Where call-letters really matter today are with national advertising agencies & rep firms--and specifically with agency planners & buyers who may never interact with a seller who gives a rat's ass about a station in Mobile, Alabama. Counting on a buyer in New York or Chicago or LA to comprehend that WABD is really, truly WABB is a hell of a risk. These folks don't know station "flips" and nicknames and slogans--all they see is call-letters.
Yeah, the WABB calls were still stuck to 1480 at the time of the sale, but nowadays the FCC lets licensees cut deals allowing seperate companies to share calls on different "services," and one would think that Cumulus/EMF could have swung such a deal. Or better yet, for a token around 1 percent of the purchase price (1% of $3 million is $30k) just bought the calls.
Hard to tell. Maybe they tried and a sentimental family member blocked it. We'll never know.
Yeah, the WABB calls were still stuck to 1480 at the time of the sale, but nowadays the FCC lets licensees cut deals allowing seperate companies to share calls on different "services," and one would think that Cumulus/EMF could have swung such a deal. Or better yet, for a token around 1 percent of the purchase price (1% of $3 million is $30k) just bought the calls.
Hard to tell. Maybe they tried and a sentimental family member blocked it. We'll never know.