If that was their intent they could have kept Gambling. Perfect folksy-homey and built-in clients.
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... and low ratings with essentially no 25-54's.
If that was their intent they could have kept Gambling. Perfect folksy-homey and built-in clients.
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Bill Paley was already rich. That's how he could afford to get into radio.
Marconi was into science and technology.
Like today's software geeks, he was into the tech and money showed up.
Bean counters are into money.
First radio was run by engineers.
Then programmers.
Then sales types.
Now bean counters. Each time, it's gotten worse. Stupid, arrogant greed killed radio. Stupid arrogant bean counters are also wing-nuts, which explains talk programming.
... and low ratings with essentially no 25-54's.
Of course, you are the same person who called one of radio's greatest voices and spokespersons, Sol Taishoff, a "ho". So I expect no less than a position that is totally devoid of truth.
I don't expect you to recognize the truth about Taishoff and the magazine he published. It was a trade magazine. It existed by tell readers what they wanted to hear; self promotion, the industry line, self-congratulation, puffery. Since he sold himself and his integrity for money, he's a ho.
You spout the industry line, too, but you don't get paid nearly as well (a). That just makes you easy.(b)
Here's the pattern: The creators and inventors.
Then people who love the product and develop the product.
Then people who sell the product take over (the process of compromise and debasement begins).
Then bean counters.
I notice that Warren Buffett hasn't invested in radio.
Samuel Paley never invested in radio either.
Bill Paley was a scion, an heir, a trust fund brat.
It may not have been his money but he had access to daddy's money. He got United Independent Broadcasters cheap and then he got Columbia Records to put money in. No owned stations at the point. All he bought were some contracts.
True. But nothing is going to change that fact. This station has the same listeners as it had in the Eisenhower era...albeit fewer.
According to the other board, they're offering $500,000 for their morning show. Is that enough?
I'd guess they need to pony up a lot more to get someone worthy of that slot unless they want to build someone from a much smaller market.
You just have to drive 30 minutes outside of NYC to find local talk show hosts making a tenth of what WOR is offering. I'm not kidding.
You can apply the 'had the economy not crashed....' to any business. When CC acquired the stations, it was based on their future financial projections. Clearly, CC didn't apply a rigorous analysis to the future potential taking account the threats to the prevailing business model of the time. Maybe noone could've foreseen it, but they placed an awful big bet that revenues would not only be stable but forever increasing. This bore out until 2004, revenue was slow to flat until 2008 when the bottom dropped out.
they'd have to give him time to build an audience.
That was my whole point all along when I said CC overpaid for its stations, as much as 18X cash flow which was an unheard of multiple considering station trading multiples were considerably less prior to the CC buying spree.
That 18 times figure may have been an extreme. However, it wasn't too far out of line. Westinghouse/CBS paid 15 times cash flow for the American Radio Systems stations in 1997:
http://articles.baltimoresun.com/19...63053_1_american-radio-westinghouse-cbs-radio
Regardless of who they hire, they'd have to do this.
While that is true, it was Clear Channel that set the "then" new multiple standard years before Westinghouse acquired American Radio Systems.
But a property is worth what someone is willing to pay. That's the rule of the marketplace.
They only "overpaid" in the context of what stations are selling for now. They paid the market price at the time.
The model WAS for companies to pay 4-8 times cash flow for stations. But, large companies-- especially CC-- were paying a LOT more than that to get the big stations in big markets. At the time, no one could have known how the economy and technology would change both the the industry & listening habits.
Fast forward almost 20 years and the companies that gobbled up all those stations at exhorbitant prices have a ton of debt to deal with. Unlike the late 90's, there isn't a lot of optimism that they can get out of it on their billing alone.