Independent Video Producers on San Antonio Public Access TV

Sunday, December 23, 2007

Image Dance, Stuck on You



Image Dance of San Antonio Tx, does a pop dance to Stuck on You for the 411 Show. The dancers are ages 10 and 11. This clip is from a 2005 Show.

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Comments by FCC Commissioner Michael Copps

From an FCC hearing with Congress last week.
Commissioner Copps: "The Commission's priorities are dangerously out-of-whack, and we
urgently need this Committee's help to save us from ourselves. We have a proposal before us at
the Commission to open the door to newspaper-broadcast combinations in every market in the country and the drive is on to rush this to a vote next week. Meanwhile we have given short shrift to pressing problems like the sad state of minority ownership of U.S. media properties and the obvious decline of localism in our broadcast programming. We have also neglected the DTV transition, and have not done nearly enough to prepare consumers and broadcast stations for the rapidly approaching deadline. If we don't turn this around quickly, the DTV transition will result in widespread television outages and a consumer backlash the likes of which you and I haven't seen for a long, long time."
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-278931A1.doc

Saturday, December 8, 2007

Friday, November 30, 2007

Martin's FCC, 70/70, (a la carte?), & You


From the Alliance for Community Media

We've received some requests to help explain just what went down at the FCC this week.

Hard on the heels of FCC Chairman Martin's full-tilt-boogie on relaxing media ownership/cross-ownership restrictions in recent hearings in DC and Seattle, comes his push to invoke Section 612(g) of the 1984 Cable Act - the so-called "70/70" provision. In short, this provision states that at such a time when cable systems (36 channels or more) pass 70% of US homes, and 70% of those homes subscribe, the cable industry shall be deemed to be uncompetitive, allowing the FCC to to adopt additional unspecified regulations in order to increase program diversity.

While Martin's 70/70 gambit has received a great deal of press and analysis, it is not as straight-forward a matter, nor as urgent an action item, as the media ownership issue. There remain just 11 more days for comments to be filled on the media ownership matter. If you haven't yet submitted comments in that proceeding, please visit StopBigMedia.com and do so - a simple online form is there (http://www.stopbigmedia.com/comment.php) as well as info on other steps you can take to help.

Before moving on to 70/70, please note these important up-coming meetings:

Dec. 5 - House Oversight Hearing of the FCC: Media Ownership - Subcommittee on Telecommunications & the Internet; 9:30 am.

Dec. 13 - Senate FCC Oversight Hearing - Full Commerce Committee; 10 am
"At this hearing, the Committee Members will hear from the five Federal Communications Commission commissioners on current proceedings involving media and telecommunications policy."

Dec. 18 - the next public meeting of the FCC.

StopBigMedia suggests you contact your congressional reps. Especially if your reps sit on these committees, it would help IMMENSELY if you contacted them before these hearings, letting them know how important localism in general and PEG access in specific is to your community.

Thanks. Now - on with the show...

I've been collecting every story I could find about 70/70, but learned early on that blindly forwarding them could do more harm then good. At this point, I'm going to suggest that the best single piece of info on this is Harold Feld's Nov. 14 blog post:

"Time For Some Hot Bi-Partisan Action on Cable: Or, Why Copps and Adelstein Need to Work With Martin Here Part I" - quoted extensively below. (In fact, since Harold is consistently fair in linking to those with opposing views, I'd say overall his blog is the best single source, certainly on this issue. ACM listserv readers may remember Lauren-Glenn Davitian pointed to Harold's blog after the FCC action this week for his take.)

Harold is an attorney with the Media Access Project - an organization that has a long history of being up-close and personal with the various media reform issues before the FCC. His post is fairly lengthy, but well worth reading in full. He gives an excellent whirlwind tour of cable regulation; great context-setting for those of us in the PEG access community.

I'm merely going to quote two extensive passages here, make one comment about where we're at presently, and leave it at that. I don't expect this topic to turn into a thread on the ACM's lists, but this is an item we should all understand and be able to follow as the story develops. Here's a start.

Harold begins his post by humorously addressing the difficulties some may have in accepting that Kevin Martin may actually be doing something helpful for increasing program diversity. In the second excerpted passage, after having looked at the source data and its sources, he then speculates about what additional regulations 70/70 could trigger - starting with a national PEG set-aside, and moving on to the 'dreaded' a la carte!

Click the link at the top to view the entire posting.

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Green Connection Bamboo Show

Rita Heck of the Green Connection Show on San Antonio Public Access TV talks to John Hainsworth of Big Grass Bamboo about this environmentally freindly wood.
Formats available: Quicktime (.mov)