I have 2 left feet I think we can make it work.I mean I've never square danced in my life. You sure you can't find a better partner?
I have 2 left feet I think we can make it work.I mean I've never square danced in my life. You sure you can't find a better partner?
Plus, I am not sure what the rush is. The only people who actually care (aside from a few radio geeks) are the current ESPN 98.7 listeners. They're being told to tune over to 1050 AM or use the ESPN New York app. Whatever happens to 98.7 will have to happen from the ground up. The stage management of the format/ownership change will have no impact on the new station's chance of success. They could wait until the very last second. What's the difference?They can't really sell advertising until they have documented ratings. That takes several months.
You're assuming the buyer will be running commercials.
Thank you. That's my point exactly. They're buying a signal. No brand, nothing to carry over. Whether it's Country, Christian, Hispanic or Khoekhoe (click language), they're starting fresh with NO advertisers or support.Whatever happens to 98.7 will have to happen from the ground up. The stage management of the format/ownership change will have no impact on the new station's chance of success. They could wait until the very last second. What's the difference?
Good to know that other people aren't allowed to post or have an opinion other than yours. I'm not trying to top anyone. I just want this thread to stop. When 98.7 sells, then it's news, Right now, it's just speculation.Can someone else please jump on the bandwagon and tell us how whoever buys 98.7 will have to start fresh from the ground up? I don't think there are enough members in this thread yet trying to top each other by way of explaining how all-knowing they are about this.
Interesting article. I know that the 216 stations in question are varied in value, but the average sale is around $278K per station. Was it always that way?Look, Inside Radio has an article today showing station sales in the first half of the year totaled $60 million.
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Radio Deals Totaled $60M During First Half, With Station Supply Said To Be Growing.
The radio deal market continued to hum along at a slow but steady pace during the first half of the year. BIA says 216 radio station sales were announced betweenwww.insideradio.com
Asking price for 98.7 started at $50 million. Ain't no way they're getting near that. There are interested parties, but buyers and sellers don't negotiate through the media, and they damn sure don't invite the general public to stick their noses in their business. When this sells, look for it to be closer to $25 to $30 million. Maybe a few bucks more, but stations aren't selling like hotcakes anymore. It will more than likely be an NCE or minority broadcaster, so deal with it.
The sale of WPLJ to EMF was airtight and took everyone by surprise. The escrow payment was made in absolute secrecy three months before the deal was announced.Since when is everything kept a secret. Everything leaks at some point.
radioinsight.com
No.Interesting article. I know that the 216 stations in question are varied in value, but the average sale is around $278K per station. Was it always that way?