Before it ruled, FCC heard from roughly 13,000 groups and individuals including the Newspaper Association of America, National Association of Broadcasters, Newspaper Guild, National Organization for
Women, Sony, American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, National PTA, American Psychological Association, the Traditional Values Coalition, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, the
Family Research Council and Morality in the Media, and even the United Church of Christ.
It seems everyone had an opinion about whether the FCC on Monday should have ended the ban in most
cities of cross-ownership of television stations and newspapers. The ruling loosened local-ownership allowing companies like The New York Times, Washington Post and Chicago Tribune to gobble up more
local TV and radio stations. It will permit Viacom, Disney and AOL Time Warner to control TV stations with nearly half the national audience. In the largest cities, it will allow owners of two TV
stations to buy a third.
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Critics of the decision fear that it will lead to an ever more concentrated media world, one in which much of what we see, hear and read is controlled by a
handful of mega-corporations. Programming is likely to become even more homogenized -- and less substantive. Subscription and advertising rates are likely to shoot up as competition diminishes. Local
news coverage, already feeble in many smaller towns and communities, is likely to get worse - or disappear altogether. There will be - brace yourself - a withering away of diversity of viewpoints.
But my fear is far more mundane. The withering away of customer service. As if it could get any worse.
Consider the case of the Chevy Chase widow vs. the mighty Comcast Cable, the
largest cable company in the United States, serving approximately 21.3 million cable subscribers.
Two years after her husband died, while handling last-minute logistics of moving out of
their house, the Chevy Chase widow tried to cancel her Comcast-provided cable service.
"Comcast said, 'You can't cancel it. We need a death certificate to prove he's dead,' "she says. "I
have to prove he's dead to get the TV turned off?" reported the Washington Post.
All the utility accounts, including cable TV, had been in her late husband's name. In canceling the
others, she had none ask for a death certificate.
After several minutes of arguing, Comcast's customer service rep wouldn't budge. He told her Comcast has had cases where someone in a bitter
divorce cancels cable TV and the irate spouse calls later.
"He said they didn't want to get caught in the middle of that," says the widow. "I said, 'What middle? He's dead!' It was not
only insensitive, it was bizarre. It's stressful enough moving, and it was certainly stressful enough since Walter died -- but now I have to argue with this person?"
Finally, the
customer rep dropped the P-bomb: company policy, he told her. Nothing he could do.
"It is a policy," confirmed Comcast spokesman Bryan Edwards, explaining that Comcast requires a death
certificate, particularly if there is a balance on the bill, a billing dispute, or even if it's just a widow closing an account in her deceased husband's name. "Before we do anything on the account,
we want to be absolutely certain we are speaking to the account holder or someone who is authorized to do it."
Once the Washington Post got on their case, Comcast relented and let the
Chevy Chase widow off the hook.
It should come as no shock that a recent survey by the American Customer Satisfaction Index singled out three cable operators - uh, including Comcast - for
earning "among the lowest scores ever recorded across all companies and industries."
When I contracted for Cablevision to provide broadband service to my home a few years ago, after six
different service guys failed to hook me up successfully, I had to threaten corporate HQ with going public with my experience before they finally sent somebody who had a clue. (In fairness, others in
town say that since then Cablevision's service has vastly improved.)
I'm not just picking on cable companies. It is easier to pass through the eye of a needle than to get the New York
Times delivered to my home at the location I have requested at least 15 times. And on the days they fail to deliver it altogether and promise a "redelivery" it often never comes and if so at about
3:30 in the afternoon when the news is beyond stale.
Frankly, I don't think the average media consumer is all that concerned about who owns what. While the ad industry worries about near
monopoly ownership of broadcast ad inventory in local markets and liberals and conservatives debate about who will get a larger share of voice in the world after June 2 and journalists worry about
losing jobs to consolidation and local news runs a danger of disappearing in favor of homogenized Clear-Channel-one-size-fits-all news; I worry that media company customer service, already an endless
maze of touch dial options and three hour windows for repair calls, will only get worse.
And with all the media under a few big roofs, there will be no alternative but to take it all
lying down.