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Bloomberg Buttonholing

Looks like FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski could not escape the long arm of the Comast/NBCU merger even during a trip to New York Oct. 27 to attend a UBS luncheon and (sniff) the Broadcasting & Cable Hall of Fame dinner.The chairman could not make the dinner portion of that trip after what looked like it might be a break in the Fox/Cablevision retrans impasse. The FCC had been monitoring the negotiations closely and he needed to huddle with his staff.

According to an ex parte filing just posted on the FCC’s Web site, the chairman was buttonholed at the UBS event by Daniel Doctoroff, president of Bloomberg. The news organization has been battling hard for conditions on the deal to insure Comcast does not favor its presumably soon-to-be co-owned CNBC over Bloomberg’s own TV operation.

“The meeting occurred during a widely attended luncheon,” Bloomberg said, adding that “there had been no meeting requested.”

Doctoroff told the chairman that Bloomberg has invested “substantially” in order to compete head to head with CNBC, but that the merger “changed the competitive situation” and needed to be structured “so as to permit competition.”

Bloomberg said it did not think it even needed to mention the encounter, but did so out of an “abundance of caution.”

Net Neutrality in 140 Characters

Reaction to the FCC’s proposed network neutrality draft order was coming in faster than it could be digested and summarized in real time Wednesday, so here are the end-of-the day twitter versions (140 characters or less, not including names and titles) of some of the comments that did not make it into other stories:

American Cable Association President Matt Polka: “A Title II framework would have imposed large and burdensome costs on small cable operators that offer broadband service.”

Jason Rosenbaum, PCCC Senior Online Campaigns Director: “The proposal from FCC chairman Genachowski isn’t net neutrality, it’s a corporate giveaway.”

Insight Communications CEO Michael Willner: “This is a compromise that gives nobody everything that they wanted and everybody something.”

NAACP: “We believe that the FCC’s proposal will help foster equal access to affordable and sustainable broadband and stimulate job creation in all communities.”

The Writers Guild of America, East: “We oppose a plan that would permit ISPs or other providers to charge consumers for access to ‘fast lanes’ which would distribute content more quickly….”

Parul Desai, Policy Counsel for Consumers Union: “This is just the beginning of the process; we’re eager to work with the FCC in establishing viable and sensible rules.”

Fred Humphries, Microsoft: “We believe that today’s net neutrality proposal from the FCC represents an important step forward.”

Charlie Ergen, EchoStar: “Dish Network applauds chairman Genachowski for moving forward on critically important net neutrality rules.”

ACLU: “While the proposed rule is a good start toward protecting Internet openness, it does not go far enough to protect free speech for certain communications systems.”

Rep. Gene Green ( D-Tex.): “I certainly welcome any departure from the ‘third way’ proposal circulated earlier this year.”

National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners: “While we need to see the details of [the FCC’s] proposal, we hope it will recognize the critical role State commissions play in furthering these initiatives.”

Venture Capitalist Jed Katz: “As a technology venture capitalist representing hundreds of millions of dollars in investment, I strongly support your proposed rules.”

Nonprofit World Growth Senior Advisor James K. Glassman: “While the reported solution is not perfect, it will provide a large dose of regulatory certainty to spur investment and innovation…”

The Chair Recognizes Himself...In a Funhouse Mirror

FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski Thursday night poked fun at his reputation, fair or not, for indecision; for his lawyerly evasion of questions; his aborted attempt at Title II reclassification, and other criticisms leveled by both industry and the public interest community.

But after a heaping helping of good-natured self-deprecation, he had plenty of deprecation left over for everybody else, including National Cable & Telecommunications Association President Kyle McSlarrow, Verizon, Free Press and even his predecessors in the FCC’s big chair.

Those barbs, self-inflicted and otherwise, have become the hallmark of the Federal Communications Bar Association’s (FCBA) annual Chairman’s Dinner, held Thursday night at the Washington Hilton. A roomful of lawyers and lobbyists and lawyer/lobbyists spent more time in the aisles than their chairs. pressing the flesh with FCC staffers, congressfolk and each other.

In an opening “PSA” for FCBA–the chairman’s face was superimposed on everyone from James Bond to Yoda to Sharon Stone in Basic Instinct (yes, that scene, though not all of that scene). The tape, a send-up of the Dos Equis “most interesting man” commercials,” was peppered with som peppy one-liners at the chairman’s expense. “He’s not afraid of heights,” said the tape, “but he’s terrified of widths,” a nonsequitorial start that struck an endearingly goofy note. “He likes his martinis shaken and stirred. He calls that a win-win,” the voiceover continued.

Superimposed into Jerry Maguire, the verbal beatings continued. “He had you at hello, but kept talking until people lost interest. He is the most interesting chairman currently at the FCC.”

Voiceover: “He’s not afraid of taking tough questions, as long as no one is expecting intelligible answers.” Then there were a couple more really good one-liners that I can’t reconstitute from my tape because I was laughing too loud, followed by: “He can handle the truth, but he is going back to the D.C. Circuit anyway,” a reference to the Title I net neutrality defense that got hammered the first time around. Cut to Genachowski in “The Godfather.” “When he got the offer, he refused, but then he tried to broker a sensible compromise.”

Cut to scene from “Sixth Sense,” Genachowski as the kid: “He sees dead people. Some of them were still alive when he started the open Internet proceeding.” Badabum. Pish (sound of drum and cymbal hit).

With the tape as warm-up act, Genachowski proceeded with the stand-up portion of the evening’s entertainment. He pointed out that Prince William had finally got engaged. “I hate it when people take too long to make a decision,” he said.

It did not take long for the chairman to take aim at McSlarrow, who was seated at a table close to the stage. “Kyle Mcslarrow announced he is leaving NCTA,” Genachowski said. “At about the same time, the President and the Republicans struck a deal to extend the Bush tax cuts and unemployment benefits. Kyle is not sure whether he should be excited about the former or the latter.” Laughter, but with ample groaning. McSlarrow is exiting to join the ranks of either a cable operator or programmer.

But as an equal opportunity roaster, Genachowski took aim at the phone industry as well.

He said the Chilean miner rescue was a remarkable story, but that an unfortunate side note was that it turned out one of the miners’ phones was roaming. “Talk about bill shock.” He said. The miner tried to get the charges waived. “But the customer service rep said: ‘Only the first 1,000 feet underground are free.’ They called it a depth charge.”

He then turned the joke on Free Press, which has complained about the FCC-hosted stakeholder meetings on net neutrality. “And if that weren’t bad enough,” he said, Free press attacked the trapped miners “for meeting in closed quarters.”

The chairman’s roasting of the telcos got even hotter. “Our enforcement bureau worked incredibly hard on a settlement with Verizon on unauthorized mystery fees, the largest in FCC history,” he said, adding that those fees might be a bigger problem than he realized. He said he had looked closely at his own phone bill and found “$1.99 for the Buffy Seidenberg scholarship. What’s that?” Ivan Seidenberg is chairman of Verizon.

One of the subtler, ‘wait for it’ jabs, and one that arguably got the most sustained laughter, was aimed good naturedly at former FCC chairmen–Michael Powell, Dick Wiley and former acting Chair Michael Copps were all in the room. “Earlier this year, the FCC was selected as the most improved agency in the federal government,” said, pausing a half beat. “All the credit belongs to my predecessors.” The laugher morphed into sustained applause and a hoot or two.

The chairman then ticked off a couple of the “questionable”–and apocryphal–recommendations he said had “slipped into” the National Broadband Plan.

“To achieve universal broadband all Americans should move to South Korea.”

“With every broadband subscription, a free Snuggie*.” (The joke was accompanied by a picture of former Broadband Plan Advisor Blair Levin in a Snuggie and holding a copy of the plan). Levin was in the audience, sitting with former Chairman Michael Powell, but there was no Snuggie in evidence.

Noting that Powell, along with former FCC Chairmen Kevin Martin and Reed Hundt. had recently teamed up for an episode of C-Span’s Communicators series, Genachowski said they had decided to re-team on a reality show, “Dancing For Spectrum.”

A graphic showed the three as judges (though curiously teamed with Idol’s Simon Cowell rather than Len or Bruno or Carrie Ann) watching cell phone lobbyist Steve Largent dancing. “Everyone will watch it,” teh chairman said, “even people who think ’spectrum crunch’ is a breakfast cereal.” He said Largent** and National Association of Broadcasters President Gordon Smith would be contestants, with billions of dollars of spectrum allocated to whoever can do the best cha-cha. “David Zaslov I hope you are here,” he said, referring to the DiscoveryCEO. “This could be big. And if Congress doesn’t authorize incentive auctions, we’ve got a backup plan.

A highlight of the chairman’s stand-up was a mock iPad app, the FCBA translator. He said it was a beta version of a voice-to-text and voice-to-voice app that would translate lawyerspeak.

Some examples:

His Chief of Staff Eddie Lazarus’ observation: “We are so close to a deal” translated as: “I can’t believe I moved from L.A. for this?”

“FCC rules must promote a level playing field” translated as “Regulate them, not us.”

“Industry needs regulatory certainty” translated to “industry will litigate this forever.”

He said the app was also good for translating ex parte filings, which are the documents parties must file after they have met with commissioners or staff about an issue under review.

“I met with an advisor to the chairman” became “I’m never going to get a $@%#! meeting with the $#%&* chairman.” He added that it was “a good thing we turned on the child protection feature.”

“Carriers need to be able to manage their networks without burdensome regulation” translated as “Don’t touch my junk.”

And what of the other side of that network neutrality debate?

“Innovators and consumers need protection against online discrimination” translated as…”Don’t touch my junk.”

“I knew there was broad consensus on this topic,” he said.

Also per tradition, the Genachowski briefly waxed serious to thank his wife and kids, FCC staffers including those deployed oversees with the military, and his fellow commissions. ” I am proud of what we have already accomplished together, and I look forward to ongoing collaboration.”

He may have to look fairly far forward, at least beyond the planned Dec. 21 vote on network neutrality for that hoped-for collaboration. Commissioner Meredith Attwell Baker Thursday called out the chairman in a speech to many of those same lawers Thursday for not putting out his draft net neutrality order for public comment, and suggested the FCC was overstepping its bounds into some deep legal kimchi in the face of court and congressional directives to the contrary.

A senior FCC official shot back in an e-mailed statement to B&C/Multichannel News: “”We are hard pressed to think of an issue that has been more publicly debated and dissected than preserving a free and open Internet. Over the last 14 months, we’ve had hundreds of meetings, held numerous public workshops, received more than 100,000 comments, and even released a text of the proposed rules. The draft order was circulated to all of the Commissioners a full three weeks in advance of the vote, a courtesy that Chairman Genachowski has consistently extended. So, we are particularly perplexed by Commissioner Baker’s call for yet more time given that it took her less than 24 hours to read the order and publicly declare her flat opposition to the proposal. ”

Maybe the chairman actually said “clobber-ation.”

Did I mention the soup was really good at this dinner. It was billed as Pea, Brie and Ginger Bisque, which sounds like a great name for a female triplets if anyone is planning on having them,  but made for an even better first course.

* Pretend there is a little superscript circle with an “r” inside it after Snuggie in all references ’cause I can’t find the registration mark on this keyboard and it is really late.

**  Given that professional athletes, including football players, have done very well on “Dancing With the Stars,” I asked Largent how he thought he would do on the show. “Not well,” he replied.

Chairman ManHandel-ed By Staffers

The FCC took aim at the cell phone industry and exhalted its chairman to the heavens (I hope everyone stood during the duration of the song) in the annual Christmas Carol parody sing-along, now in its 20th year.

It was a day for holiday parties at the commission, according to one staffer, including serenading commissioners and staff with the modified songs of the season.

Enjoy, unless you are CTIA or Verizon, in which case “grin and bear it.”

Carol of the Bills (Carol of the Bells)

Hark how the bills,

Mobile phone bills,

All seem to say,

Throw cash away.

Frustrating bills!

Maddening bills!

Charges ad hoc

Lead to bill shock.

I must complain, driven insane.

Mystery fees, make them stop please!

Texting limits surpassed by the thousands,

Roaming charges from the Virgin Islands!










The FCC

Says they’ll help me.

On the attack,

They’ve got my back.

Usage alerts,

More bill inserts,

Learn something new

From the EU.

Cop on the beat, nimble and fleet

Empower me, To be shock-free.

For the countless times Verizon screwed me,

They paid twenty-five mill to the Treasury.










CTIA

Says it’s OK.

They have the tools,

No need for rules.

Market still works

Just a few quirks.

Why act in haste?

Government waste!

With FCC, they disagree.

Survey’s all wrong, kids don’t belong.

Using words like “shock” will serve to inflame.

Think that “fun surprise” should be the new name.










How do I know

When I will go

Past my limit

By one minute?

What shall I do?

Don’t have a clue.

What must I think?

Need a Billshrink.






Just stay at home, where I can’t roam.

Throw out my phone, leave me alone!

Tired of all the unexpected payoffs.

Getting very, very, very ticked off!

How do I know?

Where will I go?

What shall I do?

Don’t have a clue.






Bills!

The Genachowski Chorus (The Hallelujah Chorus)

Genachowski! Genachowski! Genachowski! Genachowski! Genachowski!

Innovation! Ecosystem! Competition! Revolution! Genachowski!

Ev’ry fourth word I say’s about broadband!

Revolution! Ecosystem! Revolution! Ecosystem!

And all the rest are still about broadband!

Genachowski! Genachowski! Competition! Innovation!


The ecosystem shall expand throughout the mighty cloud.

Technology! Transparency!

And he shall bring robustness forever!

And he shall bring robustness forever!

And he shall bring robustness forever!

And he shall bring robustness forever!


Wonk of wonks!

Unleashing, unleashing! Genachowski! Genachowski!

And nerd of nerds!

More data! More data! Genachowski! Genachowski!

Internet!

Robustness! Robustness! Genachowski! Genachowski!

Neutrality!

Investment! Investment! Genachowski! Genachowski!

Broadband plan!

More broadband! More broadband! Genachowski! Genachowski!

Technology! Ubiquitous!

Broadband plan! Ubiquitous!










Wonk of wonks! And nerd of nerds!

Unleashing, forever! Unleashing, forever!

Genachowski! Genachowski! Innovation! Revolution! Genachowski! Genachowski!

Net Neutrality: What's At 'Stake'

As the FCC prepared to vote on new network neutrality regs Tuesday morning, Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) a vocal critic of the vote and the regs, took off the gloves. big time.Here is the “Nightmare Before Christmas” scenario she painted in the lead from her blog posting on RealClearPolitics:

“There’s no such thing as hospice for federal bureaucracies. No quiet corner where bureaus who have outlived their usefulness can go to bravely face the end. The undead need no such niceties; not when they can leap vampire-like upon the next great sector of American life and proceed to suck it dry in the name of “public interest”, “fair play,” or any other euphemistic glamour the Executive and Legislative branches can be lulled into.”

She suggested the new Congress would drive a stake through the heart of Count Genachowski. OK, technically it was to kill with sunlight (oversight, investigations?):” Like the breaking of dawn,” she said, “the new Congress will prove a swift antidote to the federal bloodsucker you found at your throat this Christmas.”

She also called the net neutrality order a “blind impulse to regulate,” an “Internet grab,”a “hysterical reaction” and a “redundant solution” to “hypothetical problems.”

Other than that, how was the play Mrs. Lincoln?

Have a Ball, Wherever You Are

DISH Network has found some unique counterprogramming for those who want to keep their eye on another ball Sunday (July 12).At about the same time Spain and the Netherlands are battling it out for soccer supremacy in the World Cup final over on ABC, DISH will be offering a view of a darkening world on channel 287.

For those who want to watch the solar eclipse on Sunday–which will not be visible in the U.S.–DISH will show it live ontheir channel. That won’t be a stretch, since its DishEARTH channel already features 24/7 views of Earth from an EchoStar satellite in space.

The eclipse will only be visible in person on ships, or a few small islands, in the southern Pacific Ocean and from the tips of Chile and Argentina.

I Vote for Starbucks

Turns out that the House Communications Subcommittee was not able to provide streaming video online of its hearing on Comcast/NBCU Thursday (June 8), a high-profile deal one of whose key issues is access to online video. There must be cameras there, since a spokeswoman said today there would be video available in a couple of days, which sounds like a Federal Pony Express delivery in this day when communications is so instantaneous that even if you don’t snooze, you can still lose.

This latest bit of bad news for the RCMP (reporters covering media professionally) follows the House Judiciary Committee’s inability to provide streamed video of its field hearing on the deal from L.A. last month, ostensibly for similar problems.

Diversity was a big issue at the L.A. hearing, and will be at the Chicago hearing as well, with the Rev. Jesse Jackson of Rainbow/PUSH scheduled to speak, as well as NBCU Chief Diversity Officer Paula Madison. Seems a shame those siiues will not get a world-wider Web audience today.

It must be a lot tougher to stream video than I thought–so, obviously, not a “kid in his gym shorts in his dorm room” kind of easy–if two different congressional committees can’t get it done on the road.

I also hear from someone at the hearing that there is no wi ifi or wireless reception in the Dirksen federal building (the one in Chicago, not D.C.), where the hearing is being held.

Hmmm. Federal building where you can’t stream video or get wi fi. That would not be my choice of buildings for the hearing, even if it does have the comfort factor of bearing the same name as the one on Capitol Hill, though that is a Senate office building and this is a House subcommittee.

Next time, maybe they should check out a Starbucks.

Steaming Over Streaming

We can put a man on the moon, but nobody could seem to stream the hearing today on Comcast/NBCU from Los Angeles Monday.

The house Judiciary Committee, which held the field hearing, had said it was not streaming it, with not much explanation beyond the logistics and cost cited by one committee source. C-SPAN cited the lack of a witness list on Friday as one reason not having it on the calendar.

Why would a powerful congressional committee hold a hearing in a big city on an issue that includes access to online content and not make sure it could be streamed to the rest of the country? I don’t know.

Free Press hired someone in L.A. to tape the hearing and try to live stream it, but a spokesperson said that the freelancer they hired opined that wireless connectivity seemed to be available, but that that he was unable to stream the coverage. Tweets from others at the hearing suggested connectivity problems.

A committee spokesman had told Multichannel News Friday that the committee would be happy to work with an outside party to stream the hearing.

The Free press spokeswoman said she would post their coverage as soon as possible, both on its Web site as well as excerpts on YouTube.

Antitrust Hearing Could Include Comcast/NBCU

It is not billed as a Comcast/NBCU hearing, but keep an eye on the Senate Antitrust Subcommittee hearing this Wednesday (June 9).The witnesses are Christine Varney, assistant Attorney General for the Antitrust Division at Justice, and Jon Leibowitz, chairman of the Federal Trade Commission Washington.

The hearing is on antitrust review in general–Justice and the FTC have come out with proposed new guidelines for their reviews. Per an agreement that dates back decades, the two divvy up antitrust merger reviews, including the ones that get parallel looks from the FCC–Justice drew the short or long straw, depending on how you look at it,on Comcast/NBCU.

The chairman of the committee is Herb Kohl (D-Wis.), who two weeks ago fired off a letter to the FCC saying he had concluded their needed to be major conditions on the deal, including divesting online video site, Hulu.com. Al Franken (D-Minn.) is a member of the committee as well. Franken was arguably the toughest Hill  interrogator during Hill hearings on the proposed deal.

Varney, for one, wouldn’t be able to talk specifically about the merger since it is currently before Justice for vetting, but that didn’t stop the Senate Commerce Committee from having Varney and FCC chairman Julius Genachowski testify at a hearing generally about competition and specifically about Comcast/NBCU.

Retrans Critics Unite!

Look for the coalition of the retrans unwilling to formalize its relationship.Reliable information holds that a majority of the cable, phone and satellite operators and public interest groups that petitioned the FCC to step in to fix what they see as problems with the retransmission consent regime, are planning to join with more than a dozen others to create a coalition to take their critique to the web and the airwaves (a web site and ad campaign are standard currency for any ad hoc coalition).

The petition, filed last March in the wake of some high-profile retrans wrangles, was itself already a sort of informal coalition of strange bedfellows, putting Time Warner on the same page with Public Knowledge, Verizon and DirecTV in a pitch for FCC action on negotiations between broadcasters and cable operators over carriage.

Just last week, according to an ex parte filing, Time Warner’s counsel met with FCC Commissioner Robert McDowell to talk about the company’s desire for the FCC to adopt retrans reform, citing the “constant threat of service disruptions and cost increases.”

The FCC has collected comments on the petition, but has not yet decided what, if anything, to do about it.

There are said to be close to three dozen groups/companies in the new coalition, but all with the similar criticism that stalled retrans negotiations are consumer-unfriendly to the max thanks to what they see as a system skewed toward broadcasters.

The petitioners pushed the FCC for independent arbitration of disputes and standstill agreements that keep TV station signals on multichannel video providers during impasses. Both are expected to be big issues in the coalition as well.

Broadcasters have countered that the system works fine, that instances of signal-pulling are rare and that they are just beginning to get fair value for their valuable signals.

The coalition is expected to officially reveal itself sometime this week.

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