The common thread is that EMF was able to offer cash to motivated buyers - owners who needed cash to service debt. In Philly's case, Merlin invested a lot of other people's money in several stations which they then tanked with expensive news formats that didn't gain traction. In Philly, they tried mostly-syndicated talk which, given time, would probably have caught on. But Merlin didn't have any time left; their investors wanted to recover what they could from the failed experiments in Chicago and NYC. EMF offered cash for 106.9 and CBS either lost interest in an additional FM outlet (possibly for KYW), or didn't want to pay the price. In NY and DC, Cumulus' past mismanagement tanked WPLJ and WRQX. The new team couldn't turn them around in a timely manner and debt reduction became more of a priority than trying to monetize small station clusters. EMF, cash in hand, to the rescue. Silver lining: removing two major signals from competition in the commercial sphere, which benefits other commercial stations in the affected markets. Win-win for broadcasters. For anyone still relying solely on terrestrial radio for entertainment, it might be seen as a setback.