Friday, May 15, 2026

INCLUDED WITHIN:

  • Reply to Mark Aitken's Op-Ed on 5G Broadcast
  • June 16 Webinar Information
  • News from David Oxenford
  • Celebrating 250 Years - What are you doing locally?
  • Industry Events Coming Up
  • Join Us!




Frank "SuperFrank" Copsidas

Founder and Board Chair of the LPTV Broadcasters Association


“LPTV has discovered a path for the future; it is time for full power to find a path of its own. Then again, imitation is the sincerest form of flattery. ‘SuperFrank” Copsidas, Chairman and Founder



A Sympathetic Response to Mark Aitken’s Op-Ed: It’s a Shame They’re Still Fighting This Battle

READ MARK AITKEN'S OP-ED HERE


There is no false choice. Mark Aitken’s public acknowledgment of 5G Broadcast’s real strengths—its native alignment with mobile ecosystems, familiar tooling, and clear potential for reaching everyday phones—is refreshing. Still, the situation for Mark and the dedicated team at Sinclair/ONE Media is understandable. They have invested years of sincere engineering effort into ATSC 3.0, and watching it struggle for relevance in a mobile-first world must be exhausting. The Op-Ed reads less like a confident vision and more like a heartfelt plea to keep the dream alive through increasingly complex workarounds. When so much has been invested, letting go is painful. But good intentions do not make the hybrid proposal practical.


The Time-Slicing Compromise Is a Sad Technical Patch

It is unfortunate to see talented engineers spotlighting three delicate scheduling “knobs”—CAS muting cycles, 5 ms frame alignments, and bootstrap timing promises—as if they represent breakthrough innovation. In reality, this is a fragile hack: two mismatched waveforms awkwardly sharing spectrum, complete with guard times, drift compensation, and coordination overhead that reduce efficiency and introduce real operational risks.


The small-scale Castanet pilots are admirable as lab efforts, but the use of ATSC 3.0 in Castanet is essentially a bandaid solution until 5G Broadcast is fully licensed and available. Presenting this as ready for broad deployment feels like wishful thinking born from necessity rather than strength. Much creativity is being spent gluing incompatible systems together instead of pursuing cleaner solutions.


The “Chips in Phones” Claim Deserves Gentle Honesty

The repeated emphasis that ATSC 3.0 mobile receivers are ready today comes across as more hopeful than realistic. Saankhya/Tejas demodulators exist in niche Indian reference designs, yet mainstream consumer smartphones remain untouched. Full receiver integration—antennas, RF front-ends, power management, and usable software—stays confined to controlled demos, not products people actually buy and carry.


Meanwhile, 5G Broadcast benefits from riding inside the cellular modems already present in billions of phones. The community continues to hold onto “we built some tablets” stories while the broader ecosystem has moved on.


The India D2M Hope Feels Like a Distant Lifeline

Reliance on India’s government-backed trials to generate global momentum and open the stubborn US market for ATSC 3.0 is understandable. India’s unique policy environment and genuine need for low-cost solutions are real. What the Op-Ed does not mention, however, is that India’s largest wireless carrier, Jio, is actively involved in 5G Broadcast trials nationwide together with Prasar Bharati, India’s public broadcaster. Jio’s 5G Broadcast trial in Delhi, for example, is testing delivery to smartphones for both broadcast TV and public warning notifications.


Expecting India’s ATSC 3.0 efforts to magically overcome America’s carrier-controlled ecosystem, regulatory gridlock, and consumer apathy toward broadcast tuners is more poignant than persuasive. It reads like a last best hope rather than a credible strategy and does not fully reflect what is actually happening in India or Brazil.


The Phased Plan Reflects Deep Investment, Not Momentum

The three-phase roadmap—scale today’s limited ATSC 3.0 datacasting, publish yet another coexistence profile, then hope India delivers devices—feels less like bold progress and more like a holding pattern to protect existing infrastructure. After all these years, broadcasters are still being asked to wait for meaningful mobile datacasting wins.


In the end, Mark Aitken’s sincerity and the solid technical merits ATSC 3.0 offers for home and portable reception are not in doubt. But it is unfortunate to watch talented people defend such convoluted hybrids and optimistic projections when the mobile world has already chosen its direction.

True progress in broadcast datacasting will come from technologies that meet consumers where they are—inside their everyday phones—rather than asking them to embrace yesterday’s compromises. The ATSC community deserves better than fighting these rearguard actions. They deserve a graceful evolution.


"LPTV has discovered a path for the future; it is time for full power to find a path of its own. Then again, imitation is the sincerest form of flattery." "SuperFrank" Copsidas.


Webinar Coming Up
June 16, 2026, 2pm EST


Topic: The Open Letter to Chairman Carr and the Next Steps, 5G Broadcast Overview


Join us as LPTVBA Founder and Chair Frank "SuperFrank" Copsidas, clarifies and discusses the simplicity of 5G Broadcast, a worldwide standard, coming ot to your cell phone soon! Everyone is welcome - Free for Members; $25 for Non-Members


RSVP COMING SOON


From the Desk of David Oxenford
Wilkinson Barker Knauer LLP


Potentially Great News!

The FCC released a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking proposing its fiscal year 2026 regulatory fees for its regulated entities, including broadcast stations. Read More


Jimmy Kimmel

National Religious Broadcasters filed a complaint with the FCC against Disney requesting that the FCC investigate and sanction Disney for the broadcast of ABC late night host Jimmy Kimmel’s monologue aired before the White House Correspondents’ Dinner. Read More


Dielectric Backs LPTV Expansion Wave Following FCC Rule Changes


Dielectric, a provider of antennas and RF systems, is supporting a surge in low-power television expansion after the FCC’s first major LPTV rule revisions in more than 40 years, opening opportunities to relocate facilities, resolve interference and expand service coverage across the U.S.


Jeffrey Winemiller, owner of Lowcountry 34 Media, has filed more than 250 applications to modify and grow LPTV station footprints and is using Dielectric antennas, filters and RF systems for many deployments.

“These rule changes have completely transformed what’s possible for low-power TV,” Winemiller said. “We’ve gone from serving small, rural populations to potentially reaching hundreds of millions of viewers. Dielectric’s antennas and RF systems give us the flexibility to solve interference challenges, combine signals efficiently and build cost-effective transmission sites quickly.”


Read the full article here

Broadcasters Prepare for America's 250th Anniversary


Broadcasters across the country are rolling out a range of America 250 initiatives designed to engage audiences in unique and meaningful ways for the nation's 250th anniversary. Look what GenZ is doing!


What are YOU doing locally?

2026 Industry Events

DATES

EVENT

LOCATION

June 16

LPTVBA Webinar

Google Meet


June 1-3

ATSC 
(Advanced Television Systems Committee)


Washington, D.C.

September 
11-14

IBC

Amsterdam, Netherlands

October 21-22

NAB New York

New York, NY

LPTVBA MEMBERSHIP

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