The FCC has had four different administrations to change ownership laws. Bush, Obama, Trump, and now Biden. Two FCC chairmen tried to do it under Bush. Once by Michael Powell in 2003, and then in 2008 by Kevin Martin. Both times, they were rebuked, and overturned by Congress:
www.tvweek.com
Congress is so woefully dysfunctional, with the House in particular verging on completely broken because of a handful of extremist idiots, the FCC could probably try again, and they might actually succeed, considering that said idiots are more concerned with, among other things, sabotaging and hate-speeching (is that a word? It is now!) not only their speaker (that
they elected), but also their fellow Republican
and Democratic colleagues at every opportunity rather than actually doing their jobs, which includes keeping entities such as the FCC in check. What ever happened to teamwork and cooperation?
I suppose when the FCC's attempts at ownership rule changes were overturned, it was probably appropriate, as the last thing anyone wants is a too-big-to-fail multimedia juggernaut with a monopoly so large that nobody would even stand a chance. The ownership limits presumably exist to help prevent a single company from owning every station in every market and locking out any competition.
As it is, many of the large radio conglomerates in existence now (iHeart, Cumulus and Audacy, to name three) have
all had fairly severe debt problems, and all three of them have suffered through bankruptcy, so it seems like a business model that doesn't work too well (maybe at one time when radio was more important (pre-Internet, basically), it worked, but not so much anymore). And now they want to merge and get
bigger? I really don't think that will work out well.
We live in interesting times, for sure, and I'm not sure I like it much.
c