I guess I'm confused about the whole local Vs. national thing. On the one hand, iHeart wants all of its national talkers cleared in as many markets as possible, yet on the music side, they do not nationalize in the way that would be most efficient at all because apparently local revenue is still pretty important. None of the big markets are national, and even in the smaller ones that run mostly national content, local brands are retained, if in name only.Not just local sports. iHeart sees value in sports in general nationally. It's trying to strengthen its portfolio of teams.
A low rated sports station is worth more to them than a medium rated music station. Because they own the content.
The other question I've asked before that nobody has been able or willing to speculate on is why Bonneville never made a play for 104.5. Yes it's the worst FM in the market, but it still covers most of the market well, and they clearly see the value of being on FM, otherwise they probably wouldn't have blown up KBSG. Now with 104.5 in the hands of K-Love, I doubt they will be able to get their hands on it, but I'd be willing to bet that if another full market FM comes up for sale in this market, Bonneville will want it for sports talk. I have no speculation at all on what signal that might be.
