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- BUSINESS, Page 63Business NotesMEDIAThose Oldies Are Goldies
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- The finest wines do not age nearly as well as successful
- television shows. Reruns of American TV hits, along with
- syndicated sensations like Wheel of Fortune, gross close to $6
- billion a year worldwide. That huge market has long been the
- virtually exclusive preserve not of the networks but of the
- Hollywood studios that create the shows. The Federal
- Communications Commission decreed in 1970 that ABC, CBS and NBC,
- then the largest buyers of programs by far, could not also be
- major sellers. But more recently, facing profit-sapping
- competition from cable TV and independent stations, the Big
- Three lobbied the FCC to change the rules. Last week the FCC
- gave the networks a piece of the action: they may produce and
- thus possess up to 40% of TV's prime-time shows. It will take
- the networks years to reap the rewards of the new ruling.
- Nonetheless, producers reacted angrily. "We made the best shows
- the networks ever had," lamented Lee Rich, executive producer
- of Dallas. "This decision kills the system." Responded NBC's
- equally dissatisfied general counsel: "We went to the FCC
- seeking complete repeal."
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