Yes, and these are generally single owner or small partnership organizations that have existed for many years... if not decades. You see very few new single station ownership situations.Here we go with the arrogant responses (“you don’t understand the challenges faced…”). There are absolutely mom and pop owners who have local air staffs. And many of them exist in small markets all over the country.
I looked at ownership about a decade ago. Despite a convincing resume and plenty of references and adequate capital of my own, no financing was available for single station or single market deals, and multi-market deals required "different economies" in the various markets. It was nearly impossible to find any reasonably priced money.
Again, all are heritage operations. When the original owner wants to retire, they can't find buyers unless it is the "other owner" in the same or adjacent market. Nobody "new" is coming into this.You don’t have to look hard to find them. My favorite example is WPLM/Plymouth, MA. They run a hell of a local station with a live, local air staff and live weekenders. I can even name some mom and pop operators in Iowa, of all places, where I’m sure revenue isn’t high.
I thoroughly doubt that any of the large groups would be sold in bits and pieces. Most likely is another reorganization with the unsecured lenders taking a hit. This is basically putting a retread on old tires because they can't afford new ones.If some of the huge operators went into Chapter 7, the assets would be sold for pennies on the dollar. There are plenty of wealthy individuals or businesses that would take on radio stations if they could be bought for cheap. Heck, a lot of big time sports owners are interested in doing just that.