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On Sat, 04 Dec 2004 05:50:08 GMT, "David Eduardo"
wrote: XETRA's US rights (similar to an LMA) are being sold by Clear Channel... as you speculate below. This is absolute and confirmed. I'm curious...I've heard this is actually being forced for regulatory reasons...the reason being that the Mexican signals give CC *way* over the number of allowed signals in the San Diego market, and that someone's "finally" realizing that as far as the feds are concerned. (DOJ, perhaps?) Is this true? I know that to be able to program the signals, a U.S. operator has to file papers somewhere with the FCC. And I know the major U.S. operators with signals they program across the border generally treat the operations as if they were FCC licensed U.S. signals. (And one other silly question - are the Mexican signals still required to air "The Mexican National Hour" on Sunday nights? I thought I heard this went away recently, perhaps coinciding with the new presidential administration south of the border.) While CCU will transfer the US rights to the X stations, they will keep the intellectual property of the programming. So Z-90 or any of the other formats might replace the existing format on one o fthe US licensed Clear Channel SD stations. It is unlikely that John Lynch will get 690. He keeps making noises about it, but it sounds like he isn't going to get it. And though CC is not replicating "XTRA Sports" on an existing San Diego based frequency, instead consolidating it on 570/L.A., they COULD...if they wanted to. Mike |
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