Las Vegas Review-Journal

Taunting the networks, an app streams free TV

- By Edmund Lee New York Times News Service

NEW YORK — On the roof of a luxury building at the edge of Central Park, 585 feet above the concrete, a lawyer named David Goodfriend has attached a modest 4-foot antenna that is a threat to the entire Tv-industrial complex.

The device is there to soak up TV signals coursing through the air — content from NBC, ABC, Fox, PBS and CBS, including megahits like “This Is Us” and Sunday’s broadcast of Super Bowl LIII. Once plucked from the ether, the content is piped through the internet and assembled into an app called Locast. It’s a streaming service, and it makes all of this network programmin­g available to subscriber­s in ways that are more convenient than relying on a home antenna: It’s viewable on almost any device, at any time, in pristine quality that doesn’t cut in and out. It’s also completely free.

If this sounds familiar, you might be thinking of Aereo, the Barry Diller-backed startup that in 2012 threatened to upend the media industry by capturing over-the-air TV signals and streaming the content to subscriber­s for a fee — while not paying broadcaste­rs a dime. NBC, CBS, ABC and Fox banded together and sued, eventually convincing the Supreme Court that Aereo had violated copyright law. The clear implicatio­n for many: If you mess with the broadcaste­rs, you’ll file for bankruptcy and cost your investors more than $100 million.

Goodfriend took a different lesson. A former media executive with stints at the Federal Communicat­ions Commission and in the Clinton administra­tion, he wondered if an Aereo-like offering that was structured as a noncommerc­ial entity would remain within the law. Last January, he started Locast in New York. The service now has about 60,000 users in Houston, Chicago, Boston, Philadelph­ia, Dallas and Denver as well as New York, and will soon add more in Washington. It is not yet available in Las Vegas.

Goodfriend, 50, said he hoped to cover the entire nation as quickly as possible. “I’m not stopping,” he said. “I can’t now.”

The comment is basically

 ?? JEENAH MOON / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? David Goodfriend shows off the interface of his free streaming service, Locast, which makes network programmin­g available to subscriber­s, in Manhattan. Want to watch network TV for free? This startup will let you, and (so far) the big broadcaste­rs aren’t trying to stop it.
JEENAH MOON / THE NEW YORK TIMES David Goodfriend shows off the interface of his free streaming service, Locast, which makes network programmin­g available to subscriber­s, in Manhattan. Want to watch network TV for free? This startup will let you, and (so far) the big broadcaste­rs aren’t trying to stop it.

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