Some in this thread would do well to take a refresher course in TV syndication economics.
I would think Media General would be a more willing seller of KRON-TV than Cox of KTVU, thus KRON-TV could be had at a more attractive price assuming Cox were even willing to sell KTVU. No affiliation swap need take place.
If the KRON-TV building is in such bad shape, why is it still occupied and why did they scrap plans to move out? They've had 24 years going back to Chronicle days to repair any damage from the 1989 earthquake. I was in that building several years ago and no mention was made of it being unsound.
Did KTVU's pilot-name gaffe impact their news ratings in any meaningful way?
If KRON-TV had the money, which I doubt they do, they could rent space in a building that's freeway close and make it their ENG garage and park and dispatch their vehicles from it. I'm old enough to remember when KQED occupied three buildings in the early '70s. They had two buildings on 4th street (one for studios, offices, videotape and M.C.) and one across 4th street for the art and film departments. They also had the building at 8th and Bryant which housed channel 32 which had just been given to them by Metromedia, as well as housing KQED-FM.
Fox owned the former KBHK/channel 44 for a few months in2001. It picked up KBHK with the acquisition of the Chris Craft/United Television station group and sold it to Viacom shortly thereafter.
I would think Media General would be a more willing seller of KRON-TV than Cox of KTVU, thus KRON-TV could be had at a more attractive price assuming Cox were even willing to sell KTVU. No affiliation swap need take place.
If the KRON-TV building is in such bad shape, why is it still occupied and why did they scrap plans to move out? They've had 24 years going back to Chronicle days to repair any damage from the 1989 earthquake. I was in that building several years ago and no mention was made of it being unsound.
Did KTVU's pilot-name gaffe impact their news ratings in any meaningful way?
If KRON-TV had the money, which I doubt they do, they could rent space in a building that's freeway close and make it their ENG garage and park and dispatch their vehicles from it. I'm old enough to remember when KQED occupied three buildings in the early '70s. They had two buildings on 4th street (one for studios, offices, videotape and M.C.) and one across 4th street for the art and film departments. They also had the building at 8th and Bryant which housed channel 32 which had just been given to them by Metromedia, as well as housing KQED-FM.
Fox owned the former KBHK/channel 44 for a few months in2001. It picked up KBHK with the acquisition of the Chris Craft/United Television station group and sold it to Viacom shortly thereafter.
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