amfmxm said:
But, no, Clear Channel did not come along as a White Knight to save a foundering industry.
It wasn't one single company that came along in the late 90s to buy stations. It was a group of about ten. They all bought stations under the same rules, and each had their goals and agendas. Sillerman's goals were very different from Mays. But the government insisted that each buy a certain number of AM stations for every group of FMs they bought.
amfmxm said:
They recognized an opening to rewrite the law--effectively skipping the pesky rulemakers at the FCC
Once again, they were not the only company involved at the time. The "pesky" FCC had already loosened the ownership limits, and was on its way to loosen it even more. Also, companies had already begun operating stations under LMAs. I know for a fact that had the change in ownership law not been passed, these companies would have achieved the same thing through LMAs. They'd just have skipped the debt. which in the final analysis was the mistake. They would have been better renting than owning.
The ONLY reason the door was even open for companies like CC to get involved is because the government, in a bi-partisan way, wanted something from the owners. They wanted them to invest more money in their stations, invest in digital infrastructure, and buy failing AM stations. The owners wanted something in return. Everybody got something out of this deal.
It's a very interesting and complicated story, and not as simple as you indicate. It's easy now and look back at it as a huge mistake, but it was obvious that the 1934 Act needed to be re-written. It was one of the last great bi-partisan laws, in which political agendas were put aside (for the most part), and the purpose was to modernize the media. My view is it worked for the short term. After 8 years, newer unregulated media were able to bypass the rules and made the 96 Act obsolete. But to open that bees nest again won't be as easy.
amfmxm said:
to gobble up a commanding presence in about 250 of the 300-or-so rated radio markets and thereby control the lion's share of the money spent in our industry.
But the government put several clauses in the law that prevented them from doing that. Which is why, over the years, CC has been forced to divest itself of radio stations in certain markets. And why all of their stations aren't top rated in every market. They HAVE to own some losers in every market. That's the law. No one at CC wanted that. Had CC actually written the law, as you state, I doubt they would have written it this way.
amfmxm said:
They had the plan in place before pulling the trigger on the legislation, giving themselves an unfair advantage over everyone else. A pure power play, motivated by pure greed.
Once again, they were not the only ones in the room, not the only ones lobbying for change, and not the only ones who stood to gain from change in the law. They just had more money to spend than everyone else. But CBS was just as interested in being a player here as CC. As for the greed factor, it's better than the alternative, which is political power or thought control, which is what some in the left charge. My fear is the next big wave in media ownership will be for political control, and that is far scarier than simple greed. There has to be a motivation for doing something, and in this country, the motivation is money. That is the way the game is played. The alternative is we all become hobbyists, and although I did that for several years, I prefer getting paid.