit Armstrong Williams 80 Howard Stirk Holdings was first established in 2013 with its acquisition of two conflicting stations in Sinclair s earlier acquisition of Barrington Broadcasting 81 In December 2013 FCC Video Division Chief Barbara Kreisman sent a letter demanding information from the Sinclair Broadcast Group on the financial aspects of its sidecar operations and warned that in the three aforementioned markets the proposed transactions would result in the elimination of the grandfathered status of certain local marketing agreements and thus cause the transactions to violate our local TV ownership rules 80 It was asserted that the deal might only be legal if the affected stations were operated under shared services agreements 80 82 Sinclair restructured the deal in March 2014 choosing to sell WHP TV WMMP and WABM and terminate an SSA with the Cunningham owned Fox affiliate WTAT in Charleston to acquire the Allbritton owned stations in those markets WCIV WHTM TV and WBMA LD while also creating a new duopoly between the ABC and CW affiliates in Birmingham as well as foregoing any operational or financial agreements with the buyers of the stations being sold to other parties 83 84 In May 2014 Sinclair disclosed in an FCC filling that it was unable to find buyers for the three affected stations requiring changes to its transaction 85 In Harrisburg Sinclair chose to retain WHP TV and divest WHTM to Media General 86 However in Charleston and Birmingham the company proposed to shut down stations entirely rather than selling them to other buyers that would also handle their operational responsibilities so it could maintain legal duopolies surrendering the licenses for WCIV and the full powered repeaters of WBMA LD WJSU and WCFT and moving their ABC programming to Sinclair s existing stations WMMP and WABM respectively which would shift their existing MyNetworkTV programming to digital subchannels 85 After nearly a year of delays Sinclair s deal to acquire Allbritton was approved by the FCC on July 24 2014 87 FCC limits on joint sales agreements for television stations Edit In response to criticism of the virtual duopolies and sharing agreements the FCC began to consider potential changes to address these loopholes In March 2013 the Commission first tabled a proposal that would make joint sales agreements count the same as ownership 88 In January 2014 town hall meeting FCC chairman Tom Wheeler disclosed that he planned to place more scrutiny on the use of LMA style agreements and shell companies stating that there were a couple of references in a couple of recent decisions in which we ve said that we re going to do things differently going forward on what were called these shell corporations Later that month it was reported that the FCC had placed all pending acquisitions involving the use of shell companies on hold so the Commission could discuss changes to its policies Among the deals affected by this decision included the aforementioned Sinclair Allbritton purchase 89 90 On March 6 2014 the FCC announced that it would hold a vote on March 31 on a proposal to ban joint sales agreements involving television stations outright making them attributable to FCC ownership limits if the senior partner sells 15 or more of advertising time of a competing junior partner station in the JSA the ban applies to both existing sharing agreements under such a structure as well as pending station transactions that include a JSA Station owners would be given a two year grace period to unwind or modify joint sales agreements in violation of the policy coordinated retransmission consent negotiations between two of the four highest rated stations in a single market would also be barred under the proposal Wheeler also proposed an expedited process to review joint sales agreements on a case by case basis granting a waiver of the rules if a broadcaster can prove a particular joint sales agreement arrangement serves the public interest 91 92 On March 12 2014 the FCC Media Bureau released a notice that it would further analyze television station transactions that include sharing agreements particularly those that include a purchase option that may counter any incentive the licensee has to increase the value of the station since the licensee may be unlikely to realize that increased value 93 Under the new provisions broadcasters must demonstrate in their transaction applications as to how such deals would serve the public interest 93 The National Association of Broadcasters NAB which along with station groups such as Sinclair Broadcast Group have disapproved of the proposal to ban JSAs presented a compromise proposal in which the brokered licensee in a sharing agreement would retain control over at least 85 percent of the station s programming maintain at least 70 percent of ad sales revenue and maintain at least 20 percent of station value in the license itself 94 FCC commissioner Ajit Pai and Gordon Smith president of the NAB were also opposed to the new rules on joint sales agreements believing that they would discourage the ownership of television stations by minority owned companies 87 95 Tom Wheeler however proposed the restrictions in the hopes of encouraging more women and minorities to own stations due to the ongoing consolidation in the television industry through company mergers and sharing agreements 96 On March 31 2014 the FCC voted 3 2 to approve the proposed ban on joint sales agreements and voted 5 0 to approve the proposed ban on coordinated retransmission consent negotiations between two of the four highest rated stations within a given market the JSA ban went into effect on June 19 2014 97 Under the restrictions the FCC would rule on waivers to maintain select existing JSAs within 90 days of the application s filing The FCC also began a request for comment on policies to address other agreements such as shared services agreements 2 3 98 The prohibition on television JSAs had been proposed as early as 2004 a year after the FCC voted to treat JSAs between radio stations as duopolies Despite this fact broadcasting companies criticized the ban accusing the Commission of using it as a move to encourage participation in a spectrum incentive auction then set to occur in 2015 and stating that the ban would place them at a disadvantage during retransmission consent negotiations with pay television providers 99 100 On December 19 2015 as a rider to the federal budget the grace period for unwinding or modifying existing JSAs was extended to 10 years 101 On May 25 2016 the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit struck down the restrictions on joint sales agreements ruling that the FCC cannot manipulate its ownership rules without in the previous four years fulfilling its obligation to review the rule and determine whether it is in the public interest 102 On November 16 2017 under the Trump administration the FCC voted in favor of no longer having JSAs attributable to ownership 16 Divestment and subchannel consolidation of stations Edit The increased scrutiny being imposed by the FCC regarding local marketing shared services and joint sales agreements have led to more drastic measures by broadcasting companies attempting to use them in acquisitions in 2014 two broadcasting companies declared intents to shut acquired stations down entirely and consolidate their programming onto existing stations through multicasting rather than attempting to use sidecars and sharing agreements or selling them to other parties that would assume full responsibility of their day to day operations 103 104 In May 2014 Sinclair informed the FCC that it was unable to find buyers for WABM or WMMP the company s MyNetworkTV stations in Birmingham Alabama and Charleston South Carolina that it planned to sell in its purchase of Allbritton Communications In Birmingham the company proposed surrendering the licenses of WCFT TV and WJSU TV the two full powered satellites of ABC affiliate WBMA LD converting WABM into a full powered satellite of WBMA LD and moving its existing MyNetworkTV programming to a digital subchannel of WABM although the WBMA LD simulcast was placed on WABM s subchannel instead while MyNetworkTV programming was retained on its main channel Similarly in Charleston Sinclair planned to surrender WCIV s license and move its ABC affiliation and programming to WMMP In both cases Sinclair believed that its own stations had superior technical facilities than those of the stations it intends to surrender 85 104 Sinclair was able to retain WBMA LD in any event as the FCC does not impose any ownership limits on low power stations 105 On June 13 2014 Gray Television announced that it would shutter six stations and consolidate existing programming onto subchannels of Gray owned stations in their respective market Unlike Sinclair however Gray stated that it would sell the licenses of the shuttered stations to minority owned broadcasters in collaboration with the Minority Media and Telecommunications Council under the condition that they would operate them independently from other stations in the market and without the use of any sharing agreements All six of the stations were owned by companies other than Gray but their non license assets are either owned by Gray or were operated by stations now owned by Gray under agreements Gray would operate the affected stations under LMAs until the sales and consolidation are complete Aside from one most of the stations involved in these changes were related to Gray s acquisition of stations from Hoak Media Three of these stations were immediately shut down the same day while the remainder remained operated by Gray until the sales were completed 103 106 107 Gray announced buyers for the stations on August 27 2014 108 The six stations affected by Gray s move included KHAS TV Hastings Lincoln Nebraska previously owned by Hoak On June 13 2014 KHAS TV was shut down and its NBC programming was moved to the primary channel of KSNB TV channel 4 Gray had bought KSNB under a failing station waiver to form a duopoly with CBS station KOLN KGIN and operated the station as a MyNetworkTV MeTV affiliate with local programming focused on central Nebraska this existing programming was moved to KSNB DT2 upon the transition 109 110 On August 27 2014 the station was sold to Legacy Broadcasting 108 On May 21 2018 Gray agreed to acquire KNHL from Legacy Broadcasting for 475 000 becoming a satellite station of KSNB TV 111 KNDX KXND Bismarck Minot North Dakota owned by Prime Cities Broadcasting which asked the FCC to dismiss the sale of the stations to Excalibur Broadcasting a sidecar owned by former Gray executive Don Ray 32 which would have made them sisters to the NBC North Dakota chain being acquired from Hoak by Gray 112 Gray acquired the stations non license assets on May 1 2014 113 both stations were then taken off the air on June 13 2014 with Fox programming being moved to subchannels of the NBC North Dakota stations KMOT KQCD TV and KFYR TV 107 On August 27 2014 the stations were sold to Legacy Broadcasting 108 KXJB TV and KAQY Fargo North Dakota and Columbia Monroe Louisiana El Dorado Arkansas both owned by Parker Broadcasting and operated by Hoak now Gray stations Both were originally to be sold to Excalibur Broadcasting 113 On August 27 2014 KXJB TV was sold to Major Market Broadcasting and KAQY to Legacy Broadcasting 108 KJCT Grand Junction Colorado acquired by Excalibur in August 2013 from News Press amp Gazette Company and taken over by Gray owned KKCO following the acquisition 32 On August 27 2014 the station was sold to Chang Media Group and was later re launched as Cozi TV station KGBY 108 114 Following the approval of Sinclair s purchase of Allbritton commissioner Ajit Pai further criticized the FCC s new policies and its endorsement of Sinclair s proposal to shut down stations to comply with them Describing the three Allbritton stations as being victims of the crackdown against joint sales agreements he stated regarding WCIV that apparently the Commission believes that it is better for that station to go out of business than for Howard Stirk Holdings to own the station and participate in a joint sales agreement with Sinclair I strongly disagree And so too I ll bet would consumers in Charleston 87 In September 2014 Sinclair backtracked on its original plans and reached deals to sell WCIV WCFT and WJSU s license assets to Howard Stirk Holdings for 50 000 each and lease them studio space pending FCC approval Unlike Howard Stirk Holdings other stations they are operated and programmed independently and Sinclair did not enter into any agreements to operate the stations on Stirk s behalf 115 116 117 118 In Quincy Newspapers acquisition of Granite Broadcasting s remaining stations the acquisition was briefly re structured to have Malara Broadcast Group which served as a virtual duopoly partner for Granite with WISE TV NBC Fort Wayne and KDLH TV Duluth CBS retain the stations and their current agreements with WPTA and KBJR TV in lieu of having them sold to SagamoreHill Broadcasting The acquisition was restructured in July 2015 to again have SagamoreHill Broadcasting acquire the two stations but have their current SSAs wound down within nine months Following the end of the SSA the two stations retained The CW as independently run stations with their remaining affiliations moved to subchannels of KBJR and WPTA 119 120 121 Quincy similarly wound down an SSA in Peoria Illinois with Sinclair owned WHOI by trading its South Bend Fox affiliation previously held by WSJV TV to Sinclair where it moved to a subchannel of WSBT TV in exchange for WHOI s ABC and CW affiliations which moved to subchannels of WEEK TV 122 123 In 2018 Quincy re purchased WISE and KDLH under an assertion that both stations were not within the top 4 of their respective markets 124 125 WAGT dispute Edit Outside Television Park the facilities which were shared by WJBF and WAGT In February 2016 Gray Television acquired Schurz Communications stations including Augusta Georgia s WAGT As Gray could not own both WAGT and its existing CBS affiliate WRDW TV as a legal duopoly Gray proposed the sale of WAGT s broadcast spectrum during the incentive auction and for WAGT to go silent upon completion of the deal so the company would not be running more than one of the top four stations in the market 126 Gray also requested special temporary authority for WAGT s signal to be replaced on its existing technical facilities and UHF channel 30 by the co owned low power station WRDW CD low power stations are not subject to ownership caps and restrictions on duopolies 105 127 The FCC however required that Gray continue to operate WAGT as a separate station through the end of the auction and not enter into any joint sales agreements 126 Upon the closure of the sale Gray unwound the shared services and joint sales agreements that Schurz had established with WJBF TV and Media General and replaced its previous news programs with simulcasts from WRDW 128 129 Gray also accused WJBF of refusing to agree to a smooth transition of personnel from WAGT as WAGT s employees fall under the employment of Media General due to the SSA 130 On February 26 2016 Media General obtained a preliminary injunction against Gray for violating the SSA and JSA which required that Gray return control of WAGT to Media General and forbade Gray from selling WAGT in the spectrum incentive auction The company accused Gray of using the spectrum auction and sale of the station to exit the agreements illegitimately as they were to last through 2020 and apply to any future owner of WAGT Gray attempted to block the injunction by arguing that its actions were required in order to comply with the FCC s prohibition of joint sales agreements but was denied 131 132 Media General took back control of WAGT on March 7 2016 57 On March 10 2016 FCC Deputy General Counsel David Gossett announced that the Commission would investigate Media General s actions as possibly being in violation of Section 310 d of the Communications Act Gossett argued that by legally blocking Gray s participation in the spectrum auction Media General had sought injunctive relief that interferes with a licensee s ultimate control of a station He also stated that the FCC could consider a license revocation hearing against Media General under Section 312 of the Communications Act 133 134 On March 23 2016 the Supreme Court of Georgia struck down the injunction without addressing the litigation and Gray took back control of WAGT 135 On July 13 2016 Media General was issued a 700 000 fine by the FCC 136 WAGT s spectrum sold for 40 763 036 137 DirecTV lawsuit Edit In March 2023 DirecTV sued Nexstar Media Group alleging that it was conspiring with the sidecar companies Mission Broadcasting and White Knight Broadcasting to manipulate retransmission fees for its stations The company which had been in a carriage dispute with Mission and White Knight since October 2022 stated that the companies effectively relinquished decision making authority to Nexstar which has served as the ringleader of a conspiracy to harm competition and violate the antitrust laws 138 Internationally EditCanada Edit Local marketing agreements are effectively prohibited under the regulations of the CRTC which require that all broadcast undertakings be operated in fact by the licensee itself 139 Rogers Media and Newcap Broadcasting maintained a joint sales agreement pertaining to CHNO FM in Sudbury Ontario but community interests and the lobby group Friends of Canadian Broadcasting presented substantial evidence to the CRTC that in practice the agreement was a de facto LMA going significantly beyond advertising sales into program production and news gathering In early 2005 the CRTC ordered the agreement to cease 140 For a time CKEY FM in Fort Erie Ontario had a JSA with Citadel Communications to handle advertising sales for the station under a revenue sharing agreement integrating it with its cluster in nearby Buffalo New York In an associated agreement the station also contracted Citadel employees to produce some of its programming Due to the structure of this JSA and because the aforementioned programming was overseen by local producers the CRTC deemed that the agreement did not equate to a transfer of effective control of the station to Citadel and thus complied with its regulations taking greater issue with the amount of locally reflective programming carried by the station 141 139 Rogers Media holds a time brokerage agreement with CBC Television to air Hockey Night in Canada on the network as part of its exclusive rights to the National Hockey League in order to maintain the long running franchise and the league s presence on CBC In exchange for assigning commercial advertising time to Rogers the CBC does not pay a rights fee and also receives advertising time for its own programming during Hockey Night broadcasts The CBC also initially received payments for use of some of its staff and its Toronto studios 142 To legally assign responsibility to Rogers the broadcasts are considered to be the programming of a CRTC licensed television network owned by Rogers Sportsnet subsidiary which has an affiliation with all of CBC Television s stations Despite the legal nature of this arrangement the broadcasts still contain CBC Television continuity and branding 143 Philippines Edit In 2008 the Filipino Associated Broadcasting Company leased its airtime to the Malaysian broadcaster Media Prima through the local subsidiary MPB Primedia similar to an LMA with MPB Primedia providing entertainment programming and ABC handling news programming and operations Soon afterward ABC and Media Prima were sued by rival media company GMA for attempting to use the partnership to skirt laws requiring domestic ownership of broadcasters In response ABC s media relations head Pat Marcelo Magbanua reiterated that the subsidiary was a Filipino company which was self registered and Filipino run 144 The concerns became moot in 2010 when Media Prima announced it would divest its ownership in the network to PLDT s broadcasting subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings 145 Throughout the last week of June 2011 several plugs with the statement Si Pangga Dreaming were heard on the then Interactive Broadcast Media owned DWET FM 106 7 mHz then licensed in Quezon City which had just ended its broadcast under the previous smooth jazz format Dream FM Later on it was revealed that Ultrasonic Broadcasting System a radio network owned by the SYSU Group of Companies has started operating the station under LMA as contemporary MOR Energy FM on Dream 106 7 later changed to 106 7 Energy FM once the station s eventual sale to UBS was completed The term airtime lease is also used by other media entities particularly those from larger media companies that has a lack of obtaining its broadcast franchise from the Congress while others are owned by various herbal supplement manufacturers Only Brigada Mass Media Corporation and Bandera News Philippines operate a handful of radio stations under the same method See also EditConcentration of media ownership Local News ServiceReferences Edit FCC Denies Waiver Bid Rules Nassau Must End JSA Radio Ink MediaSpan Group August 12 2008 Archived from the original on December 28 2013 Retrieved December 27 2013 a b Doug Halonen March 31 2014 FCC Puts Kibosh on New JSA Deals TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia Retrieved March 31 2014 a b c Doug Halonen March 31 2014 FCC Blocks Joint Retrans Negotiations TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia Retrieved March 31 2014 a b c d Christopher H Sterling 2010 The Concise Encyclopedia of American radio Concise ed New York City New York Routledge ISBN 9780415995337 Eric Klinenberg January 9 2007 Fighting for Air The Battle to Control America s Media Macmillan Publishers pp 101 105 ISBN 9781429923606 PUSH pushing FCC over Sinclair Glencairn Broadcasting amp Cable HighBeam Research July 13 1998 Archived from the original on June 10 2014 Retrieved December 13 2013 Glencairn s dicey LMAs Broadcasting amp Cable HighBeam Research March 29 1999 Archived from the original on June 10 2014 Retrieved February 10 2015 FCC fines Sinclair for Glencairn control Broadcasting amp Cable December 10 2001 Retrieved February 10 2015 Steve Lovelady November 27 2011 TV Shared Services Agreements Danger Ahead CommLawBlog Fletcher Heald amp Hildreth PLC Retrieved March 10 2014 a b c d e f g Kim McAvoy June 9 2010 Virtual Duopolies Coming Under Fire TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia pp 1 2 Retrieved May 30 2012 a b c d e f g h i j Brian Stelter May 28 2012 You Can Change the Channel but Local News Is the Same The New York Times p A1 Retrieved May 30 2012 a b Katy Bachman July 25 2013 Public Interest Groups Cable Companies Oppose Gannett Belo Merger Adweek Prometheus Global Media Sarah J Pawloski July 2 2013 Daily Press owner Tribune Co to buy 19 TV stations including WTKR Daily Press Archived from the original on July 7 2013 Retrieved July 2 2013 a b c Tegna Closes On Sander TV Stations Purchase TVNewsCheck December 3 2015 Retrieved December 3 2015 Roger Yu April 21 2015 Gannett to change name to TEGNA amid print unit spinoff USA Today Gannett Company Retrieved April 21 2015 a b FCC Deregulates Broadcast Ownership Broadcasting amp Cable November 17 2017 Retrieved November 17 2017 Dave Walker January 15 2014 Harry Connick Jr may be a player in the 10 p m race between WWL WVUE both under new management NOLA com The Times Picayune Advance Publications Retrieved January 22 2014 Dave Walker November 20 2013 WVUE enters into shared services agreement with Raycom Media NOLA com The Times Picayune Advance Publications Retrieved November 20 2013 Harry A Jessell April 4 2017 Raycom Buys WVUE New Orleans For 51 8M TVNewsCheck NewsCheck Media Retrieved April 4 2017 FCC 323 Ownership Report for Commercial Broadcast Stations Federal Communications Commission March 2013 Retrieved June 19 2013 Lance Venta September 9 2012 WLYK Relaunches as Adult Contemporary RadioInsight RadioBB Networks Retrieved March 9 2014 Permit to Deliver Programs to Foreign Broadcast Stations Federal Communications Commission January 8 2009 Retrieved March 31 2014 a b c d Erika Engle August 20 2009 Execs explain TV swap but some see it as blurry Honolulu Star Bulletin Oahu Publications Retrieved December 30 2013 Phil Verveer March 6 2014 How the Sidecar Business Model Works Federal Communications Commission Retrieved April 2 2014 David Nicklaus December 20 2013 KMOV ruling may slow use of TV station sidecar deals St Louis Post Dispatch Lee Enterprises Retrieved April 2 2014 Notice of Non Renewal of Time Brokerage Agreement of WLYH TV Lancaster PA December 11 2015 Retrieved March 4 2016 Second Amendment To Assignment October 15 2015 Retrieved March 4 2016 9 1 TBA At the closing of the Agreement Assignor and Assignee shall assume the rights under that certain Time Brokerage Agreement dated October 31 1995 the TBA by and between Nexstar as successor in interest to Gateway Communications Inc and Assignor as successor in interest to Clear Channel Television Inc provided that the TBA shall be terminated and shall no longer be in effect as of January 1 2016 Matthew Daneman October 8 2013 WROC out 13WHAM in on Fox Democrat and Chronicle Gannett Company Retrieved December 27 2013 LIN spins Toledo TV to Raycom partner Radio amp Television Business Report Streamline RBR January 11 2012 Archived from the original on January 17 2012 Retrieved January 12 2012 Raycom Closes On KNIN Boise Purchase TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia October 1 2015 Retrieved March 13 2013 WPTV In Expanded SSA Deal With WFLX TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia March 11 2011 Retrieved March 13 2016 a b c Staff writers August 2 2013 News Press amp Gazette Gets 12M For KJCT TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia Retrieved August 4 2013 WTOL to be sold to Tegna Inc as part of deal worth 105M Toledo Blade Retrieved July 3 2019 Aycock Jason August 20 2018 Gray sets divestitures in eight more markets for Raycom deal Seeking Alpha Retrieved August 20 2018 Staff writers February 11 2014 Quincy Buying Stations From Granite Malara TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia Retrieved February 11 2014 Application For Consent To Assignment Of Broadcast Station Construction Permit Or License FCC Retrieved July 22 2013 KCOY to share services with KEYT parent company under planned station purchases Santa Maria Times September 23 2013 Retrieved September 24 2013 Application For Consent To Assignment Of Broadcast Station Construction Permit Or License CDBS Public Access Federal Communications Commission Retrieved January 13 2014 a b Arthur Greenwald July 26 2012 Facility Helps Duop TVs Keep Own Identities TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia Retrieved September 11 2013 a b Erika Engle August 18 2009 68 to lose jobs in local TV agreement sources say Honolulu Star Bulletin Oahu Publications Archived from the original on August 21 2009 Retrieved December 26 2013 Erika Engle December 17 2010 Following Five 0 proves beneficial for late news Honolulu Star Advertiser Oahu Publications Retrieved December 27 2013 a b Harry A Jessell September 16 2008 Denver St Louis To Get Fox CW Duops TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia Retrieved July 26 2014 Tribune and Local TV To Form Broadcast Management Company Press release Tribune Company December 20 2007 Archived from the original on December 23 2007 Retrieved December 21 2007 Joanne Ostrow March 18 2009 Channel 2 shuffles primetime The Denver Post Digital First Media Retrieved July 26 2014 Fox31 boosts early evening news to an hour Denver Business Journal American City Business Journals January 6 2009 Katy Bachman August 25 2008 CW s KPLR TV Changes Times Expands News Adweek Prometheus Global Media Michael Malone February 27 2009 KPLR Launches Noon News Broadcasting amp Cable NewBay Media Gail Pennington September 3 2010 Off the LA freeway Patrick Clark is back home at Ch 11 St Louis Post Dispatch Lee Enterprises Retrieved July 26 2014 FCC OKs Tribune Co s agreement to buy Local TV Holdings Crain s Chicago Business Crain Communications December 20 2013 Retrieved July 26 2014 Tribune Closes Acquisition of Local TV Holdings Press release Tribune Company December 27 2013 Archived from the original on December 28 2013 Retrieved July 26 2014 FCC 315 Application for Consent to Transfer Control of Entity Holding Broadcast Station Construction Permit or License Federal Communications Commission October 2012 Retrieved July 26 2014 Harry A Jessell November 8 2018 Nexstar Doubling Up In Honolulu TVNewsCheck NewsCheck Media Nexstar s Quiet Hawaiian Duopoly Play Radio Television Business Report Streamline RBR Inc November 8 2018 Retrieved November 9 2018 Andrew Gomes November 3 2018 KGMB KHNL KFVE and KHON linked in sale Honolulu Star Advertiser Oahu Publications Inc Retrieved November 9 2018 LaTina Emerson December 2 2010 WBBQ other stations to move to new locations The Augusta Chronicle Morris Communications Retrieved December 5 2010 LaTina Emerson December 30 2009 WJBF WAGT negotiating with on air personnel The Augusta Chronicle Morris Communications Retrieved December 5 2010 a b Corporate battle over WAGT TV unresolved as judge sets another hearing The Augusta Chronicle March 4 2016 Retrieved March 8 2016 Gray Producing Newscast on WAGT TVSpy Retrieved March 29 2016 WRDW Simulcasting News on WAGT Again TVSpy Retrieved March 29 2016 Dan Miner March 31 2011 Local news coming to ABC and FOX in Utica and Rome Utica Observer Dispatch Gatehouse Media Retrieved March 21 2014 Marques Phillips April 16 2010 Company has not had news since 2003 Utica Daily News Townsquare Media Archived from the original on April 20 2010 Retrieved March 21 2014 Utica s WUTR to Revive Local News Operation CNYRadio com March 31 2011 Retrieved March 21 2014 Jacob Newkirk November 22 2011 Big changes coming to News 25 and Local 7 Evansville Courier amp Press Journal Communications Retrieved November 28 2011 Jacob Newkirk November 29 2011 Nexstar announces anchors expanded Local news on WTVW WEHT Evansville Courier amp Press Journal Communications Retrieved November 29 2011 Belo Turning Over KMSB KTTU To KOLD TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia November 15 2011 Retrieved September 21 2014 a b c David Hatfield June 13 2013 Little change on Tucson TV expected from Belo s sale to Gannett Inside Tucson Business Retrieved June 13 2013 a b Kate Knable January 29 2013 Almost 30 Lose Jobs at KARK KLRT as TV Owners Consolidate Arkansas Business Arkansas Business Publishing Group Ellen Mitchell July 19 2012 Sinclair adds 2 more Gulf Coast TV stations to stable WPMI and WJTC AL com Alabama Media Group Retrieved March 28 2014 Christopher M Blanton August 8 2013 WPMI to produce newscasts for WJTC Florida News Center Press release Retrieved March 28 2014 Christopher M Blanton July 31 2013 WEAR to produce new newscasts for WFGX Florida s News Center Retrieved March 28 2014 Citicasters Co v Stop 26 Riverbend Inc PDF Ohio Seventh District Court of Appeals May 2 2002 Archived from the original PDF on February 15 2012 Retrieved July 27 2014 Alan Korn October 28 2005 Petition to Deny Renewal PDF Media Alliance Archived from the original PDF on February 7 2006 Retrieved March 22 2014 Brad Kava May 8 2001 Biggest radio mogul bending rules to get bigger San Jose Mercury News MediaNews Group Archived from the original on May 22 2013 Retrieved March 22 2014 In the Matter of Citicasters Co Notice of Apparent Liability for Forfeiture Federal Communications Commission February 13 2001 Retrieved March 22 2014 Nexstar Files Antitrust Suit Against Granite TVNewsCheck July 25 2011 Retrieved November 15 2015 Nexstar Granite Settle Antitrust Lawsuit Returning Fox Affiliation to Fort Wayne s WFFT TVSpy Adweek Blog Network Retrieved November 15 2015 John Eggerton December 16 2013 Justice Sander Can t Keep KMOV Broadcasting amp Cable NewBay Media Retrieved December 27 2013 Staff writers December 23 2013 Meredith Buying Three Stations from Gannett TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia Retrieved December 23 2013 Nexstar Buying KASW Phoenix For 68M TVNewsCheck October 23 2014 Retrieved February 10 2015 a b c Doug Halonen December 6 2013 FCC Targets Sinclair Sidecar Deals In 3 Mkts TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia Retrieved December 7 2013 Armstrong Williams becomes largest black owner of TV stations in America The Washington Times Retrieved April 10 2017 Keach Hagey December 6 2013 FCC Asks Sinclair to Revise Plans to Use Sidecar Companies The Wall Street Journal Dow Jones amp Company Retrieved December 7 2013 Kevin Eck March 21 2014 Sinclair Offers to Sell Stations Ahead of FCC Decision TVSpy Mediabistro Retrieved July 26 2014 Sinclair Proposes Restructuring of Allbritton Transaction in Order To Meet Objections of the Federal Communications Commission Press release Baltimore PR Newswire March 20 2014 Retrieved July 26 2014 via The Wall Street Journal a b c Harry A Jessell May 29 2014 Sinclair Giving Up 3 Stations To Appease FCC TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia Retrieved May 30 2014 Staff writer June 23 2014 Media General Buying WHTM For 83 4M TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia Retrieved June 23 2014 a b c John Eggerton July 24 2014 FCC Approves Sinclair Allbritton Deal Broadcasting amp Cable NewBay Media Retrieved July 24 2014 Doug Halonen March 5 2013 FCC s Pai JSA Overhaul Plan Still In Play TVNewsCheck NewsCheckGroup Retrieved March 6 2013 Doug Halonen January 23 2014 Report Wheeler Putting Brakes on SSAs TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia Retrieved January 24 2014 Doug Halonen January 10 2014 Wheeler Vows To Take Closer Look at SSAs TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia Retrieved January 24 2014 Doug Halonen March 6 2014 Wheeler Moves To End Sharing Agreements TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia Retrieved July 26 2014 Roger Yu March 6 2014 FCC proposes to curb TV stations joint sales deals USA Today Gannett Company a b Doug Halonen March 12 2014 FCC To Scrutinize Station Sales with SSAs TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia Retrieved July 26 2014 Doug Halonen March 14 2014 NAB Proposes JSA Compromise Plan TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia Retrieved July 26 2014 Katy Bachman March 6 2014 FCC Takes Aim at TV Joint Sales Deals Adweek Retrieved August 11 2014 Wheeler s Diversity Claim Is A Fantasy TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia March 28 2014 Retrieved August 11 2014 Media Bureau Announces the Effective Date of the Television Joint Sales Agreement Attribution Rule PDF Federal Communications Commission June 18 2014 Archived from the original PDF on July 27 2014 Retrieved June 18 2014 Ted Johnson March 31 2014 FCC Votes to Bar Stations from Jointly Selling Ad Time Variety Penske Media Corporation Doug Halonen April 7 2014 FCC s Lake FCC Not At War Over JSAs TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia Retrieved April 7 2014 Bill McConnell August 3 2004 FCC May Tighten Joint Sales Rules Broadcasting amp Cable NewBay Media Retrieved April 7 2014 Congress Passes Spending Bill with JSA Grandfathering Rider Broadcasting amp Cable December 18 2015 Retrieved December 25 2015 Miller Mark K May 25 2016 Court Vacates FCC s Ban On JSAs TVNewsCheck Retrieved May 25 2016 a b Carl Marcucci June 13 2014 Gray closes Hoak deal completes refinancing Radio amp Television Business Report Streamline RBR Retrieved July 26 2014 a b John Eggerton May 29 2014 Sinclair Proposes Surrendering Three Licenses to Get Allbritton Deal Done Broadcasting amp Cable NewBay Media Retrieved May 30 2014 a b Low Power Television LPTV Service Federal Communications Commission February 24 2014 Retrieved July 29 2014 Staff writers November 20 2013 Gray Buying Hoak Prime Stations For 342 5M TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia Retrieved November 20 2013 a b Gray Retains Minority Media and Telecommunications Council as Exclusive Broker for Transfer of Former Shared Services Stations Press release Atlanta PR Newswire June 13 2014 Retrieved June 16 2014 via Gray Television a b c d e Gray Sets Buyers For Its Six SSA Stations TVNewsCheck August 27 2014 Retrieved August 27 2014 Harry A Jessell November 26 2012 Gray Lines Up 2nd Station In Lincoln NE TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia Retrieved June 16 2014 Jeff Korbelik June 12 2014 KSNB TV to become NBC affiliate Lincoln Journal Star Retrieved June 16 2014 Application for Consent to Assignment of Broadcast Station Construction Permit or License CDBS Public Access Federal Communications Commission September 12 2018 Retrieved September 14 2018 Ann Thomas Paxson March 25 2014 Re Prime Cities Broadcasting Inc Request for Dismissal of Group Application for Assignment of Broadcast Station License s CDBS Public Access Federal Communications Commission Archived from the original PDF on March 27 2014 Retrieved March 26 2014 a b Staff writers May 1 2014 Gray Adds North And South Dakota TVs TVNewsCheck NewsCheckMedia Retrieved May 2 2014 New TV station offers lineup of iconic programming The Business Times Grand Junction August 25 2015 Retrieved March 20 2016 Application For Consent To Assignment Of Broadcast Station Construction Permit Or License CDBS Public Access Federal Communications Commission Charleston Television LLC Retrieved September 15 2014 Howard Stirk Holdings Grabs WCIV for 50 000 Broadcasting amp Cable Retrieved September 19 2014 DESCRIPTION OF TRANSACTION AND UNIQUE SERVICE TO BE PROVIDED Howard Stirk Holdings Retrieved September 21 2014 Application For Consent To Assignment Of Broadcast Station Construction Permit Or License TV Alabama Inc Retrieved September 26 2014 Amended Description of Agreements Description of Transaction and Request for Temporary Waiver Quincy Newspapers Inc Retrieved August 1 2015 Amendment to Agreements and Description of Transaction KBJR TV PDF CDBS Public Access Federal Communications Commission November 24 2014 Retrieved November 25 2014 Application For Consent To Assignment Of Broadcast Station Construction Permit Or License CDBS Public Access Federal Communications Commission Retrieved November 25 2014 Eck Kevin July 26 2016 Sinclair and Quincy Make Affiliation Deal WSJV Employees Wonder What s Next TVSpy Adweek Blog Network Retrieved August 1 2016 Tarter Steve July 26 2016 WEEK TV to broadcast ABC and CW signals Peoria Journal Star Retrieved July 27 2016 Consummation Notice CDBS Public Access Federal Communications Commission Retrieved August 8 2018 Consummation Notice CDBS Public Access Federal Communications Commission Retrieved August 8 2018 a b FCC Approves Gray Schurz TV Station Deal Broadcasting amp Cable February 12 2016 Retrieved February 13 2016 Engineering Statement Request For Special Temporary Authority Chesapeake RF Consultants LLC Federal Communications Commission Archived from the original on January 31 2016 Retrieved January 20 2016 Gray Television and WRDW News 12 Welcome WAGT NBC 26 WRDW com Gray Television Archived from the original on February 17 2016 Retrieved February 16 2016 Gray Closes Schurz Acquisition Related Transactions And Incremental Term Loan Facility Press Release Gray Television Retrieved February 16 2016 Gray Blames Media General for Possible Job Losses at Augusta Station TVSpy com Retrieved February 17 2016 Judge s action may delay WAGT sale The Augusta Chronicle February 26 2016 Retrieved February 28 2016 An Update on the Battle Over WAGT TVSpy Retrieved March 8 2016 FCC Launches Investigation Of Media General TVNewsCheck Retrieved March 10 2016 Case 1 16 cv 00026 JRH BKE Document 33 PDF United States District Court for the Southern District of Georgia Retrieved March 11 2016 Georgia Supreme Court strikes down Superior Court injunction over WAGT Augusta Chronicle Retrieved March 24 2016 In the Matter of Media General Operations Inc PDF FCC Retrieved July 14 2016 FCC Broadcast Television Spectrum Incentive Auction Winning Bids PDF FCC Retrieved April 13 2017 Frankel Daniel March 14 2023 DirecTV Sues Nexstar for Conspiring With Mission and White Knight To Raise Retrans Fees NextTV Retrieved March 16 2023 a b CKEY FM Fort Erie and its transmitter CKEY FM 1 St Catharines Licence renewal CRTC January 31 2005 Retrieved October 31 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2005 22 Ottawa Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission January 31 2005 Retrieved March 8 2014 WRITER ANTHONY VIOLANTI NEWS STAFF CKEY CHANGING FORMATS MOVING RIVER DOWN DIAL The Buffalo News Retrieved October 31 2021 Cherry s sidekick Ron MacLean is pushed further aside The Globe and Mail October 3 2014 Retrieved October 9 2014 Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2015 154 CRTC April 17 2015 Retrieved April 20 2015 Nerisa Almo January 5 2009 TV5 is a Filipino company defends one of its executives Philippine Entertainment Portal GMA New Media Archived from the original on January 20 2009 Retrieved January 20 2009 Bong Godinez March 26 2010 Revamped TV5 parades new programs and roster of stars at its trade launch Philippine Entertainment Portal GMA New Media Retrieved August 8 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Local marketing agreement amp oldid 1145043183, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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