Programming Expense definition

Programming Expense means all expenses directly related to a particular program run by a party, including expenses for Supervision, program supplies, personnel organizing the program, advertisement of the program, and maintenance and custodial services above and beyond the ordinary day-to-day use maintenance and custodial services for the MCA.
Programming Expense means expenses related to the acquisition by the Borrower or its Subsidiaries of the content of its television programs.

Related to Programming Expense

  • Operating Expense means salaries, wages, cost of maintenance and operation, materials, supplies, insurance, and all other items normally included under recognized accounting practices, but does not include allowances for depreciation in the value of physical property.

  • Marketing Expenses means the sum of Selling Expenses, Marketing Management Expenses, Market and Consumer Research Expenses, Advertising Expenses, Trade Promotion Expenses, and Consumer Promotion Expenses, each of which is specified below, in each case to the extent directly and reasonably attributable to the sale, promotion or marketing of the applicable ZIOPHARM Products in the countries where such ZIOPHARM Product has been launched.

  • Basic living expenses means the cost of basic food, shelter, and any other expenses of a Domestic Partner which are paid at least in part by a program or benefit for which the partner qualified because of the Domestic Partnership. The individuals need not contribute equally or jointly to the cost of these expenses as long as they agree that both are responsible for the cost.

  • Public expense means that this agency either pays for the full cost of the evaluation or ensures that the evaluation is otherwise provided at no cost to the parent.

  • Qualifying Expenditures means those expenditures for energy conservation measures that have a simple payback period of not less than one year and not more than 10 years and expenditures for the above-market costs of new renewable energy resources, provided that the Oregon Department of Energy may establish by rule a limit on the maximum above-market cost for renewable energy that is allowed as a credit.