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Due to the FCC's limits on station ownership at the time (which prevented the common ownership of multiple radio stations), local marketing agreements in radio, in which a smaller station would sell its entire airtime to a third-party in time-buy, were widespread between the 1970s and early 1990s. [4]
NHK World on 23.2, NJ Audiovision on 23.3 Montclair: 50 8 WNJN: NJTV/PBS: satellite of WNJT. NHK World on 50.2, NJ Audiovision on 50.3 New Brunswick: 58 8 WNJB: NJTV/PBS: satellite of WNJT. NHK World on 58.2, NJ Audiovision on 58.3 Trenton: 52 23 WNJT: NJTV/PBS: NHK World on 52.2, NJ Audiovision on 52.3 Tri-State area (NY-NJ-CT) Middletown ...
"Beginning in 1975, FCC rules banned cross-ownership by a single entity of a daily newspaper and television or radio broadcast station operating in the same local market." [15] The ruling was put in place to limit media concentration in TV and radio markets, because they use public airwaves, which is a valuable, and now limited, resource.
Governor Phil Murphy said on Monday that he will sign an executive order lifting the 50 percent capacity limit on New Jersey Transit, though face coverings will still be required.
Those additional costs, while small compared with the agency's $2.86 billion operating budget, are significant given the dire financial woes NJ Transit is facing, including a $119 million ...
In the United States, the practice of duopolies has been frowned upon when using public airwaves, on the premise that it gives too much influence to one company.However, rules governing radio stations are less restrictive than those for television, allowing as many as eight radio stations under common ownership in the largest U.S. media markets. [1]
His comments were reported by the news site Mediaite.. The MSNBC opinion host noted that funding for the Gateway Program, which has a total estimated cost of $16.1 billion, was made possible by ...
NJ PBS (known as NJTV prior to 2021) is a public television network serving the U.S. state of New Jersey.The network is owned by the New Jersey Public Broadcasting Authority (NJPBA), an agency of the New Jersey state government which owns the licenses for all but one of the PBS member stations licensed in the state.