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November 22, 2009
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Wilmington Ushers In Digital Television
(2008-09-09)
Mayor Saffo and FCC Chairman Martin flip the switch
(whqr) - With much fanfare Wilmington broadcasters shut down their analog signals Monday making it the first and only television market in the country to broadcast only in digital.

A crowd of media, elected officials and curious residents packed Wilmington's City Hall to watch the mayor and the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission flip a seven-foot mock switch.

The change over from analog to digital jump starts the FCC's campaign for the national transition scheduled to take place February 17th.

The commission is now focusing on cities with more than 15-percent of the population watching over-the-air television signals. FCC Chairman Kevin Martin.

"So what we're going to try to do is take some of the lessons we learned here and actually go out onto the road into the markets that we identified that are most at risk and we're going to try to have the same kind of events that we were doing here."

Over the past four months the FCC has been at senior centers, retail outlets, festivals and farmer's markets with booths touting the transition. The local airwaves were blanketed with Public Service Announcements and still people weren't ready.

"Okay, so we've moved the antenna and you're still not getting anything?"

College students were at local television stations, trying to help confused viewers who started calling minutes after yesterday's noon switch.

Viewers like Lewis Felton. From his home in the rural part of Wilmington's television market he dialed the local NBC affiliate for help.

"Okay, uh mm, okay, scan? ok thank you. Bye now, by. She says try scanning it one more time and pick up six-oh-one. Oh man, this is pain in the neck."

Felton thought he was prepared. Months ago he took advantage of the federally sponsored coupon program that allowed him to buy analog to digital converter boxes at a discount.

He got the one in his bedroom hooked up properly, but the TV in his kitchen isn't working.

He had the converter box working until a few days ago, when he pushed what was clearly the wrong button on one of his remotes.

Felton is one of those viewers the FCC is most worried about: he's older, he lives in a rural area, he doesn't have cable or satellite and he watches over-the-air television on analog TV's.

And hours after the switch he's already discouraged.

"I just think they should have just let it alone, that's my thinking."

To hear from viewers like Felton and to find out what went wrong, Elon University's Connie Book is drawing on reports from her students answering phones at the local TV stations.

Book has spent the last 14 years researching and writing about digital television. She warns broadcasters across the county to pay attention to what's happening in Wilmington.

"If under the best conditions this is what you've got, I would especially watch it because they've had special attention."

Book says the key to a successful nation-wide switch is for Wilmington broadcasters to give the rest of the nation an honest assessment of what happened here.

Do you have insight or expertise on this topic? Please email us, we'd like to hear from you. news@whqr.org.

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