Rock 100.5 should cut down on the classic rock before the 90s and focus on the modern music.
The limited audience they have comes from the older songs. They can do what you suggest, but it means blowing the place up and starting from zero.
Rock 100.5 should cut down on the classic rock before the 90s and focus on the modern music.
I could be totally wrong and maybe having an under-performing station(s) might attract a buyer for the whole Cumulus Atlanta cluster. A potential buyer looks and thinks: hey if I can “fix” Kixs 101.5 and 100.5 the revenue increase will make recovering the purchase capital easier.
The thing is it's their home market. And who else would buy those stations? Lew Dickey?
Isn't the CEO in New York? I believe there is a TV group whose headquarters is in Atlanta without them owning a station in Atlanta. It might be better not to have an operation in the same city as your "headquarters".
One would hope that Cumulus would try to maximize it's large market properties cash flow by growth instead "dreaming" that someone will come along and buy the clusters at a price that they can retire a large part of their debt.
Keep in mind they're currently owned by creditors who just want to get their money back. Cash flow doesn't matter to them.
They just received FCC permission to sell 100% of the company to a foreign buyer.
None of them want to have a broadcast division and want to sell.
Keep in mind they're currently owned by creditors who just want to get their money back. Cash flow doesn't matter to them.
They just received FCC permission to sell 100% of the company to a foreign buyer.
Cumulus Media (stock symbol CLMS) owns the Radio stations.
That's the company I'm talking about. Under the terms of their bankruptcy agreement, the creditors own the operating majority of the company.
http://www.insideradio.com/free/to-...cle_23637fd6-d5af-11e7-bed5-cf681b711322.html
If you read the above article, it says the company traded $1 billion in debt for 83% equity in the company.
The owners of that 83% want to get their money. Cash flow doesn't matter to them.
And here's the article where the FCC approved 100% foreign ownership, linked again to the bankruptcy:
https://radioink.com/2020/06/01/fcc-approves-cumulus-foreign-ownership-plan/
One can only assume that Cumulus is worried about a hostile takeover by it’s debt holders who are able to exercise voting stock options granted by the bankruptcy settlement. The Virus put the whammy on Cumulus earnings so I can only guess some of the debt holders are not happy
No one is really “buying” Cumulus.
In my “perfect world” there would be a 2 or 3 station limit per market with a maximum of 50 stations nationwide per owner. IMHO if you can’t make a profit with 50 stations how can you with hundreds more?
In my “perfect world” there would be a 2 or 3 station limit per market with a maximum of 50 stations nationwide per owner. IMHO if you can’t make a profit with 50 stations how can you with hundreds more?
There are too many markets, from Tallahassee to Boise, where Docket 80-90 brought in as many as double the number of stations.
In some markets, 250 watt translators on a TV tower or mountain are totally viable signal-wise, adding more stations to the competitive environment.
A cluster of two or three stations is just not viable in those markets. Covering the overhead of a manager, accounting department, offices, insurance, engineering and other expenses when covered by only a couple of stations is not possible.
Remember, inflation adjusted billing for the industry has declined by over 60% in the last two decades.
There are many small operators all over America that have figured how “how to make a living” with LPFMs.
Really? They're supposed to be owned by non-profits. They're not allowed to use satellite programming. Most of the ones I know are hobby stations or religious outlets. Lots of CPs are sitting unbuilt. The FCC eliminated the main studio rule in 2018, and it never applied to LPFMs.
https://www.broadcastingcable.com/news/divided-fcc-eliminates-main-studio-rule-169598
There has to be something better than having hundreds of stations operating under a bankruptcy trustee.