amfmxm said:
I've read both books--the other one is called "Clear Vision" by Reed Bunzel and is the "authorized" company profile (this means they paid Bunzel to write a complimentary book about them). Since neither author is a radio guy, they miss the good stuff.
The good stuff is that Lowry Mays fixed the system from his position as Chairman of the NAB Board of Directors... wrote the draft legislation to eliminate ownership caps... and with the inside info blitzed the rest of us and scooped up 1200 radio stations before anyone else figured out the game. Then he stripped them down--getting rid of thousands of people--to create what looked like cash flow, cast aside the losers and sold the whole kit & kaboodle for $18 billion.
Too many radio guys are focused on how voice-tracking took their jobs away. The big picture is that Lowry screwed us all for megabucks and most of us haven't connected the dots, yet. He'll be dead by the time the manure hits the fan, and his grandkids will still be laughing at us from their yachts.
Read the books, then start connecting the dots.
You say Mays "fixed" the system (and I assume you are using the term in context of "unfairly rigged"). No doubt, Mays was part of the industry initiative to change ownership caps, but he was only one of many industry leaders who supported it. And don't forget, Telcom 96 had to pass through congress and be signed by President Clinton to become law.
There were may operators that scooped up radio stations in the late '90's... and most had their exit strategy in-hand at the beginning. Clear Channel (along with Cumulus, Citadel, Infinity/CBS, Entercom, Cox, Emmis, and others) at least had intent to be long-term operators. If you're going to point the finger at shamelessly cashing in, you should point them at groups like SFX, Evergreen/Chancellor/AMFM, American Radio Systems, Capstar, Jacor, and the like who were in it for the quick burn and turn. Clear Channel simply had the resources and the foresight to jump into the game early and energe a winner.
I've worked for about a dozen different broadcast companies in my career, running the gamup from literally Ma & Pa to a couple of publicly traded companies, including Clear Channel. Clear Channel is not the best company I ever worked for, but it is also not the worst. I've seen more layoffs and general "cheapness" in the smaller operators. Has CC screwed some things up, yes... but they're not the early ones.
I intend to read both books. I am partly through one of them and will read the other shortly. The book I am reading now definitely shows a bias. (But don't jump to conclusions as to WHICH book I'm referring to.) I suspect the truth lies somewhere in the middle.
PS---It wasn't CC that was paying me $1.25/hour... it was also about 35 years ago.