What ever happened to the idea that you have to spend money to make money in all your business endeavors?
Broadcasters ARE spending money. They're just not spending the bulk of it on studios and transmitters. If you look at where they're hiring and who escapes the cuts, it's the digital side. We can debate the wisdom of that, but the big broadcasting companies do invest in their product. Also, if you want a job in a smaller market, Connoisseur has been hiring in the former Alpha markets that had been cut with a machete two years ago. Granted, that hiring has been at somewhat small levels, but not everybody is in pure cutting mode. The days when small market stations could sustain two dozen employees are over, if they ever existed in the first place.
Wasn't there a time when a major LA station was sold for 500 million? Whats that station worth today?
I don't remember one going for $500 million, but one did sell for $400 million not quite 25 years ago (100.3). Seems like Radio One offloaded it for about $150 million a few years later ($100 million cash plus 104.1 in Washington, DC). After Entercom got it (trading some Denver properties to Bonneville) and sold it as part of the CBS Radio deal, it went for about $55 million. That was 2017; not sure what it would be worth today, but I doubt it would fetch that going to a commercial operator today.