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Why Local Television Plans Are Doomed

Jeremy Hunt, the Culture Secretary, has just released details on the latest part of his plan to start very local television services in the UK. I talked a little about this earlier in the year. Allow me to expand a little more.
As you may or may not be aware, local TV is something of a hobby-horse of Hunt’s. He’s been talking about it for years – in the past repeatedly drawing comparison with Birmingham, Alabama, which he says has eight local TV services compared to none in the UK.
I always found that somewhat misleading, since the affiliate nature of US television means that all the four major “networks” are built from local affiliates. Indeed, that’s what ITV used to be until they were allowed to effectively drop the vast majority of their local requirements.
In fact, from what I can tell, Birmingham, Alabama has the usual four network affiliates, each of which – like ITV and the BBC – runs local news programming in the mornings and evenings, as well as a PBS affiliate, and a unique service owned by the University of Alabama. Beyond that, other stations available locally do not provide news or local programming, or they duplicate programming from sister networks. The other thing that’s important to note is that the local affiliate nature of those stations means that their local news programme provide a disproportionately high percentage of their incomes.
In other words, Birmingham AL is not the bustling centre of local television production that it’s sometimes presented as.
Anyway, back to the UK and Hunt’s latest proposals.
He’s listed 65 towns and cities which would be technically capable of supporting a local TV service. By that, I mean that there could be space found on Freeview.
Originally, there was the idea that there’d be a national “spine” that could supply the local TV services supplementary programming to fill out the schedule when they were not able to provide local programming. It’d be foolish to believe that any new local services could run local programming 24/7. The problem was that it became obvious that whoever ran the spine probably wouldn’t want to give up prime space to local affiliates during peak time – precisely when those services would want to broadcast their programmes. So rather than get into the internal wrangling that this might introduce, the idea was ditched. Of course any new service still has to find at least several hours a day of nearly free programming to complement whatever it can produce daily itself. A testcard probably isn’t enough.
Now Hunt has devised a framework whereby a multiplex operator can bid to provide the distribution infrastructure for all the services with £25m available from the BBC licence fund. Whether this is enough to support what might be an expensive set of services with a significant number of transmitters isn’t clear. But that’s what’s on the table.
Technically there don’t seem to be many problems with the transmission side of things. The government is suggesting that geographic interleaved spectrum is used. In other words, spectrum otherwise used by Freeview but available in localised patches. The list of areas in this consultation is based on that availability.
However, I do think that the whole scheme has a number of fundamental flaws:

Set against all these negatives, I realise that there are a handful of local television services around the country that are making ends meet to a greater or lesser extent. Internet delivery is the future, and would strip out the enormous broadcast costs, although IP delivery isn’t free. Especially not for video. Furthermore, there’s the not-inconsiderable issue of rural areas having disappointingly slow broadband connectivity.
It’s possible that local newspaper or radio groups might find a viable way to run their current businesses alongside a television operation. But I don’t believe that this really needs government intervention. I’ve no doubt that expressions of interest will be made. How serious they’ll be and how economically viable is another question altogether.
I’m deeply sceptical.

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