June 2015 carriage dispute with Granite Broadcasting On June 1, 2015, Mediacom subscribers in three television markets served by
Granite Broadcasting Corporation stations were unable to view those stations over Mediacom cable due to a
carriage dispute between Mediacom and Granite Broadcasting over
retransmission consent fees. The affected Granite Broadcasting stations included
WEEK-TV in
Peoria, Illinois,
KBJR-TV in
Superior, Wisconsin/
Duluth, Minnesota, and
WISE-TV in
Fort Wayne, Indiana, all three of which are primary
NBC affiliates. On June 11, 2015, Mediacom and Granite Broadcasting reached an agreement, thereby restoring Granite stations to Mediacom cable systems. The agreement came just in time for Game 5 of the
2015 Stanley Cup Finals which was
broadcast on NBC two days later.
July 2015 carriage dispute with Media General On July 14, 2015,
Media General pulled its stations off of Mediacom cable systems across the United States due to a carriage dispute over retransmission consent fees. This carriage dispute saw Media General stations disappear from Mediacom lineups in 14 television markets across the United States and even three of the
Fox affiliates owned by Media General were lost to Mediacom subscribers in
Hampton Roads, Virginia,
Terre Haute, Indiana, and
Topeka, Kansas just before the start of the
2015 Major League Baseball All-Star Game. On July 30, 2015, Mediacom and Media General reached a new agreement, thereby restoring Media General owned stations to Mediacom subscribers in the affected areas.
Corporate views on carriage disputes and retransmission blackouts On July 7, 2015, Mediacom filed a petition with the
Federal Communications Commission to limit or prevent
blackouts of local broadcast stations during carriage disputes. According to Mediacom CEO Rocco Commisso, the FCC has frequently neglected to address concerns regarding retransmission consent and blackouts of local television stations, particularly in rural areas, where residents have a more difficult time receiving an acceptable
over-the-air signal. Commisso's proposal was for local broadcasters not to terminate a cable or satellite provider's carriage of the station's signal at the end of a retransmission consent agreement if the station does not reach a minimum of 90 percent of its local viewers within its
DMA either over-the-air or via its online stream. Commisso also made note of the fact that retransmission consent fees double every two or three years – something which never happens in any other industry. ==References==