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Meruleo Media Sells Los Angeles TV Station To Church of Scientology

I remember when KWHY ran stock quotes all day long (until the closing bell), then it was either foreign language programming or Japanese "Giant Robot" cartoons....
 
I remember when KWHY ran stock quotes all day long (until the closing bell), then it was either foreign language programming or Japanese "Giant Robot" cartoons....
I remember when they ran stock quotes, too. I have no memory of the Japanese “Giant Robot” cartoons, though.
 
A Los Angeles TV station sold for less than an FM station in NYC who’s expecting $50 million for their signal
Wow, that is a low price tag. This is a must-carry TV station in the second largest market. I believe every cable and satellite system serving Los Angeles County, Orange County and part of Ventura County must have it on their line-ups. And it only sold for $30 million?

OK, it doesn't include a TV studio or offices, although the Church of Scientology already has that for its own streaming channel. But the deal does include the transmitter shared with KBEH-TV. While it maps to Channel 22, it really broadcasts on Channel 4. VHF channels 2 through 6 are terrible for digital reception. 7 through 13 are also not optimal but not as bad as the lower channels. Never the less, it's still an over-the-air Los Angeles TV channel that has must-carry rights in millions of homes.

As Loveofradio says, this is bad news for all owners of broadcasting properties. If you can only get $30 million for a Los Angeles TV station, how much has the price of your TV and radio outlets dropped? What low figure will 98.7 WEPN-FM sell for when its lease with Good Karma ends in a month? An FM station in NYC won't sell for $50 million if KWHY-TV 22 Los Angeles only sold for $30 million.
 
I remember when KWHY ran stock quotes all day long (until the closing bell), then it was either foreign language programming or Japanese "Giant Robot" cartoons....

I remember when they ran stock quotes, too. I have no memory of the Japanese “Giant Robot” cartoons, though.

That's because my old friend CPH has KWHY and the former KBSC entangled in his memory (probably because both were subscription TV stations for part of their history).

It was channel 52 that had Japanese anime as part of its afternoon schedule for many years, alongside Felix The Cat, the Three Stooges and Little Rascals, and (improbably enough) Doctor Who. Channel 22, going back to its days as KPOL, ran old syndicated shows during non-market hours ... most of which dated back to the 1950s and early 1960s.
 
This is a must-carry TV station in the second largest market. I believe every cable and satellite system serving Los Angeles County, Orange County and part of Ventura County must have it on their line-ups.

Unfortunately for them, that is becoming less and less relevant. I read somewhere that Charter/Spectrum (which is the dominant cable provider in most of Los Angeles and Ventura County) had a net loss of subscribers this year compared to 2022. Lots of cord-cutting going on now, and Spectrum is now pushing Internet, VoIP, and wireless rather than video services.
 
That's because my old friend CPH has KWHY and the former KBSC entangled in his memory (probably because both were subscription TV stations for part of their history).
Possibly. I *do* remember some Japanese content on KWHY in the afternoons, after the market closed for the day. (but before the station became all-Spanish sometime in the early 2000s).

Or it could have been on Channel 18 (KSCI) which had a lot of foreign language content until 2017... maybe I got 22 mixed up with that.
 
Unfortunately for them, that is becoming less and less relevant. I read somewhere that Charter/Spectrum (which is the dominant cable provider in most of Los Angeles and Ventura County) had a net loss of subscribers this year compared to 2022. Lots of cord-cutting going on now, and Spectrum is now pushing Internet, VoIP, and wireless rather than video services.

Do cable companies even offer video anymore?

I used to be on what eventually became Frontier from 2005 to 2016. I dumped the video service on Frontier (keeping the internet) in favor of DirecTV, which I kept until sometime in 2022. By then I decided to get rid of DirecTV, and get my TV through Frontier. But by them, Frontier no longer offered baseband video to new customers, just YouTube TV....
 
If you can only get $30 million for a Los Angeles TV station, how much has the price of your TV and radio outlets dropped? What low figure will 98.7 WEPN-FM sell for when its lease with Good Karma ends in a month? An FM station in NYC won't sell for $50 million if KWHY-TV 22 Los Angeles only sold for $30 million.
Eh. I know of a very low-rated AM signal right here in LA that is selling for $7.15 million, er, $6.8 million.
 
Thirty five years ago (VHF) TV9 went for $395? $95 for the license (to the cross filer) and $300
Um....no.

Disney paid $320 million---$217 million to RKO General (which was lucky it was allowed to sell it instead of having to forfeit the license) and $103 million to Fidelity Television, a group which had been contesting Channel 9's license since 1965.

 
It is a lot cheaper for them to have you stream using an app or a Xumo box than to have a massive headend with all the channels transmitted by cable.

Why? They use the same cable runs that carry broadband and VoIP phone.
 
Why? They use the same cable runs that carry broadband and VoIP phone.
I think the point was that by using IPTV streams for video services they’re not gobbling up huge amounts of bandwidth on linear channels. This is why cable systems got rid of analog distribution, and now are shutting down the digital QAM channels.
 
Um....no.

Disney paid $320 million---$217 million to RKO General (which was lucky it was allowed to sell it instead of having to forfeit the license) and $103 million to Fidelity Television, a group which had been contesting Channel 9's license since 1965.

Thanks for the clarification, I had forgotten the exact totals. I had family in on the Fidelity side. Did you know that Westinghouse first looked at the station before Disney? That eventually fell through.
 
Thanks for the clarification, I had forgotten the exact totals.

Yeah, I’d say. 395 dollars?


I had family in on the Fidelity side. Did you know that Westinghouse first looked at the station before Disney? That eventually fell through.

Yep. It went on a long time before Westinghouse bailed.

 
Yeah, I’d say. 395 dollars?




Yep. It went on a long time before Westinghouse bailed.

Group W wanted both KHJ-TV and WOR-TV in New York, if I can recall from my research. It would have been interesting to see how Group W would have programed two independents in the two largest markets if they would have gotten waivers to keep KFWB and WINS (and KYW/KYW-TV in Philadelphia) or be forced to sell those outlets.

What happened in LA was the FCC transferred the channel 9 license (which had been temporarily reallocated to Norwalk–what was the reasoning for that?) to Fidelity. Disney then paid Fidelity for the license, and RKO General for everything else (physical plant, IP, contracts, etc.) That last part was similar to what RKO did in 1982 when it was forced to relinquish WNAC-TV in Boston.
 
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