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saveaccess's blogTN: AT$T, Cable Engage In Tennessee Franchising TusslePosted on December 10, 2007 - 7:34am.
from: MultiChannel News AT&T, Cable Engage In Tennessee Franchising Tussle TCTA Leader Briggs Fires Back At State Telco Leader Morton Over Reform Issues Verbal sparring is already heating up in Tennessee over state franchising, even though the legislature won't return to the issue until January. MI: Comcast public channels go digitalPosted on December 10, 2007 - 7:30am.
from: MLive.com Comcast public channels go digital Just like George Jefferson of 1970s sitcom fame, Muskegon area public access television channels "are movin' on up." MI: Comcast pushes public access into digital tierPosted on December 10, 2007 - 7:27am.
from: Grand Rapids Press Comcast pushes public access into digital tier GRAND RAPIDS -- Some Comcast subscribers may be seeing black next month when a handful of their channels move out of their regular lineup. On Jan. 15, the Grand Rapids area's largest cable provider will shuttle its public access, education and government broadcasts from analog cable channels 24-28 to its digital system somewhere around channel 900. CO: Qwest's push for cable-TV bill gets an allyPosted on December 10, 2007 - 7:25am.
from: Rocky Mountain News Qwest's push for cable-TV bill gets an ally By Jeff Smith, Rocky Mountain News (Contact) Qwest is taking another stab at statewide cable-TV franchise legislation, this time with a key Democrat in its corner. TN: AT$T Struggles to Get Message OutPosted on December 10, 2007 - 7:24am.
from: WPLN News Tuesday, December 04th, 2007 The largest communications company in the world is having trouble airing ads on Tennessee’s local cable channels. A-T-and-T’s Tennessee president Gregg Morton says the company has been trying to air informative ads about its desire to ink a statewide franchise agreement to provide cable TV services. That would take a change in current state law that now requires cable companies to negotiate individual contracts with cities and counties. FL: Verizon FiOS TV - Two-Year Head-to-Head Competition With CablePosted on December 5, 2007 - 9:18am.
Note: Missing from this fluff press release is the fact that Verizon is raising cable TV rates 11.5% this year, on top of a 7.5% increase last year - far greater than the increases of competing cable companies. The promise of lower rates that originally led to the Florida state video franchise, simply aren't happening. from: CNN Money TN: AT$T Round 3: Franchise reform gets new House leaderPosted on December 5, 2007 - 9:15am.
from: Nashville Post AT&T Round 3: Franchise reform gets new House leader By Milt Capps UPDATED 6:15 P.M. - Sen. Bill Ketron confirmed by mid-afternoon he will be carrying the franchise bill in the Senate, in 2008. As originally reported: Senate Commerce Committee Passes Bill to Block FCC’s Dec. 18 VotePosted on December 4, 2007 - 5:20pm.
Note: Congress awakening from it's deep sleep? from: Broadcasting & Cable Senate Commerce Committee Passes Bill to Block FCC’s Dec. 18 Vote Dorgan Aide: Bill to Block Media-Ownership Vote Has Support from Both Parties By John Eggerton The Senate Commerce Committee Tuesday unanimously passed a bill to block a Federal Communications Commission vote Dec. 18 on loosening its ban on newspaper-broadcast cross-ownership. ( categories: )
AT$T/EchoStar Deal Doesn’t Add upPosted on December 4, 2007 - 1:14pm.
from: MultiChannel News Moffett: AT$T/EchoStar Deal Doesn’t Add up Analyst Says Merger Talk ‘Based on Flawed Premise’ By Linda Moss -- Multichannel News, 12/3/2007 12:55:00 PM An AT&T acquisition of EchoStar Communications doesn’t make economic or strategic sense, according to Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. ( categories: AT&T )
TN: Paying Holiday Bills Just Got Harder Thanks to Cable Company Rate IncreasePosted on December 4, 2007 - 12:49pm.
Note: TV4US is an astroturf organization paid for by the telephone companies. What they fail to mention in this press release is that Verizon just announced a 11.5% rate increase on their cable TV services (on top of a 7.5% increase earlier in 2007). There is currently no evidence in any state that competition in cable TV services has resulted in lower prices. In Tennessee, AT&T is currently trying to ram through a state video franchise for the second time. |