Yeah, 'WIN'.Sounds like BIN for old white men
Yeah, 'WIN'.Sounds like BIN for old white men
IIRC Home Depot buys a lot of network stuff. Usually the local stations clearcommercials for "free" to get the network programming. There used to national rep that dealt with the big agencies. IIRC they took 15 percent. I believe at one time Rush made you pay and you had to clear some of his commercials.You're talking about a single station sales plan. That isn't how most major advertisers buy anymore. Home Depot doesn't buy one station. They buy a national platform. They want one-stop shopping. Same with any major retailer or drug company or service provider. Why? Because they operate nationally. They're also looking to combine a digital plan with that. They want it to be interactive. They want it to fit in with their overall marketing strategy. So in this case, size matters. If all you're selling is spots & dots, you won't get the sale.
The lenders now own this sales platform. They don't see it the way the Field family sees it. They see it as a national platform that needs to grow even larger to meet the needs of advertisers and potential investors.
IIRC Home Depot buys a lot of network stuff.
Does CBS / Paramount own the CBS radio network or do they just provide "content".
Then maybe someone can start a new network as a separate company, and Audacy can provide the infrastructure to distribute that network's programming, without having to provide their own programming.However, there was a history of CBS Radio Network that was inherited with the CBS Radio stations. Entercom just saw them as individual stations without any history. But there's no reason why Audacy has to operate as a bunch of individual stations when it's competing against iHeart which owns Premiere and Cumulus which owns Westwood One. When you own stations in just about every major market, that is exactly the foundation that Bill Paley had when he started CBS. The foundation for a business exists, and they're not using it because they don't know how to think that way. All they know about is running stations.
Then maybe someone can start a new network as a separate company,
I think the point is that they had enough cash to operate, but not enough to pay debt. So the issue is that we have a company that has too much debt and can not pay it.The company was quickly losing cash on a levered basis. If the debt service had continued to be performed as agreed, the company would have been out of cash by second quarter of 2024 in all likelihood.
Different situations.The odd thing is that by the time the Entercom - CBS merge (or acquisition) occured, the evidence was known. They had seen what happened to Clear Channel and Cumulus. They should have known what condition Radio was in and the challenges the industry faced...
What Depression hurt Clear Channel? Do you mean the 2008 Recession? That was not comparable to 1929.Clear Channel had a deal based on an offer the Mays family and "Red" could not refuse.Red and Lowry wanted to prepare for "senior years" and the two sons were in agreement. Then the depression hit and the buyers tried to back out; courts made them do a deal that everyone knew was not sustainable.
Entercom was a well run company that had absorbed quite a few smaller companies and groups. But the bigger CBS deal met all the "best to worst" financial models for them and the lenders. Then we got the pandemic: radio lost 50% of its revenue and did not recuperate even partially until this year (and it is still just barely at 2019 levels and not adjusted for the huge inflation of the last 4 years.
It was to radio and TV. Most stations lost a minimum of 30% of their value within a year.What Depression hurt Clear Channel? Do you mean the 2008 Recession? That was not comparable to 1929.
There wasn't any competition for radio back in the 70's. Now you have streaming. Combine that with inflation and other world global economic events including the pandemic which spurred inflation. It would have been impossible to predict all the variables coming together which affected broadcasting as a whole.Inflation is exaggerated and not an excuse. Inflation was much worse in 1970's compared to the last few years.
Just like TV, there's a big difference between being a radio station and a radio network sending content to radio stations. Both sell advertising, but one is a national programming creator, and the other is a local way to distribute that programming.CBS was getting out of Radio long before the Entercom merge happened. They had sold their stations in many markets. That should have been valuable information that all was not well, especially to someone like David Field with his Wall Street acumen...
It was a depression for radio. The trifecta: Huge recession, the introduction of the iPhone (and the start of portable streaming) and the introduction of the PPM (which decreasec PUR by about 35%). Radio lost over a third of its billings between 2007 and 2011.What Depression hurt Clear Channel? Do you mean the 2008 Recession? That was not comparable to 1929.
Remember, the lenders did even deeper due diligence of the viability of the deal, using extensive models. But those models did not contemplate COVID, the resulting inflation based recession and the faster move to streaming due to people being at home and bored during the pandemic.Even without the Pandemic, Audacy's debt would still have been problematic. Inflation is exaggerated and not an excuse.
No, they sold stations in smaller markets... as many as they could. Heck, they even had a station in Palm Springs where the market rank is well outside the tp 100.Inflation was much worse in 1970's compared to the last few years. CBS was getting out of Radio long before the Entercom merge happened. They had sold their stations in many markets.
Again, people go to lenders all the time with things they can't afford. It is the lender's responsibility to make sure the loans can be afforded before granting them. In this case, both the Entercom people and the lenders thought it was a good deal.That should have been valuable information that all was not well, especially to someone like David Field with his Wall Street acumen...
RE: CDs & Albums: the present day method of music 'purchasing' and distribution makes it more difficult to actually buy an album. When an industry abandons a platform (like the 78, the 45, the 33 vinyl LP, the cassette, and the CD), music consumers are going to gravitate to what is available. This, in turn, alters their music consumption habits.Most of us judge what we want and what we like by what's available. If people wanted to keep buying CD's, nothing was stopping them. People had no problem buying albums until an alternative they liked better became available. With a few exceptions, they now buy one or two songs off those albums, which means they probably didn't want the other 8-10 of them in the first place. Everybody likes cheap, and everybody likes instant gratification. Music downloads and streaming services provide both. Buying physical media offered neither by comparison.
Quite possibly. You can't stop progress. Despite people being frustrated with the current situation, you won't find many who would be willing to give up their smartphones and internet connections to go back to the way things were 30 years ago.
What do you need to run a network? A Director who knows what he is doing.Like who? Why someone else? Why not Audacy? Is there some law? No. It's the lack of imagination.
What do you need for a network? You need radio stations. Guess what Audacy already owns.
What do you need to run a network?
David was in way over his head and really had no practical sense of how the human beings in his company did their jobs/provided the company value.
I could start and run a radio network from my Macbook and an AWS cloud subscription. All the contributing sources could work from home via their laptops. Don't need engineers either.What do you need to run a network? A Director who knows what he is doing.
Compelling content. Good engineering with the proper resources.
As BigA said; what you need is a national sales arm to sell advertising.
Then why haven't they? Are they totally inept?The main thing you need to start is a bunch of radio stations in the Top 50 markets. Audacy has that. They need to find a way to merchandize that platform better. iHeart and Cumulus are already doing it. The model is right there for all to see.