Posts Tagged ‘PBS’

WQLN-TV off air until Monday

It’s been a rough week for WQLN as they were affected by weekend storms that knocked off their transmission system until Tuesday. Then again this morning the digital TV transmitter went out, again due to another bad storm and didn’t want to kick back on.

Here’s the latest from their Facebook page:

From our Chief Engineer: “WQLN TV will be off the air until at least Monday. Our transmitter’s tube went bad. The tube is the most important and also most expensive part of the transmitter. We had a good run with ours though, as it was the original tube and was about 10 years old. I will keep you all updated on the progress when I know more.” If you have Time Warner or Rogers Cable, you should be getting at least channel 54.1 since that is delivered to them via fiber optic.

I guess no This Old House Hour for us antenna-only folks tonight!

WQLN adds PBSWorld, subtracts Marketplace

PBS World

PBS World

Unless you’ve been alive over a half-century, you probably learned how to count through the efforts of The Count, the friendly vampire on Sesame Street seen locally on WQLN.

Fast forward to the current decade, and the complex mathematics of state budgets and advances in technology has the local public media outlet doing some counting of their own.

On the positive side of the balance sheet is the addition of PBS World to the 54.3 standard def lineup. When it was launched in 2007, the purpose of PBS World was to be

a  new channel featuring documentary, public affairs, and news programming from public television’s award-winning signature series and acclaimed independent filmmakers

During the day you’ll see episodes from the PBS Kids lineup, proving to be a strong alternative to the regular PBS fare on 54.1 and the Create channel on 54.2.

On the liability column is the loss of the popular but expensive Marketplace radio show, which aired at 6:00 PM with morning updates through June 30th. WQLN President Dwight Miller had warned us that because of the severe budget cuts made by the state, the damage would be felt by the viewers and listeners. Marketplace was one of those casualties.

Some think that in this age of 500 digital channels and audio and video on demand, the public media service is becoming obsolete. I couldn’t disagree more. Free educational broadcasting, with programming as excellent as Marketplace, allows every citizen to be informed, and helps keep the playing field level.

Because of that, the loss of even one half-hour daily finance show that helped the common person understand the complexity of finance and economics will be sorely felt.

Can QLN take another hit?

Blazing headline in the front page of the Erie Times-News this morning: Cable loss a threat to WQLN. Online reporter Mike Maciag, quotes WQLN Public Media President Dwight Miller that if Rogers Cable in London, Ontario drops the Q in favor of a Detroit PBS station, it would put a 20% dent in the public station’s donation base.

Rogers is complaining about the quality of the WQLN digital signal, which is received over the air. The Detroit station comes in on a cable evidently from Windsor. The cost of getting a fiber-optic signal from Erie to the Rogers headend would be costly.

Meanwhile QLN is dealing with the loss of $800K from state funding, Miller said to the paper that this could be the last straw, forcing the station to cancel all local programming or even merge with another PBS entity. More layoffs would be inevitable.

How much more bad news can a non-profit take?

Survivor: Erie DTV begins

It’s February 17th, 2009, the original date set by Congress for all full-power television stations to turn off their analog transmitters and complete the transition to digital television.

DTV.govHowever, fearing a major disruption of access to local news and weather with millions of viewers still unprepared for the transition, Congress delayed the deadline to June 12th. In the ensuing days, the FCC has been trying to ascertain which stations needed to go through with the February deadline, and which would continue their analog feed until the June date.

Here’s where we stand in the Erie DMA:

  • WICU-12 (NBC) – continuing analog until June 12th
  • WJET-24 (ABC) – continuing analog until sometime in April
  • WSEE-35 (CBS) – will shut off their analog today (2/17)
  • WQLN-54 (PBS) – analog has been off since Sept. 15, 2008 due to wind damage to their transmission system
  • WFXP-66 (FOX) – continuing analog until June 12th

With WSEE getting voted off of the “analog island”, it could mean headaches from a small yet substantial percentage of their viewers. We’ll monitor the situation of how many Erie viewers will not be ready to pick up Survivor or 60 Minutes on the digital signal.

Some good digital news comes from Dwight Miller of WQLN: the long recovery process from their wind-damaged transmission system should be complete over the next few days. They will be activating their full-power all-digital signal this week as tower climbers erect the new system and regain a full footprint that has been hampered since September.

Reset the clock to June 12th as one deadline passes and another one comes into view.