If it’s Tegna, WSOC/WAXN or WCNC in Charlotte and also WSB or WXIA/WATL in Atlanta would have to be divested
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https://www.cnbc.com/2019/01/10/teg...ps-plan-january-bids-for-cox-tv-stations.html
Apparently Scripps, Tegna and Hearst are named as candidates to get the Cox stations.
It would have to be WSB in Atlanta since WXIA and WATL both operate from the same studio facilities.If it’s Tegna, WSOC/WAXN or WCNC in Charlotte and also WSB or WXIA/WATL in Atlanta would have to be divested
https://www.ftvlive.com/sqsp-test/2019/1/8/nbc-looking-at-cox-stations
If this happened you would see affiliation switches in almost every affected market...WSOC and WSB would return to NBC...this time as O&O’s. WXIA probably would return to ABC, WCNC probably would pick up ABC....I don’t see this likely to happen but you never know...
If Cox sells its stations to Hearst, don’t expect them to add the Fox affiliates, WPXI Pittsburgh, or WFTV Orlando. WHIO Dayton would also be a issue as well, having sold WDTN off in order to get WLWT Cincinnati.
I may be totally mis-understanding, but WHIO never was co-owned with WDTN (WLW-D).
I don't like venturing into "speculation" territory, but I wouldn't be surprised in Charlotte if ABC goes back to WCCB, especially given that Bahakel Communications (WCCB's owner) already has ABC affiliations on three of its other stations (WOLO Columbia, WNCF Montgomery, and WBBJ Jackson, TN). If Cox includes WAXN in the sale with WSOC, the Telemundo affiliation could move there from WSOC 9.2, which would leave WCNC the only options of either The CW or independence.
True, both WHIO and WDTN were never co-owned But I doubt Hearst wants to go back to Dayton unless they strike a swap deal for WHIO, since WLWT in Cincinnati has performed well under Hearst. Another option could be a affiliation switch that, should Hearst keeps WHIO, could make it a NBC affiliate and give WDTN CBS.
. NEW YORK, Feb 10 (Reuters) - Apollo Global Management LLC is nearing a roughly $3 billion agreement to acquire Cox's TV stations, the biggest in a series of deals the private equity firm is lining up to become a force in U.S. broadcasting, according to sources familiar with the matter.
Cox Media Group and Apollo are also discussing some joint venture agreements for Coxs broadcast station in Atlanta, where Cox is headquartered and also has radio stations, the sources said.
There may be other cities where the companies decide to have joint ventures, the sources added.
An agreement between Apollo and Cox could be announced later this week, the sources said, asking not to be identified because the matter is confidential. As with any negotiations, talks could always fall apart at the last minute, the people cautioned.
And pass that on to us. Just dandy.Apollo would seek to use some of Northwest Broadcasting's contracts, which have higher fees than Cox's, to hike up fees from the cable operators, some of the sources said.