Our local NBC affiliate has started, in my opinion, misusing the signal that will force 4x3 content to go fullscreen on a 4x3 set. (So no more "black bars on all four sides" situations.)
They're using it for that, sure, but they (and it seems NBC itself) are also using that signal to block access to widescreen video on certain shows. On such shows, broadcast in widescreen, we can no longer get a letterboxed picture. Instead, the signal is used, deliberately, to chop the sides off and blow it up to 4x3 fullscreen.
In other words, they're locking the converter box on "zoom" and there's nothing we can do about it.
Their explanation is that they're not doing it with all widescreen programming, but just with "certain shows" like the news and "entertainment" stuff like Leno and Fallon. (There are other widescreen shows that they aren't doing this with, and those we can still get using the "letterboxed" setting.) They say simply that the shows they're doing it to are "4x3 friendly".
Not much of an explanation, if you ask me.
My boxes can be set for "full", getting the full widescreen picture without letterboxing, and so COULD (not a good idea, but COULD) be used to feed a widescreen display device.
With them overriding the box's settings, tho', the "full" setting wouldn't be available, and anyone feeding a widescreen display would be stuck with a 4x3 picture and black bars on the sides (or a totally distorted picture...I'm assuming it'd be the former). No widescreen picture.
WHY would the network be doing this and be having their affiliates do the same?
Seems pretty crummy a thing to do, denying us access to a letterboxed view of widescreen shows just because we're using a converter box. (I imagine people with "better" digital tuners and HD sets aren't being affected by this override signal.)
I've protested by e-mail twice to the station. The first time they sent me the response mentioned above, but after I said "But we don't WANT you doing it with non-4x3 programming!" I was ignored. No further replies.
Anyone else having this happen to them?
WHY would they be doing this?
They're using it for that, sure, but they (and it seems NBC itself) are also using that signal to block access to widescreen video on certain shows. On such shows, broadcast in widescreen, we can no longer get a letterboxed picture. Instead, the signal is used, deliberately, to chop the sides off and blow it up to 4x3 fullscreen.
In other words, they're locking the converter box on "zoom" and there's nothing we can do about it.
Their explanation is that they're not doing it with all widescreen programming, but just with "certain shows" like the news and "entertainment" stuff like Leno and Fallon. (There are other widescreen shows that they aren't doing this with, and those we can still get using the "letterboxed" setting.) They say simply that the shows they're doing it to are "4x3 friendly".
Not much of an explanation, if you ask me.
My boxes can be set for "full", getting the full widescreen picture without letterboxing, and so COULD (not a good idea, but COULD) be used to feed a widescreen display device.
With them overriding the box's settings, tho', the "full" setting wouldn't be available, and anyone feeding a widescreen display would be stuck with a 4x3 picture and black bars on the sides (or a totally distorted picture...I'm assuming it'd be the former). No widescreen picture.
WHY would the network be doing this and be having their affiliates do the same?
Seems pretty crummy a thing to do, denying us access to a letterboxed view of widescreen shows just because we're using a converter box. (I imagine people with "better" digital tuners and HD sets aren't being affected by this override signal.)
I've protested by e-mail twice to the station. The first time they sent me the response mentioned above, but after I said "But we don't WANT you doing it with non-4x3 programming!" I was ignored. No further replies.
Anyone else having this happen to them?
WHY would they be doing this?



















rather than a CECB manufacturer.



