NextGen TV Coming to Boston

At last, a Boston area broadcast TV station is going to be transmitting a NextGen signal. WCRN-LD, physical channel 30, displays as channels 31-1 through 31-6. I first learned of the station’s move to ATSC 3.0 from a crawl notice at the start a show, and seeing that got me searching for this notice.

ENGINEERING NARRATIVE AND NOTICE OF ATSC 3.0 OPERATION WCRN-LD CH 30 FACILITY ID 9154 FCC FILE 00001113233 BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS

Tyche Media LLC (“TML”), Licensee of LPTV station WCRN-LD has been operating as a licensed LPTV DTV facility employing ATSC 1.0 in accordance with FCC Rules. Rule Section 74.782(h) speaks to stations operating in ATSC 1.0 being required to air daily announcements or crawls for a period of 30 days prior to terminating ATSC 1.0 operation and commencing ATSC 3.0 operation. TML is aware of this requirement and commenced the required notifications on June 14, 2022. The station will not provide simulcast service.

Effective July 14, 2022, TML proposes to commence ATSC 3.0 operation. The WCRN-LD operation will comply with applicable ATSC 3.0 requirements for digital LPTV stations. WCRN-LD will be transitioning to ATSC 3.0 without simulcasting as permitted under FCC Rule Section 74.782(c). The Licensee certifies that no notice to MVPDs was required based on Section 74.782(i) of the FCC Rules as there will be no change to the currently licensed facilities other than the transition to ATSC 3.0.

The WCRN-LD license was granted on May 7, 2020, and now files this formal modification of license application to be listed as a Next Gen facility as specified in Section 74.782(g)(3) of the Commission’s Rules.

WCRN has seemed experimental from the outset, with programming that has been mixed, to say the least. Some of the stations are frequently blank, and when they’re active there’s no predicting what will be aired. So I’m not surprised that WCRN is the first Boston outlet to take this step.

What does surprise me is their stated intention to broadcast exclusively in ATSC 3.0, which is not an FCC requirement. I don’t have a compatible tuner yet, and I doubt very many people do have one. So, on the day WCRN makes the switch, it will disappear from my TiVo.

Follow-up:

NextGen TV Comes to Boston

Publicity Propaganda Department

Today’s print edition of The Boston Globe came with a surprise. A copy of yesterday’s China Daily, a publication of the Publicity Department of the Chinese Communist Party.

On Facebook I have asked the Globe, through its subscribers group, for an explanation. I am aware the Globe has been printing the English-language Chinese paper for some years, but I am extremely displeased at having it foisted upon me.

Moah Foah Yoah Dollah

My second consecutive post with local news. I’m regressing to my stint in radio!

The last time Market Basket was featured here was eight years ago.

Market Basket orders customers back to stores!

I was a Market Basket customer for ten years, until moving almost 25 years ago. The supermarket’s slogan, frequently announced in the store, was “More For Your Dollar,” but pronounced as written in the title.

I once caught a Market Basket employee tearing off the label from a cut of meat on its expiration date and replacing it with a new label. When the store stopped carrying a favorite variety of frozen yogurt, my wife was told Kemps stopped making it. She called Kemps and was told, “Yes, but we stopped making that flavor several years ago! Where were you buying it?”

One of my sisters has been a Market Basket customer for much longer than I was, and she says the stores have been very good for a long time. I wonder if that was thanks to the leadership of Artie T.? Perhaps the answer is in this documentary.

My Watergate Day

John and Maureen Dean at the Senate Select Committee on Presidential Campaign Activities, 1973.

The 50th anniversary of the Watergate break-in is, I suppose, a good time to mention the day I spent with John Dean. As president of the college’s so-called Economics Society, I sponsored Dean for a campus lecture.

A previous guest speaker had been Harvard economist John Kenneth Galbraith, but what did John Dean have to do with Economics? Nothing directly, but the faculty advisor, Dr. Darrow, was hot to talk with Dean.

It was a very interesting day, and a very long day. I have a newspaper clipping somewhere about Dean’s talk that includes a photo of him that I arranged to have taken. If I find it I’ll post a scan and have a bit more to say.