Hubbard grew up in the business during a time when broadcasters were characterized by entrepreneurship and community roots. He grew up in Minneapolis-St. Paul and still lives there. His family has done business there his entire life. So donât get him started on the FCCâs new localism rules requiring broadcasters to file quarterly reports on the type of programming they do.
âThe lifeblood of a broadcaster is to serve the local community,â he said. âI hope we donât have a move back to ascertainment. We do that. Itâs our life blood. The business is tough enough the way that it is without burdening broadcasters with a bunch of paperwork... To the extent that the government stays out of broadcasting, the public will benefit.â
The Hubbardâs TV business now comprises stations in Minnesota, New Mexico, New York and Iowa. All are run by their local general managers. âUnlike a lot of companies that dictate programming, our stations are truly local stations,â Hubbard said. âThe general manager at KOB in Albuquerqueâhe runs it. He lives in the community. He belongs to the clubs. I donât. He doesnât call here and say, âwhat should we do?ââ
At the same time, Hubbard doesnât think stations owned by large conglomerates are somehow less civic minded.
âIn our market, we have Gannett, Fox and CBS... and theyâre all good stations,â he said. âNo one can say they donât do a good job serving the public.â
NO WEB WORRIES
By most accounts, TV is a tough business these days. Capitol markets have closed up like clams. Ad money seems to be flowing toward the Internet, but Hubbard sees limitations in Web advertising.
âI believe an awful lot of money is wasted on the Internet,â he said. âItâs interesting to note that when people want to get you to their Web site, where do they advertise? Television. I think the Internet is a good place for your catalog. If you have to build brand, you canât build brand on the Internet.â
People use the Internet to find something, not to read banner ads, he said. People still watch ads on TV.
âI think weâll get back to the day when the best possible way to reach the audience is over-the-air television,â he said. Spoken like a true life-long broadcaster.