Los Angeles Times

Revival of TV for free

Media company E.W. Scripps launches a campaign promoting over-the-air antennas.

- By Stephen Battaglio

As inflation puts pressure on household budgets, consumers are taking a closer look at how much they spend on subscripti­on streaming services.

One way to bring that cost down is adopting the original TV technology — over-the-air antennas that capture broadcast signals without a connection to a cable box, satellite dish or internet. The monthly price for watching is the same as it was when RCA Chairman David Sarnoff flipped the switch on the first commercial TV station at the 1939 New York World’s Fair: free.

But many Americans

who grew up with cable TV and streaming don’t realize that free over-the-air broadcasti­ng exists or understand how it works.

Cincinnati-based E.W. Scripps, which owns 61 TV stations nationwide, is out to change that.

The media company is spending $20 million this year on an unusual education and marketing campaign to help consumers understand the use and benefits of over-the-air antennas at a time when managing their TV sources is more complex than ever.

This month, Scripps launched a website, The FreeTVProj­ect.org, where users can type in their ZIP Codes to learn what stations they can get for free in their area with an antenna. In Los Angeles, the nation’s second largest TV market, antenna users can receive more than 160 free broadcast channels.

The site also explains how broadcast TV works and offers informatio­n on what type of antenna works best, based on the user’s geographic­al location. The one-time cost can range from $20 for an indoor antenna to $149 for outdoor models that require installati­on on a rooftop.

Scripps began airing cheeky 30-second TV spots in cities where it owns stations. It also will place ads on social media sites, outdoor billboards and connected TV streaming platforms, hoping to reach the cordcutter­s or cord-nevers who don’t use an antenna.

Adam Symson, chief executive of Scripps, believes the combinatio­n of economic uncertaint­y and a scrambled TV landscape where streaming service prices are creeping up creates an opportunit­y to get more consumers to add over-the-air broadcasti­ng to their viewing diet.

“We’re sitting at a moment in time where there is more pressure on the consumer’s pocketbook than ever,” Symson said. “We’re reading every day about ‘plus fatigue.’ Consumers are frustrated by the fact they have five video streaming subscripti­ons and they are not sure what value they are getting out of them.”

The buzziest and criticlaud­ed scripted shows are now on streaming services, but broadcast is still the home of the bulk of the NFL football games — the most watched content on any platform — and other major sporting events, including Major League Baseball’s World Series, the NBA Finals, Triple Crown horse racing and the NHL’s Stanley Cup. All air on the major broadcast networks, which reach nearly every home in the U.S. with their signals.

“The only place cord-cutters and cord-nevers can watch live sports for free is going to be on over-the-air television,” Symson noted. “Free is an incredibly compelling consumer propositio­n.”

While major broadcast networks are neglected by critics and Emmy voters, they still offer first-run episodes of some of the most popular series on television, including “NCIS” and “Ghosts” on CBS, ABC’s “Grey’s Anatomy” and the inexhausti­ble “Law and Order” franchises on NBC.

A study done earlier this year by research firm Screen Engine/ASI found that 68% of all consumers consider the major networks a “musthave.” The number rises to 79% among antenna users.

TV antenna usage is on the upswing. The Consumer Technology Assn. says 32% of U.S. households own a TV antenna, up from 26% in 2019. The CTA expects the number of antenna-using homes to reach 50 million by 2025 as more consumers cut the pay-TV cord.

Many of the new antenna customers are using them to pull in broadcast stations not offered in their markets by virtual multichann­el video program distributo­rs such as YouTubeTV, Hulu Live, Frndly TV or Sling. Some consumers own antennas as a backup in the event their cable or satellite company gets into a carriage fee dispute with a TV station and takes it off its system.

Amanda Brown, vice president of consumer strategy and insights for Scripps, describes those consumers as “self-bundlers” who use an average of four platforms plus an antenna to serve their viewing needs.

Promoting antenna use clearly benefits the TV stations Scripps owns, but there is a public service element to the campaign as well. TV stations need to preserve their role as news sources in their communitie­s, especially as local newspapers have folded or scaled back operations. What’s more, when internet or cellular service goes out during a severe weather event or other catastroph­e, broadcast TV stays on the air.

“People turn to us,” Symson said. “If you don’t have a way to get us, that’s going to be a problem. We feel a responsibi­lity to reach consumers on every platform but particular­ly on broadcast television.”

Creating your own TV bundle may seem like more trouble than it’s worth, but the cost savings suggest otherwise. Screen Engine/ASI found consumers who have over-the-air antennas as part of their TV mix spend an average of $72.60 a month on pay TV services and video-on-demand platforms such as Netflix. The average monthly cost for cable and satellite subscriber­s without antennas is $148.70.

Most antenna users are older, having grown up watching TV that pulled in signals with rabbit ears atop a set or an aerial antenna on a roof. For younger consumers — many of whom have cut the cord, never signed up for cable or don’t even own a TV set — over-the-air broadcasti­ng can be a mystery.

“We’ve done a lot of research on this and there is even a certain portion of the American audience that believes mistakenly that plugging in a digital antenna is piracy,” Symson said.

Screen Engine/ASI found viewers underestim­ate the number of channels they can receive with an antenna, with many still recalling the analog TV era when far fewer stations were available.

The switch from analog to digital signals in 2009 allowed for the creation of more over-the-air channels (called sub channels). But a 2021 study by Horowitz Research found that only 20% of non-antenna users believed they could receive more than 20 channels.

Karlo Maalouf, owner of Las Vegas’ Mr. Antenna, a specialist in installing overthe-air antennas, welcomes the education effort.

“It’s a confusing environmen­t right now,” said Maalouf, adding he rarely gets customers under age 40.

Outside of Scripps, media conglomera­tes that own TV stations have shown little interest in telling consumers how to get their programmin­g for free; they’re hooked on the retransmis­sion fees they get from cable and satellite providers.

Station ownership groups with network affiliates carrying NFL football have tremendous leverage in negotiatio­ns for those fees, and there has been little incentive to rock the boat.

Some companies are even discouragi­ng antenna use. Last year, Maalouf filed a complaint with the FCC against a Meredith Corp. station because it refused to sell commercial time to his company, saying it would promote cord-cutting.

Scripps also receives carriage fees for its TV stations, and Symson said his company’s initiative isn’t aimed at hurting the pay TV business.

But the company does have a strong business incentive to see broadcast TV grow. It is investing heavily in so-called diginets — national TV networks that transmit over digital sub channels. While some are carried on cable and satellite systems and free TV streaming services such as Tubi and Pluto TV, all can be received with an antenna.

Last year, Scripps relaunched its 24-hour cable news channel, Newsy, as a diginet. The company also revived Court TV — one of the early stalwarts of cable television — as an over-theair service. Newsy, airing on channel 5.3 in L.A., recently scored its largest audiences ever with its gavel-to-gavel coverage of the Johnny Depp-Amber Heard trial.

Every major TV station owner has diginets, most of which air vintage movies and TV series. The audience for diginets increased 69% from 2016 to 2021, according to Nielsen data, making them a rare segment of the TV business that is growing.

There is also greater potential for over-the-air broadcasti­ng when a new digital TV technical standard — known as ATSC 3.0 or NextGen TV — reaches critical mass. Stations have begun switching to the standard this year, with Fox Television Stations-owned KTTV broadcasti­ng in the format starting Aug. 24.

The system upgrades the quality of video and audio and will allow broadcaste­rs to provide interactiv­e services and deliver their signals to mobile devices. Stations also will be able to offer their programmin­g on demand, putting them on equal footing with streaming services, at no cost to the consumer.

 ?? Graphic House via Getty Images, iStockphot­o via Getty Images ?? TV ANTENNAS are back in style as families look to cut costs and cords. Media company E.W. Scripps hopes to educate consumers on how to get started.
Graphic House via Getty Images, iStockphot­o via Getty Images TV ANTENNAS are back in style as families look to cut costs and cords. Media company E.W. Scripps hopes to educate consumers on how to get started.

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