In Bakersfield, CA.
and KRJK 97.3Don't forget Buck Owens his family still owns KUZZ 107.9 & 550 KUZZ-AM Along with Classic Country KCWR 107.1
In the longer term, someone has to stop these religious broadcasters from building up a pile of cash to outbid secular companies whenever a decent signal in a market becomes available for purchase.
I was actually thinking along the lines of finding some way to prove to the IRS that they aren't really non-profit, which would make all those "donations" from their listeners taxable and negate their ability to amass that pile of cash each of them have.But there is no other way to stop religious organizations from buying radio stations.
They may be aware, but owners of those tech companies generally have little free cash… their wealt is in their ownership of the tech companies which is not liquid.There's people in the tech community that could outbid VCY, buy that station and build a non profit around it. They could follow the example of the late Paul Allen's relationship with KEXP.
Why they aren't aware, or not interested, is another issue.
I was actually thinking along the lines of finding some way to prove to the IRS that they aren't really non-profit, which would make all those "donations" from their listeners taxable and negate their ability to amass that pile of cash each of them have.
They may be aware, but owners of those tech companies generally have little free cash… their wealt is in their ownership of the tech companies which is not liquid.
Mr. Bezos bought the WaPo many years before he was divorced. And it was only a $250 million deal, less than 1% of his peak fortune.Depends. Mr. Bezos had enough spare cash (even after the divorce) to buy the Washington Post.
Mr. Musk is well short on his financing, especially now that Tesla stock has taken a beating in the last 90 days.Elon Musk was able to put his hands on $54 billion pretty easily. That could be enough to buy a big radio company.
Mr. Bezos bought the WaPo many years before he was divorced. And it was only a $250 million deal, less than 1% of his peak fortune.
None of the Washington Post money came from personal funds. He buys things with someone else's money because he figures that a typical 7% or so business loan will be paid for by an enterprise he figures to make 15% or better on as an ROI.Depends. Mr. Bezos had enough spare cash (even after the divorce) to buy the Washington Post. Elon Musk was able to put his hands on $54 billion pretty easily. That could be enough to buy a big radio company.
It really does not hurt. As my father taught me when I was about 10 or 11 and learning to buy shares of stock: "it's not a loss unless you sell it".His Amazon stock has lost about $1000 a share in the last month, so that has to hurt. But I bet he still has enough cash in his mattress to buy KREV. If he was interested (which he's probably not).
Not soon enough.Stolz is such a rotten pox on broadcasting.. when will he just go away?
And it was leveraged; he sold a tiny amount of stock and borrowed the rest.Mr. Bezos bought the WaPo many years before he was divorced. And it was only a $250 million deal, less than 1% of his peak fortune.
He had already sold the small amount of shares needed to leverage the loaned money to offer the deal. He did not need to sell any more Tesla stock to make it work.Mr. Musk is well short on his financing, especially now that Tesla stock has taken a beating in the last 90 days.