In case any of you aren't paying attention to detail the Cumulus bankruptcy has been approved by a Texas bankruptcy court. Today or yesterday. Mary Berner wins again.
I am terribly sorry, I thought I was still on the thread about KM's new Oldies station. I must've just left it!The thread is about 560, not about K.M.
Not that I could tell. I did check adjacent channels from Pt. Reyes SDR last night.Very interesting. (KLZ is a local for me.) I wonder if KLZ's HD sidebands suppressed anything on 550 or 570.
I'm not surprised, given that KLZ is a heritage regional signal, much like the old KSFO was.They do up here in Laramie.... ive got noise on adjacent channels because of the hiss.
Between KSFO (as it then was) and KMJ, 570 was an impossibility for me in Oakland. KUZZ is what I would have expected at 550. In Oakland, it sometimes came in strong enough to break through the sideband noise from KSFO.Not that I could tell. I did check adjacent channels from Pt. Reyes SDR last night.
570 was running Dodgers baseball, so presumably KLAC/Los Angeles.
And 550 was KUZZ/Bakersfield, confirmed with an identifying liner.
This is not a “win” for Berger. She specializes in troubled businesses and was brought in to Cumulus to try to find a process that would allow the company to survive. In such a case, the beneficiaries are the remaining employees and the debtors.In case any of you aren't paying attention to detail the Cumulus bankruptcy has been approved by a Texas bankruptcy court. Today or yesterday. Mary Berner wins again.
But not anyone who owns stock in Cumulus. That's now worthless when they take the company private.This is not a “win” for Berger. She specializes in troubled businesses and was brought in to Cumulus to try to find a process that would allow the company to survive. In such a case, the beneficiaries are the remaining employees and the debtors.
But not anyone who owns stock in Cumulus. That's now worthless when they take the company private.
It was, if I recall correctly, stock that was on the pink sheets. In other words, a highly speculative investment. Anyone buying the stock should have been doing so with full awareness of probable losses. Personally, I would have had more confidence in sports betting. And I don't gamble.But not anyone who owns stock in Cumulus. That's now worthless when they take the company private.
I wonder about the employees, and any ESPP that was invested in. If they had one, couldn't those employees than become equity holders as well?Keep in mind the stockholders are primarily the lenders who are now the equity holders.
If anyone bought any Cumulus stock, they were shorting it, not for the long term. Because there is no long term for Cumulus stock.
I wonder about the employees, and any ESPP that was invested in.
Very few employee plans such as 401-k options recommend or even permit buying shares in the company the employee works for. This is a classic "putting your eggs in one basket".I wonder about the employees, and any ESPP that was invested in. If they had one, couldn't those employees than become equity holders as well?
I wonder how many broadcasters with such bonus plans in the last 25 years ever made anything from those programs. Most were the result of the increase in publicly traded broadcast companies following deregulation and were used to help retain and recruit management.You must be joking.
The only thing I'm aware of was an executive bonus plan.
I wonder how many broadcasters with such bonus plans in the last 25 years ever made anything from those programs.
Down here in SoCal with a good radio and a careful nulling out of 570 KLAC you easily hear KVI !Not that I could tell. I did check adjacent channels from Pt. Reyes SDR last night.
570 was running Dodgers baseball, so presumably KLAC/Los Angeles.
And 550 was KUZZ/Bakersfield, confirmed with an identifying liner.
Until its demise we could usually hear 560 down here in SoCal but not nearly as strong of course as it's Bay Area neighbor just up the dial on 610.Most precisely, I think the best way to describe the 560 night DA pattern is "nulls toward KBLU Yuma and KPQ Wenatchee." Everything else about the pattern is a product of those nulls and the way the lobes between them interact with the ground conductivity of the Bay Area hills and the saltwater.
I've seen them in quite a few plans, generally in the form of a unitized trust whose shares reflect the underlying company shares plus a little bit of cash for liquidity. One 401(k) plan I had in the late 2010s placed limits on individual holdings of company stock in the retirement account. That plan also paid the match in company shares, though participants could sell them the next day, which I did. The Enron debacle led to more stringent regulations on company stock in retirement plans.Very few employee plans such as 401-k options recommend or even permit buying shares in the company the employee works for. This is a classic "putting your eggs in one basket".
In other words, stock options. There's also restricted stock units and performance stock units that reflect shares to be granted based on a vesting schedule and, for performance stock units, meeting corporate targets.Of course, employees may have bonus or incentives that are rewarded by the ability... not requirement... to buy company shares at establishments prices. But one has no equity until those shares are purchased.
In other words, stock options. There's also restricted stock units and performance stock units that reflect shares to be granted based on a vesting schedule and, for performance stock units, meeting corporate targets.