Nationwide Insurance is constantly running ad campaigns - during NASCAR races on the Motor Racing Network. Dale Ernhardt Jr. serves as spokesman.
gr8oldies said:That would make sense since there's a Nationwide series. There are sponsored studios "from the NAPA studio" but none of them are buying stations.
SirRoxalot said:Liquidation would lead to greater competition, and overall better programming.
SirRoxalot said:Since there was little regulation, businesses looking to extend their brand to the folks weathy enough to purchase radios made a relatively modest investment in radio.
Once the industry took off, lots of people invested in radio. When it got expensive enough that individual players couldn't afford it, broadcasting companies were born so many players could share the cost, and share the benefits.
What we've seen since the '80s is a focus on buying and selling, not operating. What we're watching now is the media conglomerates collapsing under their own weight, but maintaining control over their radio stations instead of being forced to liquidate. The "pre-packaged" Chapter 11 is the big boys jobbing the system again, screwing the small investor, and continuing to maintain control. Liquidation would lead to greater competition, and overall better programming.
DavidEduardo said:There have been hundreds of smaller stations going into bankruptcy.
SirRoxalot said:The idea that Google - a company built on expanding web services - would invest in "old media" is laughable.
gr8oldies said:I'm in a Citadel market now and I actually hear a mix of live and syndicated programming on their stations, which are top rated. You really think it would be a good thing for 5 stations to go silent for months or years waiting for gosh knows who to buy them and supposedly have live jocks 24/7?
SirRoxalot said:As far as smaller stations going into bankruptcy, is it hundreds, or is it dozens?
SirRoxalot said:Are they going dark, or going to lenders who financed small groups trying to emulate the big boys?
SirRoxalot said:Besides, isn't HD radio going to resolve that issue?
SirRoxalot said:Now that's just plain silly. Liquidation wouldn't turn any stations off, or take them silent. They'd be in the hands of the reciever until they were sold. Things would likely operate just as they are now.
The difference would be that the stations would ultimately not belong to Citadel. Citadel would cease to exist.
As far as some of the other posts are concerned, Westinghouse was NOT primarily a broadcasting company. That was a small portion of their business.
They were primarily in the power production and transmission business. Radio was a small portion of their business, and the fact that radio required significant power for transmission complimented their core business.
As far as smaller stations going into bankruptcy, is it hundreds, or is it dozens?
Are they going dark, or going to lenders who financed small groups trying to emulate the big boys?
SirRoxalot said:Now that's just plain silly. Liquidation wouldn't turn any stations off, or take them silent. They'd be in the hands of the reciever until they were sold. Things would likely operate just as they are now.
The difference would be that the stations would ultimately not belong to Citadel. Citadel would cease to exist.
As far as some of the other posts are concerned, Westinghouse was NOT primarily a broadcasting company. That was a small portion of their business.
They were primarily in the power production and transmission business. Radio was a small portion of their business, and the fact that radio required significant power for transmission complimented their core business.
As far as smaller stations going into bankruptcy, is it hundreds, or is it dozens?
Are they going dark, or going to lenders who financed small groups trying to emulate the big boys?
DavidEduardo said:The difference would be that the stations would ultimately not belong to Citadel. Citadel would cease to exist.
No, Citadel continues, but it has new shareholders. The prior ones have lost all, or most, of their equity.
DavidEduardo said:As far as some of the other posts are concerned, Westinghouse was NOT primarily a broadcasting company. That was a small portion of their business.
That was not my point. You said, paraphrasing, that there were no groups until around 1930. In fact, and westinghoouse was an example, there were the beginnings of groups well before 1930.
DavidEduardo said:They were primarily in the power production and transmission business. Radio was a small portion of their business, and the fact that radio required significant power for transmission complimented their core business.
In the early years of radio, transmitters were quite low power... most through the late 20's were in the 500 watt and below range. Even with inefficient equipment, most large neon signs of the era used more power. It was not until around 1941 that the US station count exceeded 1000. In the late 30's, as plenty of published sources show, there were only a few hundred stations in the US.
SirRoxalot said:With the shifts in population, the Northeast is over-radioed, while the south and west are fighting over a relative paucity of frequencies. Besides, isn't HD radio going to resolve that issue?
SirRoxalot said:Under Chapter 7 - liquidation - Citadel would cease to exist as a radio station owner. All assets, including the radio stations, would be sold. It's possible that Citadel's Chapter 11 reorganization could proceed to Chapter 7 IF no agreement with creditors is reached. It's unlikely, but there are still possibilities that the "pre-packaged" Chapter 11 will be modified if enough creditors make enough noise.
You're "paraphrasing" something I never said. Please show me where I said that there were no groups before 1930? What I said was that radio was in its infancy in the 1920s, and there was no assurance that the advertising model would work.
Tell that to WLW - 50,0000 watts of power in the '20s, and 500,000 Watts of AM power in 1934. The Radio Act of 1927 was born because largely unregulated radio stations were beating each other up in power wars on a free-range of frequencies. There were plenty of 50 watt stations run by hobbyists and schools, but there were also a significant number of 5 Kw, and even 50 Kw stations.
DavidEduardo said:SirRoxalot said:Under Chapter 7 - liquidation - Citadel would cease to exist as a radio station owner. All assets, including the radio stations, would be sold. It's possible that Citadel's Chapter 11 reorganization could proceed to Chapter 7 IF no agreement with creditors is reached. It's unlikely, but there are still possibilities that the "pre-packaged" Chapter 11 will be modified if enough creditors make enough noise.
But Citadel is in Chapter 11, and, except for your post, there has been nary a hint of a full liquidation even being discussed. You may think lenders are totally stupid, but they apparently know that they have less chance to recover anything significant if they sell in today's environment than if they trade debt for equity and get the cash flow the group produces.
DavidEduardo said:The principal creditors put together the prepackaged bankruptcy, so there is no significant creditor group yelling for Chapter 7.
DavidEduardo said:You said that groups formed later. In fact, the ad model was proven to be working well before 1930. In fact, there were radio ratings before 1930. Once the model proved viable, stations started increasing power... there were many in the 5 kw range by the late 20's, mostly due to the prospects of greater income as well as the improvements in technology
"Once the industry took off, lots of people invested in radio. When it got expensive enough that individual players couldn't afford it, broadcasting companies were born so many players could share the cost, and share the benefits."
SirRoxalot said:DavidEduardo said:SirRoxalot said:Under Chapter 7 - liquidation - Citadel would cease to exist as a radio station owner. All assets, including the radio stations, would be sold. It's possible that Citadel's Chapter 11 reorganization could proceed to Chapter 7 IF no agreement with creditors is reached. It's unlikely, but there are still possibilities that the "pre-packaged" Chapter 11 will be modified if enough creditors make enough noise.
But Citadel is in Chapter 11, and, except for your post, there has been nary a hint of a full liquidation even being discussed. You may think lenders are totally stupid, but they apparently know that they have less chance to recover anything significant if they sell in today's environment than if they trade debt for equity and get the cash flow the group produces.
I never said that Citadel was in Chapter 7. What I did say - if you READ it - was that Citadel and other "big boys" were "jobbing the system again, screwing the small investor, and continuing to maintain control. Liquidation would lead to greater competition, and overall better programming." What you quoted above was in response to a bit of nonsense from Gr8oldies about stations going "silent for months or years waiting for gosh knows who to buy them".
There certainly is a "creditor group" yelling for a modification of the compensation offered to unsecured stockholders. You have heard of Aurelius Capital, right?
Please quote me on this. You can't because I NEVER SAID IT. What I said was
"Once the industry took off, lots of people invested in radio. When it got expensive enough that individual players couldn't afford it, broadcasting companies were born so many players could share the cost, and share the benefits."
There is no reference to the '30s. Purely broadcasting companies really began after licenses became more valuable, which happened when the radio Act of 1927 limited licensing, and began regulating power and frequency, which drove up the value of licenses, and added layers of regulation to the licensing process. "Fred's radio store" decided at that point to get out of the broadcasting business because the of the expense and time required by the licensing process.
As to the rest, you bounce back and forth between the middle '20s and the middle '30s. That's like talking about the Internet between 1995 and 2005, and the age of computer communications as it evolved from dial-up to broadband.
DavidEduardo said:That's not a creditor group. That is a group of three related investment companies that bought a bunch of stock for very little money to see if they could make something from it. They are shareholders, not creditors.