Make your voice heard on High-Definition TV!

NAB: Cable Will Reduce HD Picture Quality 
NAB: Cable Will Reduce HD Picture Quality
Broadcasting group CEO says cable operators are purposely diluting the HD images from local stations.
By Phillip Swann


Washington, D.C. (April 16, 2007) -- David Rehr, CEO of the National Association of Broadcasters, today accused cable TV operators of planning to dilute the High-Definition picture quality of local stations.

In a speech today at the NAB's annual convention in Las Vegas, Rehr said the practice, called "downconversion," will give cable's own high-def signals an advantage over local stations unless Congress and/or the FCC acts.

“What we have here is broadcast discrimination by the cable operators,” Rehr said, according to Multichannel News.

Some cable operators are part of larger corporations that own channels that broadcast in high-def, such as Time Warner's HBO and Comcast's Versus/Golf Channel.

According to Multichannel News, Rehr says the cable services plan to downconvert local HD signals to standard-definition to give their own networks an edge.

The NAB and the cable TV industry have been battling for months over several issues surrounding digital transmissions such as downconverting and multicasting must-carry.

Cable services deny they are diluting the picture quality of local channels and they oppose the NAB's effort to force them to carry multiple digital signals. Some local stations are broadcasting digital channels in addition to their high-def feeds, such as 24/7 weather channels.

Multichannel News reports that Rehr today charged that the cable industry is discriminating against local broadcasters. He said cable TV's opposition to carrying all digital feeds from a local station will deny the TV viewer from seeing important programming.

“This is, in effect, stripping," Rehr said. "They are ripping out programming."

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Pittsburgh Fans Upset Over HD Coverage  
Pittsburgh Fans Upset Over HD Coverage
The local newspaper reports that Penguin playoff games are not in high-def.
By Phillip Swann


Washington, D.C. (April 17, 2007) -- Pittsburgh Penguin fans are hopping mad -- and it's not because the team is behind in the first round of the NHL playoffs.

They are angry because FSN Pittsburgh is not showing the Penguin playoff series against the Ottawa Senators in High-Definition.

That's according to an article in today's Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

The newspaper says FSN's failure to carry any of the Penguin-Senators series in high-def has "brought a hail of criticism from viewers with HD sets."

The regional sports network has the rights to carry as many as five first-round games. NBC has broadcast one game in high-def and the Versus channel is showing some games in HD. However, Versus is blacked out in the Pittsburgh area because FSN Pittsburgh has the territorial rights.

FSN executive producer Shawn McClintock tells the Post-Gazette that the network simply doesn't have enough production trucks and crew for high-def coverage everywhere.

"Everything runs through our facility in Houston. They have limited capacity. Additionally, it can be challenging to find an available truck on such short notice. With the quick turnaround, we could not pull it off for the first round," he said. "In the event the Penguins advance, we're making plans to cover as many games as we can in HD."

The Penguins are now trailing the Senators two games to one in the best of seven series.

McClintock added that FSN aired 25 Penguin games in high-def this season and will broadcast 40 Pittsburgh Pirates games in HD in 2007 as well.

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The HD Videos! 
TVPredictions.com spotlights a new video on High-Definition TV every day. From commentaries by site president Phillip Swann to off-beat TV commercials to instructional videos, the daily TVPredictions.com video will always entertain as well as educate.

You can see past videos by clicking HD Video

Comment on the videos below.

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DIRECTV to Add Tennis Channel HD 
DIRECTV to Add Tennis Channel HD
The high-def debut is expected by year's end.
By Phillip Swann


DIRECTV will add The Tennis Channel in High-Definition is late November or early December.

That's according to an article by the Associated Press.

The news service reports that DIRECTV has reached a multiyear distribution agreement with The Tennis Channel that will start with the addition of the non-HD signal this summer.

The agreement, AP says, will double the number of homes that receive the tennis network. About eight million DIRECTV subscribers are expected to get the channel in their programming packages.

"This is a watershed moment," Tennis Channel CEO Ken Solomon told the wire service. "If you're in the distribution business, this is what clearly and indelibly forever puts you on the map."

Tennis Channel HD will be part of a larger rollout of high-def channels by DIRECTV. The satcaster says it will offer 100 national HD channels by year's end.

Eric Shanks, DIRECTV's executive vice president of entertainment, told AP that the Tennis Channel has "done a great job at acquiring high-profile events."

In advance of the summer launch, DIRECTV will carry the network's coverage of the French Open, which starts May 27.

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HDTV DVD War Is Not Over  
HDTV DVD War Is Not Over
By Joseph Whip
HD Observer


Editor's Note: Samsung this week said it would introduce a dual-format HDTV DVD player by year's end. The news has led some to speculate that the Blu-ray vs. HD-DVD war is far from over, including our HD Observer Joseph Whip..

Washington, D.C. (April 14, 2007) -- Looks like Sony was premature in their declaration of victory in the HD-DVD/Blu-Ray format war. Samsung's announcement of their dual format player is evidence that cracks are starting to form in the BD camp.

At this time last year, Samsung was proclaiming publicly that they were BD exclusive and had no plans to develop, manufacture and market a dual format player despite rumors to the contrary. Now they have formally announced their dual format player and have not ruled out selling an HD-DVD only player.

Why that change of heart?

Perhaps it is due to Sony's sales of the PS3 at prices substantially below what standalone BD players were selling for, cutting BD CE manufacturers such as Samsung and Panasonic off at the knees, as sales of standalone BD players are anemic at best. Samsung clearly can't be happy with this result. I can't imagine that Panasonic and Pioneer are happy with their sales either.

The second reason is the Nielsen Videoscan sales numbers released by Sony which show how few discs of each format are selling. Despite the sale of over a million PS3 consoles, well fewer than a million BD discs have been sold since the sale of the first BD player, the Samsung BDP-1000, back in June 2006. The best that BD could do was Casino Royale, at less than 40,000 discs despite Sony's claim that they shipped 100,000 of those discs.

Many titles have sold less than 1000 copies, even some big titles such as Chicago. HD-DVD sales were comparable despite the fact that HD-DVD has sold somewhere under 250,000 players. Batman Begins and The Departed on HD-DVD have sold similar numbers as CR.

Given the number of players sold by each camp, one would have expected BD to far outsell HD yet they haven't. The attach rate of HD discs far surpasses that of BD.

With the recent sales triggered by the reduction by Toshiba of their A2 player to a MRSP of $399 and the upcoming release of The Matrix on HD-DVD only as well as the flurry of recently announced HD-DVD titles, it is not unreasonable to believe that HD-DVD sales will soon match or exceed those of BD, even with the BD exclusive releases of Cars, Pirates of the Caribbean 1 & 2.

What is clear is that, despite the protestations of Sony and Fox to the contrary, the format war is not only not over but far from it. In fact, one can see the two formats existing side by side for years. It would be difficult to see were that to be the case, why BD exclusive studios such as Fox and Disney would want to remain so and ignore sales of their content to HD-DVD buyers, losing out on significant profits. Remember that Fox and Disney also supported the failed DIVX format as well and then supported DVD.

Maybe they have made a similar mistake in this format battle? Should they switch, this war may in fact end, with BD on the losing side.

Joseph Whip is a HD Observer for TVPredictions.com. If you would like to be a HD Observer, send an e-mail to: swann@tvpredictions.com

The opinions of our HD Observers may not reflect the position of TVPredictions.com.


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Ask Swanni: Meet the Press In HD? 
Ask Swanni: Meet the Press In HD?
Your humble high-def guru takes your questions.
By Phillip Swann


Washington, D.C. (April 13, 2007) -- I get scores of e-mails every week from readers asking everything from whether they should buy a new HDTV to when will their TV provider add new high-def channels.

So, from time to time, I will publish my responses here in this new column called, "Ask Swanni!"

Q. Now that NBC's Nightly News is in high-def, will they go HD with Meet the Press? -- Tommy R.
Quite likely -- and sooner than later. The Sunday morning interview show hosted by Tim Russert would be a perfect addition to the network's HD news lineup. Don't be surprised if you see it go high-def this year.

Q. I heard that EchoStar will soon add Cinemax HD. True? I love movies in HDTV! -- Cathie K.
I asked EchoStar today and a spokeswoman would neither confirm or deny the rumor. So we'll see. The rumor is that it will be added in the next few weeks.

Q. When will Time Warner add National Geographic HD in my area? I live in upstate New York. -- David R.
Time Warner says it has the rights to offer the channel, but it's up to the local TW system to decide whether to carry it. You might want to let your local Time Warner office know that you want it today!

Q. In your poll regarding which HDTV offers the best picture, you didn't mention a front projector. How come? I have one and the picture is great. -- Sam P.
I wanted to restrict the poll to high-def sets which are the overwhelming choice of most consumers. Nothing against the front projector, though. Many Home Theater enthusiasts think its capacity to display high-def images on a 100-inch screen is heaven on earth. (By the way, our poll of TVPredictions.com readers found that Plasma has the best HD picture with LCD a close second.)

Q. Any news on whether CBS will air more than three NFL games a week this season in high-def? -- Wayne P.
Wayne, that's a great question and I am putting it on my list to find out. For those of you who don't know, CBS last season broadcast just three National Football League games each week in HD, compared to six or more by Fox. A CBS executive told me last November that the network would review the policy following the 2006 season.

Q. Will cable show the Extra Innings baseball games in HD? I haven't seen any yet. -- Roy T.
In Demand, which provides the games to cable TV operators, says the Extra Innings package will include at least five games each week in HD. So stay tuned.

Q. Why do you think Samsung is bringing out a dual format HDTV DVD player? Does this mean it thinks the format war will go on forever? -- Aaron P.
Maybe not. Samsung says it hopes to launch the dual format player, which will display both Blu-ray and HD-DVD discs, by the holidays. A lot can happen between now and then.

Q. Do you know when the Weather Channel will start in HD? -- Summer S.
September.

Q. Do you think HDNet will hire Don Imus like they did Dan Rather after he left CBS? -- Eddie I.
I don't think anyone will be hiring Imus anytime soon. Plus, do you really want to see the "I-Man" in high-def?

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Samsung to Sell Dual HDTV DVD Player  
Samsung to Sell Dual HDTV DVD Player
The set-top is expected to be available this holiday season.
By Phillip Swann
 
Washington, D.C. (April 13, 2007) -- Samsung Electronics today said it would launch a dual format HDTV DVD player this holiday season.

The set-top will be able to play both Blu-ray and HD-DVD high-def discs. Samsung did not reveal any pricing or a specific launch date.

LG Electronics earlier this year introduced the world's first dual format player, which is priced at $1199. The dual format player is targeted to high-def owners who are concerned about picking a loser in the format war between Blu-ray and HD-DVD.

Samsung's dual player, model BD-UP5000, will support both formats and their interactive features. At least one Hollywood studio, weary of the format war, welcomed today's news.

"We welcome Samsung's HD player as another solution in the marketplace that will help reduce consumer confusion and buyer hesitancy towards HD media," said Ron Sanders, President of Warner Home Video. "This is an innovative product that can move us closer to mainstream consumer adoption of HD technologies."

Samsung officials echoed Warner's contention that consumers are confused about the format war.

“Consumers are hungry for more HD content but are currently confused about competing formats. Samsung’s (dual) HD player will allow consumers access to every HD movie title available regardless of the authoring format," the company said in a statement.

News of Samsung's dual player could portend a prolonged battle between Blu-ray and HD-DVD. While Blu-ray sales have outpaced HD-DVD in recent weeks, the latter hopes to pull even with the release of 70 new titles between now and summer.

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HDTV's Most Reliable Brands! 
HDTV's Most Reliable Brands
Consumer Reports says Dell, Philips, Vizio are among TVs requiring more repairs than average.
By Phillip Swann


Washington, D.C. (April 11, 2007) -- When buying a High-Definition TV, you need to be sure that the set will not require frequent repairs. Reliability is almost as important as the picture.

With that in mind, Consumer Reports has just published a comprehensive review of the reliability of dozens of major brands, including big-screen TV makers.

Although the magazine said LCD, Plasma and some rear projection technologies are too new to draw final conclusions, it did offer some judgments based on data over the last two years.

LCD
In the LCD category, Consumer Reports said the following brands have shown "promising reliability," meaning they have needed few repairs:

JVC; Magnavox; Panasonic; Philips; Samsung; Sanyo; Sharp; Sony; and Toshiba

However, the magazine said Dell LCD sets have needed "more repairs than average."

Plasma
In the Plasma category, Consumer Reports said the following TV makers have shown "promising reliability":

Fujitsu; Hitachi; Panasonic; Pioneer; Sony; and Toshiba.

Consumer Reports said Philips and Vizio Plasma sets have needed "more repairs than average."

Microdisplay Rear Projection
In the Microdisplay Rear Projection category, the magazine said the following brands have demonstrated "promising reliability."

Panasonic and Sony

However, it said RCA (DLP) and JVC (LCoS/D-ILA) have needed 'more repairs than average."

Based on data from 2001 to 2006, Consumer Reports also rated tube TVs from 30 to 36 inches. It said JVC, Sharp, Sanyo and Toshiba needed repairs only three percent of the time.

In the 34 to 36-inch category, the magazine said Toshiba tube TVs needed repairs only four percent of the time while Sony sets needed repairs just five percent of the time.

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Reader Poll: Plasma Has Best HDTV Picture! 
Which High-Definition TV offers the best picture?

Answer: Plasma.

Well, according to the readers of TVPredictions.com.

In an online poll conducted over the last 24 hours, 35 percent of 931 respondents said a Plasma set delivers the best HDTV picture.

Thirty-three percent said a LCD HDTV has the best picture while 27 percent said a DLP rear projection set offers the best high-def images.

Five percent said the HD picture is the same on all the sets.

The poll is not scientific. But Plasma's narrow margin of victory is evidence of the uncertainty in the marketplace over which High-Definition sets are the best performers. Many people vigorously argue that one set's technology is better than another.

The flat-screen war between Plasma and LCD is the scene of most battles. Most industry observers say Plasma looks better in a darker setting while LCD fares better in well lit areas. But even that contention is disputed by some.

However, everyone seems to agree that HDTV -- regardless of which set you own -- looks better than what we all watched before.

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Which HDTV Has the Best Picture? 
We have started a poll asking the question everyone wants answered:

Which HDTV has the best picture?

Your choices:

LCD
Plasma
DLP
None of the above; they are all the same.

To cast your vote, click Poll

Then, come back here and offer your comments!

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Time Warner Gets Rights to Versus HD 
Time Warner Gets Versus HD Rights
But a spokesman says it's up to each system to add it.
By Phillip Swann

Washington, D.C. (April 9, 2007) -- Time Warner Cable has obtained the rights to broadcast the Versus/Golf channel in High-Definition.

However, Mark Harrad, a Time Warner spokesman, says it's up to the individual Time Warner system whether to add the high-def channel.

Versus/Golf, which is owned by Comcast, carries National Hockey League games and some golf tournaments in HD. The network will broadcast NHL playoff games in high-def.

Harrad says he does not know which (if any) local Time Warner systems have added the HD channel.

"We do have the rights to carry Versus in HD," Harrad says. "I do not have information here regarding which divisions have added that to their line-up and which have not at this point in time. It's up to the divisions. Generally, we try to add as much HD programming as possible, but there has to be channels available on the appropriate tier and the channel line-ups differ from division to division."

With the NHL playoffs beginning this week, several Time Warner subscribers have contacted TVPredictions.com asking if the high-def Versus/Golf will be added.

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Porn Will NOT Determine HDTV DVD War 
Porn Will NOT Determine HDTV DVD War
The industry has changed since adult films influenced the outcome of the Beta vs. VHS battle.
By Phillip Swann

Washington, D.C. (April 9, 2007) -- Reuters is reporting this week that the adult film industry could determine the winner in the Blu-ray-HD-DVD high-def DVD war.

Noting that the porn industry sided with VHS over Beta in the 1980s, the wire service quotes industry observers as saying it could happen again with some large adult studios leaning to HD-DVD.

"If the porn industry wanted to break the logjam of HD-DVD and Blu-ray, it could," Forrester Research's James Mr McQuivey tells Reuters. "If they said 'We are going to go with HD-DVD' you would see a few million homes immediately go out and buy HD-DVD players. They have that power."

Actually, they don't. For two reasons:

1. Different Times
While porn clearly helped VHS defeat Beta, the adult business has undergone a dramatic change over the last two decades, lessening its possible impact on the HDTV DVD war.

In the 1980s, the advent of home video revolutionized the adult industry. Rather than crawling into a dank movie theater, adult fans for the first time could watch their favorite performers in the privacy of their homes. Consequently, they rushed out to buy VCRs, and videotapes, by the millions. With more films available in VHS, the impact on the format war was enormous

But now, the Internet has made porn immediate and varied. People can watch anything they want, whenever they want. Although Net video is not in high-def, it's hard to imagine millions of adult fans rushing out to buy a HDTV DVD player just to get a clearer picture. Some, perhaps, but not enough to impact the format war.

2. Different War
The Blu-ray vs. HD-DVD war is also quite different from the Beta-VHS battle. Videotape was the only way to watch movies at home in the 1980s, but now consumers can watch videotape, standard DVDs, premium movie channels and dozens of basic cable movie channels on cable and satellite. And some of those channels broadcast movies in high-def.

So, it's less likely that the HDTV DVD industry will grow at nearly the same pace as videotape in the 1980s. This lessens the possible impact that any one industry sector will have on the war.

Additionally, in the Reuters story, some executives say that Blu-ray is making it difficult for adult studios to make copies of their films in the format. They suggest this will give HD-DVD an edge.

But Blu-ray has the backing of seven of the eight major non-porn studios while HD-DVD has just four. Any advantage that HD-DVD would have in the porn industry is more than offset by Blu-ray's strength in the traditional film world.

So while it may be fashionable to repeat the theory that porn will once again determine a DVD format war, this time it's not true.

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Reader Poll: DIRECTV Will Be the HDTV Leader  
Which TV provider will have the most High-Definition TV channels at the end of the year?

The answer: DIRECTV, according to the readers of TVPredictions.com.

TVPredictions.com conducted an online poll over the weekend, asking the question: "On January 1, 2008, Who Will Have More HDTV Channels?"

The choices were:

1. My cable TV service
2. DIRECTV
3. EchoStar
4. All will have roughly the same number.

Approximately 57 percent of our readers said DIRECTV will carry the most high-def channels at year's end.

Twenty percent said all TV providers will have roughly the same number. Seventeen percent said EchoStar would have the most while six percent said their local cable TV operator would offer the highest number of HD channels.

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Celebrities In HD: You're So Vain  
Celebrities In HD: You're So Vain
TV's top talent is evading the ultra-clear HD lens with some new tricks of the trade.
By Phillip Swann


Washington, D.C. (April 7, 2007) -- "You're so vain; you probably think this story is about you."

I'm paraphrasing a lyric from the Carly Simon tune, You're So Vain, which supposedly described the narcissistic behavior of a certain celebrity. However, the lyric could easily apply to many of today's TV broadcasters and primetime stars.

Apparently scared silly by the introduction of High-Definition TV, which is so clear that it can expose the smallest facial flaw, some TV stars are now hiding behind special camera filters and other tricks of the trade.

The effect is to soften the realistic HD image so the on-air talent will look younger and appear to have fewer facial imperfections.

While network officials won't speak publicly about the trend, one high-ranking ABC executive tells TVPredictions.com that it's not anything new.

"For years, we've softened the image for certain performers," the executive said in an e-mail interview. "To do so in HD is just a continuation of that."

To protect the talent, the networks are using a new makeup application called airbrushing -- and new specially-made HD camera filters. Tiffen, one maker of the new filter, says it will definitely do the trick.

"This is the filter of choice for making people look great without evidence of filtration," the company says at its web site.

However, the decision to put the stars' image ahead of the image seen by viewers is upsetting many high-def owners who are expecting the sharpest picture possible for their investment.

For instance, NBC Nightly News With Brian Williams began broadcasting in high-def last month and HD owners began complaining immediately that the network was using a filter to make the anchor look better.

"I think NBC has hired Loretta Young's cinematographer," said one poster at the TVPredictions.com Reader Forum.

He was referring to the actress who only appeared in soft focus during her 1950s NBC primetime program, The Loretta Young Show.

"I was frustrated and disappointed," the poster added. "Come on, NBC, get real."

If Williams is hiding behind a camera filter, he's not alone. Meredith Vieira looks like a different person depending upon which lens she is viewed through during the HDTV broadcast of NBC's The Today Show.

When Vieira is shown in the studio, she looks 10 years younger than she does when the cameras swing outside for segments in front of 30 Rock. Apparently, the network is not using the filters on the outdoor HD cameras.

Diane Sawyer, the 61-year-old hostess of Good Morning America on ABC, seems to get the same favorable camera filtering during her program, which is also in HD.

But it's not just TV newscasters. Many primetime stars, such as Blythe Danner, who appeared on Showtime's Huff, are also freaking out over high-def and asking for help.

"I wasn't terribly conscious of it until we did Huff and they used this dreadful High-Definition which makes anybody over 50 look as if they are 80," says the 63-year-old actress. "So, I got very self-conscious about that. Yes, we all get a little help, a little bit of this or that, not tremendous amounts. There were some shots on Huff I was just appalled by. I don't think I am terribly narcissistic, but you don't want to look your worst."

Vanessa Williams, star of Ugly Betty on ABC, is no Ugly Betty in high-def or not. But the former Miss America is also complaining loudly about high-def's all-too-clear picture.

"It's horrifying," Williams, 43, tells CelebrityWeek.com, an online entertainment site. "My brother had (HDTV). I remember him being really excited about it -- and you could see every pore, every hair, every line on the actress’s face."

It's not known if Ms. Williams' cameras are filtered during the show.

Even today's top adult stars are asking for a little assistance when filmed in HD. Jesse Jane, star of such films as Pirates, told HDNet World Report recently that she was getting breast surgery to look better in high-def.

It's unclear where all this will go. High-def owners are demanding the sharpest pictures possible while the celebrities will likely increase their calls for more high-tech camouflage.

"Boy, I'm not a fan of HD personally. I'd like some Barbra Streisand gauze...I want the Barbara Walters soft-focus," Pat Sajak, host of Wheel of Fortune, which is produced in high-def., tells iVillage. " I want low-def. Low, lower and lowest def."

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Should EchoStar Subs Switch to DIRECTV? 
From today's Ask Swanni:

Q. I have EchoStar and I keep hearing about DIRECTV adding all these new HD channels. Should I switch? -- Dennis A.
Well, you first might want to consider that EchoStar's Dish Network now has more national HD channels (31) than any other TV provider, including DIRECTV. A bird in the hand, you know. And don't underestimate EchoStar. While DIRECTV says it will have 100 national HD channels by year's end (including sports packages), EchoStar may have more than you think. We'll see at the end of the year.

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Cable Will Keep Extra Innings; HDTV Expected 
Cable Will Keep Extra Innings; HDTV Expected
But EchoStar could be left out of the game.
By Phillip Swann


Washington, D.C. (April 5, 2007) -- Major League Baseball has agreed to a deal that will let cable TV operators carry its 'Extra Innings' package.

Comcast, Cox and Time Warner say they will carry the package, which includes up to 60 out of market games a week. Other cable operators are likely to announce their plans in the next few days.

However, less clear is whether EchoStar subscribers will have access to the package.

High-Definition plans were also not immediately known, but cable operators have previously shown some Extra Innings games in HD on INHD, which is owned by In Demand, the cable group that negotiated the new deal with the league.

MLB and DIRECTV signed an agreement last month that said the satcaster could have Extra Innings exclusively if other TV providers did not match the offer by last Saturday. (The satcaster plans to show most of the games in High-Definition by 2008.)

However, under pressure from congressional leaders, MLB agreed to extend negotiations with other TV providers past the Saturday deadline. In Demand and the league announced the new agreement last night.

As part of the deal, cable TV's top systems and DIRECTV, will carry MLB's Baseball Channel when it launches in 2009. In Demand, which is owned by Comcast, Cox and Time Warner, agreed that the cable operators would offer the channel to 80 percent of its digital cable subscribers.

That provision means that roughly 40 million cable and satellite viewers will have access to the Baseball Channel in 2009.

In Demand and DIRECTV will also both have an equity stake in the new channel.
"Our chief goal throughout the process was to ensure that fans would have access to as many baseball games and as much baseball coverage as possible," MLB President Bob DuPuy said in a statement. "With this agreement, the MLB Channel will launch with an unprecedented platform."

Rob Jacobson, president of In Demand, echoed that sentiment:

"We couldn't be happier that we have reached an agreement with Major League Baseball and are able to make these games available to baseball fans as we have for the past five years," he said.

DIRECTV issued a statement saying it was pleased that the cable agreement will provide the satcaster with "unique financial benefits." However, DIRECTV now loses the exclusive rights to the Extra Innings package.

A MLB spokesman said the league would continue to negotiate with satcaster EchoStar, according to the Associated Press. But DIRECTV said it expected to be the exclusive satellite carrier of the package.

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If You Could Add Just One HDTV Channel... 
Every day, readers ask me when their TV provider will add one HDTV channel or another. They can't understand why Comcast, DIRECTV, EchoStar, Time Warner -- and every other TV service -- seems to refuse to add their personal favorites.

So, folks, here's your chance to shout off which channels you would like to see your satellite or cable provider add.

If you could require your TV provider to add just one HDTV channel, which one would it be -- and why?

Cable and satellite executives read this Forum so this is a great opportunity to make your voice heard.

So, which HDTV channel would you like to see added?

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Fox Denies HD Baseball Rumors  
Fox: Baseball In HD Not 'Scaled Back'
The network says "most" games will be in high-def.
By Phillip Swann

Washington, D.C. (April 3, 2007) -- Fox Sports today denied reports that it's reducing the number of Saturday afternoon baseball games in High-Definition.

Fox will broadcast three Major League Baseball games every Saturday afternoon, starting this week.

Dan Bell, a Fox Sports spokesman, told TVPredictions.com today that the premiere game will always be in high-def and many of the "second" games will be as well.

"There is no scaling back," Bell said.

Fox Sports announced in February that "most" of the Saturday games would be in high-def. Bell said that description still applies.

"We never put a number on the games that would be in high-def," he said. "But most of the games will be in HD."

Rumors circulated last week that Fox was reducing the number of high-def games when an online guide posted a note saying that Fox was 'scaling back' its coverage due to insufficient HD production truck availability.

The report was quickly picked by some gadget blogs and message boards.

However, Bell said that some apparently misinterpreted the network's original announcement.

"We said most games, not all," he said. "The goal is to have all, but we will have most."

Fox's triple-header coverage begins this Saturday at 3:30 p.m. ET with the New York Mets playing the Atlanta Braves; the Minnesota Twins vs. the Chicago White Sox; and the Los Angeles Dodgers vs. the San Francisco Giants. The Dodgers-Giants game will be in high-def.

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Only 3 Baseball Teams Not In Local HD 
Only 3 Baseball Teams Not In Local HD
The Nats, O's and Royals are not broadcast locally in high-def.
By Phillip Swann

Washington, D.C. (April 3, 2007) -- Major League Baseball's 2007 season has begun and it's a Home Run for most High-Definition TV viewers.

According to a TVPredictions.com study, 27 of the 30 Major League Baseball teams can be seen this season in high-def on local or regional sports channels.

The remaining holdouts: The Baltimore Orioles and the Washington Nationals, which are carried locally by the Mid-Atlantic Sports Network (MASN), and the Kansas City Royals, which is broadcast by the team-held Royals Sports Television Network (RSTN).

The Orioles were available locally in high-def last season when their games were carried by Comcast Sports Net. However, MASN, which is owned by Oriole owner Peter Angelos, now has the rights.

MASN also got the rights to the Nats' games as a concession when the league decided to move the Montreal Expos to Washington D.C. prior to the 2005 season.

The Royals next year will be carried by Fox Sports Midwest, which is expected to show their games in high-def.

However, MASN has told several publications, including TVPredictions.com, that it is uncertain when it will begin broadcasting in HD.

Of the 27 teams that will broadcast locally in high-def this year, all have announced HD schedules except for the Milwaukee Brewers, whose games can be seen on Fox Sports North. However, the regional sports channel is expected to carry some Brewer games this year in HD.

Fox and ESPN will also carry dozens of national broadcasts of MLB games in high-def this season.

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March Madness: Does Your HDTV PIcture Break-Up? 
The 'Mad' Mystery of the HDTV Basketball Blur
High-def sleuths in Kentucky investigate why the picture breaks up during March Madness.
By Phillip Swann


Washington, D.C. (April 2, 2007) -- When Ohio State's Greg Oden jumps for a rebound in tonight's NCAA college basketball championship, HD viewers in Kentucky say their picture will likely "break up" or become blurry.

And it won't be the first time. According to the Lexington Herald-Leader, the picture distortions have been trying March Madness fans mad during tournament action.

"People have asked us about the TVs: 'Is there something wrong with my television' 'Is there something wrong with our cables?'" Tony Spires, a local electronics retailer, tells the newspaper. "We just have to do a lot of explaining."

High-def sleuths in Kentucky are pointing to everything from the local CBS station's (WKYT) decision to divide its signal into three channels (called, "multicasting") to CBS' source feed to the transmission of the local cable and satellite providers.

Regardless of the problem's cause, Spires says the picture break-up "can be really annoying."

Picture break-up, or sudden blurring, is not uncommon to high-def viewers in any area, particularly during sports broadcasts which feature sudden movement. (This reporter, in fact, has noticed occasional break-up during DIRECTV's broadcast of this year's Madness games; however, Comcast, my local cable operator, has not had the same problem.)

The distortions can be caused by a variety of factors (including the ones stated above).

But the Herald-Leader reports that WKYT's break-ups during March Madness games are a special case.

The newspaper reports that WKYT, the CBS affiliate in the greater Lexington area, which is broadcasting the NCAA tournament in high-def. airs three digital channels: the CBS feed; a 24-hour weather channel, and a feed from the CW network.

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DIRECTV to Add HD On Demand  
DIRECTV to Test VOD; Will Include HD Movies
Full service expected to roll out in July.
By Phillip Swann


Washington, D.C. (April 1, 2007) -- DIRECTV says it will begin testing its Video on Demand service this month and it will include High-Definition movies.

That's according to a report in Multichannel News.

TVPredictions.com reported last year that DIRECTV was preparing an on-demand service that would include high-def. But the satcaster has been uncertain about launch dates.

Multichannel News writes that DIRECTV plans to roll out the on-demand service in July after the initial testing, which begins this month. The publication did not report whether the testing would take place in consumer homes or employee homes.

The VOD service will be available via Broadband lines connected to DIRECTV's HD DVRs.

The satcaster says it has signed about 12 networks to offer dedicated on-demand channels, including the Food Network and Discovery Channel.

In addition, 2,000 movies will be available on demand, many of which will be in high-def.

DIRECTV is hoping the VOD offering will counter cable TV's On Demand lineup, which includes thousands of hours of programming.

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Reader Poll: Blu-ray Will Win  
Reader Poll: Blu-ray Will Win
The high-def DVD format trounces its rival HD-DVD in an online survey.
By Phillip Swann


Washington, D.C. (April 1, 2007) -- Sony's Blu-ray will be the ultimate victor in the HDTV DVD format war against Toshiba's HD-DVD.

So says an online reader poll conducted by TVPredictions.com.

The poll, which was posted Friday, asked: "Who Will Win the HDTV DVD War?"

Sixty-five percent of poll respondents said they thought Blu-ray would win. Twenty-one percent said HD-DVD would emerge victorious. And roughly 14 percent said neither format would win. (725 readers of TVPredictions.com participated in the poll.)

While not scientific, the poll reflects a growing consensus that Blu-ray now has the momentum. Blu-ray disc sales have outpaced HD-DVD by about 2-1 over the last two months.

However, Toshiba is firing back with the release of several new titles -- and it has just cut the price of its entry-level player to $399.

Blu-ray has the exclusive backing of four major film studios while HD-DVD has just one (Universal) supporting it exclusively. This has given Blu-ray more titles and bigger-name films.

Sony said last week that it has shipped 100,000 Blu-ray copies of Casino Royale.

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Is Microsoft Retreating From HD-DVD? 
Is Microsoft Retreating From HD-DVD?
Company may be sending signals that it's hedging its bets in the format war.
By Phillip Swann

Washington, D.C. (March 30, 2007) -- Microsoft has arguably been the leading supporter of the HD-DVD format, other than Toshiba, the company behind the technology.

The software titan has added a $199 HD-DVD attachment drive for its XBox 360 video game console and it even has an employee (Kevin Collins) with the title, "Director of HD-DVD Evangelism."

However, in the last week, Microsoft has taken steps that have led some to speculate whether it's hedging its bets in the Blu-ray vs. HD-DVD high-def disc war.

First, Microsoft unveiled its new XBox 360 Elite game console that can play high-def movies downloaded from the XBox Live Marketplace.

However, the console, which will be available next month for $479, does not include a HD-DVD player, unlike Sony's PlayStation 3, which has a Blu-ray player inside.

With a price tag comparable to PS3's entry point of $499, it's surprising that Microsoft also did not match Sony's high-def player feature.

The omission might seem unimportant if Microsoft Europe's senior regional director did not make some news this week as well.

In an interview with GamesIndustry.Biz, Neil Thompson discounted the progress of the high-def disc market, but left open the possibility that XBox 360 could support Blu-ray at some point.

“I’m not sure the market has moved to High Definition (movies) yet,” Thompson said. “And if and when it does, then the way that we’ve constructed the offering we’ve made means we’ll be able to go whichever way we want.”

Presumably, Thompson's remarks reflect the thinking at Microsoft headquarters. In recent months, Blu-ray player and disc sales have easily outpaced HD-DVD and many industry observers are concluding that Blu-ray could be reaching the stretch drive.

“Whatever format wins it is highly likely we will offer a solution," Thompson said in an interview with the BBC. "The only debate is if you want to watch Blu-ray movies and pay the extra money for that feature. We prefer to offer the consumer choice.”

The question now is: Will that choice soon include Blu-ray?

We have a poll running at TVPredictions.com on who will win the HDTV DVD format war:

Blu-ray or HD-DVD?

Cast your vote by clicking Poll

Then come back here and offer your comments!


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DIRECTV: 100 HD Channels Will Include Sunday Ticket  
DIRECTV: 100 HD Channels Will Include Sunday Ticket
The satcaster says it has 70 standalone HD networks under contract.
By Phillip Swann

Washington, D.C. (March 29, 2007) -- DIRECTV says its upcoming lineup of 100 High-Definition channels will include feeds from sports packages such as the NFL Sunday Ticket.

That's according to an article by Multichannel News.

DIRECTV has said it will offer 100 national HDTV channels by year's end. Multichannel News reports that DIRECTV CFO Michael Palkovic says the satcaster has 70 high-def channels under contract.

The company has announced deals with several HD channels yet-to-be launched, including CNN, USA Network, Sci-Fi Channel, the Cartoon Network and The Weather Channel.

But Palkovic added that the 100-channel lineup will include feeds from Sunday Ticket, MLB's Extra Innings and other sports packages. In 2008, DIRECTV is planning to show most (if not all) of the games available in pay packages in high-def.

For example, Palkovic said the Sunday Ticket, which offers 13 different NFL games each week, would count as 13 HD channels.
“That’s the way you would count that,” Palkovic told Multichannel News.

He said that about 70 or 80 channels would be 24/7, year-round high-def channels.

Palkovic also discounted speculation that DIRECTV would add the 15-channel high-def lineup from Voom.

“First of all, there are no Voom channels, there is nothing like that that people would consider not really quality channels,” Palkovic said. “We’re talking USA, Sci Fi, some of the Turner networks, The Weather Channel, mainstream programming that’s been around for a long time that’s going to make the leap to HD.”

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Rush Limbaugh Is Wrong -- About HDTV 
Rush Limbaugh Is Wrong -- About HDTV
The conservative commentator says he loves high-def, but he apparently doesn't know when a show is in high-def.
By Phillip Swann

Washington, D.C. (March 28, 2007) -- Recent studies have found that millions of High-Definition TV owners are unsure when a show is broadcast in high-def. Many assume that a program's in HD because it's on a high-def set and/or a high-def channel.

Apparently, you can count Rush Limbaugh in that group.

The conservative commentator has made a number of recent statements on his nationally syndicated radio show that indicate that he doesn't know when a show or segment is really in high-def.

This is a bit surprising considering that he's a vocal HDTV supporter, frequently telling his listeners how wonderful it is. But it appears that he may not always be aware of what he's watching.

For instance, Limbaugh yesterday said on the air that NBC Nightly News With Brian Williams began broadcasting in high-def on Monday night.

That is true. But Limbaugh added that a Nightly News interview segment with Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez during Monday's broadcast was in high-def.

It was not. Nightly News is airing the studio segments with anchor Williams in high-def. Most of the field reports, including Justice Department correspondent Pete Williams' interview with Gonzalez, are shown in standard definition.

The previous day, Limbaugh made the same error when he joked that "Mrs. Bill Clinton had a town meeting today on Good Morning America. I was watching this, and it was on High Definition. And I'm saying to myself, 'Mrs. Clinton, stay away from HD.'"

However, the joke was actually on Limbaugh. While Good Morning America airs its studio segments (and some outdoor shots) in high-def, most field reports (such as Mrs. Clinton's Town Hall meeting) are not in HD.

An ABC spokeswoman confirmed today that the Clinton segment was not in high-def.

Limbaugh's error is common, and understandable, considering that a network will frequently say a program is in high-def although some of its segments are not. For viewers not familiar with the industry or the technological aspects of high-def, it's easy to assume that it's all in HD.

But it's a bit embarrassing for Limbaugh, a broadcast veteran of multiple decades, to make such a mistake.

I tried to contact the commentator to explain the situation. However, at his web site, you have to sign up for a pay service for the privilege of sending him an e-mail.

So, consider this my effort to set him straight.

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