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Bschneider
10-07-2008, 04:50 PM
NBC Universal Shutting Down Weather Plus

Three months after acquiring stake in The Weather Channel, NBC Universal pulls plug on its 24-hour local weather service

By Marisa Guthrie, Broadcasting & Cable, 10/7/2008

NBC Universal is pulling the plug on Weather Plus, the 4-year old digital venture between NBC and local affiliates that provided 24-hour local weather service on digital tiers.

NBC and the NBC Television Affiliates Association Board unanimously approved the decision to dissolve the service, according to an announcement. NBC News chief Steve Capus informed the staff Tuesday that operations would be shut down. Ten NBC O&Os and 80 affiliates currently use Weather Plus.

"NBC Universal's purchase of The Weather Channel, coupled with the ongoing financial and distribution challenges facing Weather Plus, made the venture no longer feasible," the company said in a statement. "As was the world's first all-digital broadcast network, Weather Plus will no doubt pave the way for the future of digital broadcasting, and we are proud of all we accomplished with this unique property. On the air and behind the scenes, the staff has shown tremendous dedication and professionalism, and we would like to thank them for all their efforts."

Weather Plus fell under the news division’s responsibility last year when Jay Ireland, former head of the NBC stations group, returned to parent company General Electric.

Weather Plus was intended to exploit new revenue streams for NBC and its affiliates, but the service was facing increasingly challenging economic realities. When NBC Universal acquired a minority stake in The Weather Channel (http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA6575575.html)in July, Weather Plus was rendered all but redundant.

Few at the station level were surprised to hear of NBC’s decision to pull the plug on Weather Plus.

“Weather Channel is such a strong brand—it’s the weather brand,” says WTHR Indianapolis VP/General Manager Jim Tellus, whose station offers its own Skytrak franchise instead of Weather Plus. “I would’ve guessed they’d put their energies into Weather Channel.”

But affiliates are increasingly curious as to how NBC will work Weather into the station mix. They say their rich archive of local weather content, coupled with the preeminent weather brand, would make a robust combination.

“The chance to localize the Weather Channel product, which is considered one of its shortcomings, seems like a natural fit,” says KSNW Wichita President/General Manager Al Buch, who is on the NBC affiliates board. “There’s significant opportunity to leverage the affiliate body to have a very potent weather resource.”

Other affiliates wonder what will become of their digital slot to be vacated by Weather Plus. Some suggest a mix of their local news and NBC’s news and entertainment content would fill the breach nicely. “Stations might be apprehensive about filling their own local news channel,” says WJAR Providence VP/General Manager Lisa Churchville, who learned of Weather Plus’ demise from a reporter. “A mix of MSNBC, CNBC, and maybe NBC entertainment programming could’ve made for an interesting outlet.”

http://www.broadcastingcable.com/ind...leID=CA6602781 (http://www.broadcastingcable.com/index.asp?layout=articlePrint&articleID=CA6602781)

Bschneider
10-07-2008, 04:53 PM
This could be very good news for the Tampa market. Perhaps WFLA can quit that bandwidth hog of a sub channel that NO ONE watches.

But I highly doubt it. Both Bright House and Verizon has a channel dedicated to this channel. I doubt that WFLA will give that up.

Bschneider
10-07-2008, 06:22 PM
NBC Shutting Down Weather Plus
By Michele Greppi

The sun is setting on NBC Weather Plus, the 4-year-old digital joint venture between NBC and affiliated local stations, which programmed the 24/7 local weather service on their digital channels. The service was one of the first digital projects conceived as a way for a network and its affiliates to work together to create new revenue streams.

NBC News President Steve Capus informed the on- and off-air Weather Plus staff headquartered at CNBC facilities in Englewood, N.J., Tuesday morning that the operation would be phased out in stages through the end of the year.

Mr. Capus said the NBC affiliates board had notified the network last week of its desire to disband the partnership in which the 10 NBC owned-and-operated stations and approximately 80 affiliates have been participating. Only the NBC O&Os had signed on for the online aspect of Weather Plus. “That’s been, quite frankly, frustrating on our part,” Mr. Capus told TelevisionWeek Tuesday.

He said that jointly owned but locally focused Weather Plus would have come to this end even without NBC Universal’s acquisition of a minority stake in The Weather Channel, for which NBC News will assume programming responsibility and with which NBC News already is sharing some content and talent. NBC has been plugging The Weather Channel after some “Today” show weather segments.

“This is a tough business,” Mr. Capus said. “It has not been a profitable business.”

“It’s a very difficult business climate these days. You can’t ignore those realities,” Mr. Capus said. “Even if the Weather Channel acquisition hadn’t happened, this was a business that was challenged. We were going to have to face that at some point.”

Mr. Capus’ news division last year assumed responsibility for Weather Plus after former NBC-owned stations chief Jay Ireland returned to parent company General Electric. Mr. Capus said he reminded the affiliates then that the news division was facing “real financial pressures.”

Although such Weather Plus talent as Jeff Ranieri had become nationally known through appearances on NBC News programs and MSNBC, the fact that about half of the affiliates did not participate in Weather Plus stymied any thought of national advertising sales and meant all ad support had to come only from local markets.

Among the questions that will need to be addressed are those about the disposition of what Mr. Capus calls “pretty cool gear” Weather Plus has, as well as how many employees, including talent with long-term contracts, can or will be absorbed elsewhere in the network.

“I’m a huge fan of Jeff Ranieri and Bill Karins and some of the other folks, and we’re going to look at everybody and make a determination about what we’re going to do,” Mr. Capus said. “There are some real superstars behind the scenes whom we’ll work to move into other jobs. That’s going to be difficult, given the general climate right now, but we’ll do the best we can.”

Among those he singled out for praise is Weather Plus general manager Jeff Thein.

There was no immediate comment from NBC affiliates board Chairman Michael Fiorile, who is vice chairman and CEO of Dispatch Broadcast Group.

However, the general manager of one of the first affiliates to sign up for Weather Plus, who declined to be identified, said he is eager for Weather Plus to go away.

http://www.tvweek.com/news/2008/10/n...ather_plus.php (http://www.tvweek.com/news/2008/10/nbc_shutting_down_weather_plus.php)

bdraw
10-07-2008, 09:18 PM
Hip, Hip, hooray!!!

UnixPimp
10-08-2008, 09:52 AM
This could be very good news for the Tampa market. Perhaps WFLA can quit that bandwidth hog of a sub channel that NO ONE watches.

But I highly doubt it. Both Bright House and Verizon has a channel dedicated to this channel. I doubt that WFLA will give that up.

Why would removing this channel be a good thing? They actually show 24/7 weather coverage of local weather and anyone can get this channel OTA with a DTV tuner. No cable required.

Unlike The Weather Channel, which requires cable/satellite and mainly covers weather outside of the local area.

This digital sub channel is not HD, so it does not take up that much bandwidth.

If you want to talk about sub channels that no one watches, just look at the extra 3 channels from ION.

FTBoomerIII
10-08-2008, 10:37 AM
Why would removing this channel be a good thing? They actually show 24/7 weather coverage of local weather and anyone can get this channel OTA with a DTV tuner. No cable required.

Unlike The Weather Channel, which requires cable/satellite and mainly covers weather outside of the local area.

This digital sub channel is not HD, so it does not take up that much bandwidth.

If you want to talk about sub channels that no one watches, just look at the extra 3 channels from ION.


I'm no expert on this and one of our resident experts will chime in soon but here is my understanding:

The network weather sub-channels are not real channels, they are actually sharing (read: stealing) bandwidth from the main channel. 607 is stealing bandwidth from 608 not transmitting on it's own channel\frequency.

Floyd
10-09-2008, 12:14 AM
I'm glad they failed, since they turned it into just another advertising venue, and you had to watch it for a while to get any useful info from it....similar to the national weather channel.
I hope the local ch-8 weather sub channel goes back to the original format where they showed the weather radar all the time. That was information you could actually use to see where the rain was, and where it was coming from/going. They would switch the radar coverage to another exciting locale when nothing was happening here. I don't think it took up a lot of bandwidth, since the radar only updated periodically, and it wasn't hi-res.