We got 2008 about half right – now for 2009
* The DTV transition will be a huge story for two weeks, with glitches capturing the headlines, but will calm down as most left-behind consumers restore their television service one way or another.
* Lots of daily newspapers will be put up for sale. Most will not find buyers. In the end, a few will simply shut down.
* Many broadcasting companies will trip on loan covenants in 2009. Most, though, will get waivers or renegotiated terms.
* There will be no attempt in Congress or at the FCC to restore the Fairness Doctrine.
* Broadcasting will become an afterthought as the Obama FCC focuses on broadband and net neutrality issues.
* Broadcasters, on the other hand, will have their hands full staving off reinstatement of long-discarded FCC localism initiatives, possibly resulting in the NAB taking the issue to the courts.
* The Radio Advertising Bureau/Miller Kaplan Arase monthly radio revenue report will finally get into the black for a month on top of the less-than-challenging comps of 2008.
* Whole station groups will merge as a way to clean up their balance sheets in an environment where financing for outright purchases is hard to find.
* Syndication will have a growth year in both radio and TV as stations look to cut costs by taking more syndicated programming.
* There will be a great hullabaloo in at least one market where a strong and stable TV station moves to add a major network affiliation for a multicast channel at the expense of a weaker in-market station.
* We will see many more retransmission consent fights, but those that reach the point of stations being pulled from a cable or satellite operator will be settled quickly in the face of viewer complaints to their subscription video providers.
* Yes, there will be more Chapter 11 filings and state court receiverships that in most years, but new owners will be found for all stations in financial dire straits.
* Nielsen will announce plans to take its US radio ratings service beyond the initial 51 markets. (We really didn’t need a crystal ball for this one.)
* HD Radio licenses will not be renewed with many broadcasters.
* Sirius XM will handle its $194 million refinancing due in February, but after that the financial picture gets dicier. Our best guess is that satellite radio will still survive as 2009 comes to a close, but barely, with a Chapter 11 filing a real possibility.
* Sirius-XM will come up with an ad-supported model to avoid bankruptcy.
* Radio will strengthen its trend for calling itself WXXX.COM, instead of FM, AM or HD.
* Cable TV MSOs will get a huge boost in business from the analog shutoff.
* The FCC’s December 2007 attempt to loosen broadcast/newspaper cross-ownership rules for the top 20 DMAs will still be in dispute and will not have force.
* Congress will reinstate the minority tax certificate to encourage broadcast ownership diversity. Have an opinion on this article? Post your comment below.
Today's Broadcasting News |
RBR - Radio News |
TVBR - TV/Cable News |
||||
|
|
|
||||
Log in
|
|||


Most Popular - Top 10 List
- 9NEWS Denver anchor Kyle Dyer injured by dog on-air (video)
- Nassau Broadcasting headed for the auction block
- Loray Robinson dead at 53
- Greg Kelly will not be charged in rape accusation
- Sinclair CEO sees little likelihood of TV spectrum auction (audio)
- Fox and House to call it quits
- Another strong growth quarter for SiriusXM
- Flip flap: Super Bowl halftime pits NFL v NBC
- File under failure for three fined stations
- American Idol is a steamroller
Rate this article


