/ 06.10.2005 12:00AM
NAB Blasts CEA Over Over-The-Air DTV
Earlier this week, the CEA sent letters to the leaders of the Senate Commerce and House Energy and Commerce Committee saying that 13 million U.S. households currently depend on analog TV broadcasts. They then followed up with a statement issued Wednesday by CEA President Gary Shapiro in which he declared: “"Clearly, the vast majority of TVs in the United States are not used to view over-the-air television and we can presume that these numbers will diminish as more and more Americans subscribe to pay TV services, including coming technologies such as TV-over-IP, via telephony and even powerline.”

While the CEA data is based on a combination of in-house surveys and publicly stated subscriber numbers from the cable and satellite TV industries, they are vastly different from the official Government Accountability Office's study citing 21 million U.S. households rely exclusively on broadcast television.

Needless to say, this raised a red flag with the NAB's Dennis Wharton: "CEA has proven today it can manufacture bogus DTV numbers along with millions of soon-to-be-obsolete analog television sets. The undeniable fact is that the Government Accountability Office has testified before Congress that 21 million U.S. households rely exclusively on broadcast television, or 19% of all homes. That is more households than are located in the states of Texas, Michigan, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oregon, Tennessee and Wyoming, combined. CEA has no credibility when compared to the highly respected, non-partisan GAO."


Comments
Post New Comment
If you are already a member, or would like to receive email alerts as new comments are
made, please login or register.

Enter the code shown above:

(Note: If you cannot read the numbers in the above
image, reload the page to generate a new one.)

No Comments Found




Thursday 12:00AM
Broadcasters File Suit Against FCC’s Political File Rules
“The FCC decision to put the political files online will bring broadcasters into the 21st century, and will make already public information more easily accessible to everyone.” Free Press Senior Policy Counsel Corie Wright.

 
Featured Articles
Discover TV Technology