Radio station economics in South Jersey work much the same as the tourist related businesses. You make your money in the summer and CYA in the winter. Even the big boys like Equity and Millenium work on this model. Sales are great from May through the fall. You save up a war chest big enough to cover your expenses over the 1st quarter. It's been like that for years.
The thing that still puzzles me is that Atlantic lost SO MUCH money over what is traditionally the busiest season of the year. These weren't start ups..they were active stations with some nice local and national accounts, casinos, beer money, etc. How could they lose SO MUCH money over the summer and fall, so that they would have to throw in the towel by November? And after cutting thousands in expenses by gutting their programming department. They were experienced radio managers who own successful properties themselves. They were smart and capable. And they had the summer economy to fatten the bank accounts. What happened?
No one will ever know, of course except the individuals involved. However, one scenario seems at least plausible. Suppose you come in to manage a cluster. You see that sales are soft and the operation is losing money. You try to rally sales and swap formats. But the existing debt service is crushing you. The economy has cut the value of the properties by a third or more. What to do? How do you deal with the debt service? How can you turn this losing situation around for personal gain?
What you do is let the company fail. Tear it down. Run it into the ground. File for protection and leave the lien holders and creditors out to dry. You have no personal stake, so who cares? When the assets come up for sale to satisfy the creditors, quietly move through a shell company to buy them yourself at their drastically reduced price. Now, you OWN the stations, and at 50 cents on the dollar. The debt service is manageable and you have made a purchase at a 20 year low bargain basement price. You win. The bank and the creditors and the original investors lose.
I would call that fraud. But I guess that's how you get to be a millionaire flying in on private jets these days.