Beasley's debt problem did not happen overnight but has been building for years. A lot of the problems are the same as every other media outlet; things like the Covid pandemic, changing media habits, more entities competing for the same piece of a non-expanding pie. Like so many of the big operators (Cumulus, iHeart, etc.) they have put gobs of money into things that don't make them money. Things like large performance spaces and palatial studios where they no longer have local talent to use them. The audience and advertisers don't really care about these blandishments.
Beasley also made a bunch of bone headed decisions (they purchased an e-sports team, sold off a number of low revenue but profitable stations in order to raise quick cash, counted on digital media to save their bacon, and so on.)
Many of these are industry-wide problems made worse by what might be considered bad management.
The question now is: How does Beasley (and the rest of the industry) dig them selves out of this hole?
Beasley also made a bunch of bone headed decisions (they purchased an e-sports team, sold off a number of low revenue but profitable stations in order to raise quick cash, counted on digital media to save their bacon, and so on.)
Many of these are industry-wide problems made worse by what might be considered bad management.
The question now is: How does Beasley (and the rest of the industry) dig them selves out of this hole?