Dish Drops Four Citadel Stations in Retrans Impasse
Dish Network unable to negotiate extension to retransmission-consent deal 
with Citadel Communications.

By Robert Marich
Broadcasting & Cable

8/1/2008 5:51:00 PM

http://www.broadcastingcable.com/index.asp?layout=articlePrint&articleID=CA6583689


Dish Network dropped four Midwestern TV stations early Friday that are 
owned by Citadel Communications from its local-station offer after being 
unable to negotiate an extension to its retransmission-consent deal.

A Dish spokeswoman said the satellite-TV platform had no choice but to 
cease transmission since its carriage rights lapsed.

The four stations are ABC affiliate WOI-TV Des Moines Iowa; ABC affiliate 
KCAU-TV Sioux City, Iowa; ABC affiliate KLKN-TV Lincoln, Neb.; and CBS 
affiliate WHBF-TV in the Quad Cities.

The Dish spokeswoman said the broadcaster wanted an "excessive" rate 
increase for continued carriage but would not provide details.

Citadel president Ray Cole blamed Dish for the impasse, saying that it 
dragged its feet on negotiations by not responding for two months so 
Citadel opted not to grant a temporary extension. He added that the 
broadcaster's stations are still carried by all cable and DirecTV platforms.

"We continue to engage Dish Network for an agreement that is fair to both 
parties," Cole said. "I think if we had really rolled up our sleeves, we 
could have done a deal" without a blackout.

Citadel is a closely held company owned by Philip Lombardo.

The Dish spokeswoman said the satellite-TV platform is not experiencing any 
other retrans disputes at this time. In an earnings conference call Friday, 
Hearst-Argyle Television said it just concluded a Dish deal involving more 
than 2 million households for its stations.

A banner ad titled, "Important Information for Dish Subscribers," on the 
Web site of KLKN-TV cited the Dish outage. Clicking the ad calls up text 
that says in part, "Our request to the Dish Network is really quiet simple 
and fair. We've asked them to fairly compensate us for the redistribution 
of our on-air programming. This is totally consistent with the carriage 
fees Dish pays other broadcasting-affiliated TV stations. Additionally, our 
request is only a very small fraction of what is already being paid to 
other program providers who have no local ties to our community. Over the 
past several years, we've very successfully negotiated dozens of these 
agreements without any major difficulty."

Current rates for broadcast-TV-carriage deals typically run 10 cents-50 
cents per subscriber, per month, with satellite TV typically paying at the 
high end of that range. In renewals, broadcasters are proposing $1-$1.65 in 
negotiations, but often settling for less.

Stations and multichannel providers generally do not provide specific 
details on financial terms.


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu

*******************************
* POST TO [EMAIL PROTECTED] *
*******************************

Medianews mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://lists.etskywarn.net/mailman/listinfo/medianews

Reply via email to