WGAW, Consumer Groups Warn of Comcast-NBCU 'Behemoth'

WGAW, Consumer Groups Warn of Comcast-NBCU 'Behemoth'

Published: June 21, 2010 @ 2:59 pm
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By Ira Teinowitz

The Writers Guild of America, West, joined consumer groups on Monday in urging the Justice Department and the Federal Communications Commission to reject Comcast’s $30 billion deal for NBCU -- even as some competitors asked that strong conditions be imposed on the deal.

“Because the proposed merger of Comcast-NBCU will upend the media and internet markets as we know them, we oppose this merger as it stands today,” said a letter sent to the Justice Department and the FCC and signed by the WGAW, Bloomberg LP, Common Cause, Communication Workers of America, WealthTV, the National Consumers League, the Media Access Project, Free Press and Public Knowledge.

Warning that the Comcast-NBCU combination creates a “behemoth,” it claimed, “The merged entity will exert a degree of market power unrivaled in our nation’s media history.”

The letter was among more than 2,200 that arrived on the last day initial comments could be filed. Replies to initial comments can be filed through July 21; responses to the replies can be filed through Aug. 5.

Comments came in bulk on both sides of the issue. Indeed, while the WGAW expressed concern about the deal, the Directors Guild of America suggested the deal would produce jobs.

“Too little focus has been placed on the issue of jobs maintenance and creation,” said a filing from Jay D. Roth, national executive director at the DGA. “In a time when the industry is facing financial pressure from all sides, we expect Comcast’s commitment to grow the industry, infuse new capital into the entertainment business and invest additional resources into programming.”

The WGAW and consumer groups were not so optimistic.

The groups said that with the merger, Comcast will “have the means and the incentive to prevent the success of independent programmers” and would likely do so.

“Comcast will have every reason to undermine the many independent news, sports and entertainment channels that compete with the channels it owns,” the groups said, warning that the discrimination could be in channel placement, unfair negotiating practices or refusal to carry independent channels.

The letter also questioned the impact of the merger on internet video, cable pricing and news coverage.

“What is completely predictable is that a company of this size will be able to exert an unhealthy degree of influence over the media landscape absent strong efforts to limit that control.”

In a separate filing with the FCC, the WGAW said it was concerned about the deal’s impact on content creators -- especially its potential effects in determining the value of content and in adding even more integration to an already concentrated industry. 

The union pointed to Comcast’s previous citing as a benefit of the deal an ability “to ameliorate the negotiation friction” that has made it difficult to obtain content.

“The ‘negotiation friction’ between independent parties is what determines the fair market value of the content,” the union said. “Eliminating this friction will allow only one party to decide the value of content.”

Tags: cable, Comcast, Directors Guild of America, Media, NBC Universal, Networks, Television, WGAW, Writers Guild of America
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