josh said:
PA_TUNE:
WELL PUT! I appreciate you laying out the facts once and for all. No one can dispute this proof and lays the opposition to rest.
josh
Josh:
Sorry, but you're still cheerleading...and not answering what are very reasonable objections to your point. (And you seem to have plenty of time to answer when it seems someone may be making your point.)
But here are some more of those facts that get in the way: most of those AM stations that are still hugely profitable and are top 5 in their markets are 50,000 watt blowtorches. OR...5 KW Class B's in a metro area whose owners still invest in and market. And there's not one of those you can buy for $75,000.
One of the first things a college textbook on radio broadcasting that's widely available says to people considering station ownership to do is check out the facility, yes. But, then...look at the community it's in to see if the community or the area could actually support a station. Many small towns simply don't have enough business to support a station. (And, Gr8t Oldies knows: the reason the trimulcast he mentions works is that, even though it's lowly rated in the market...barely a 1 to 1.5 share most of the time...the stations are in 3 different cities all at least 20-30 miles apart. Those 3 communities together certainly can support a station full time. So, it's a unique format with a unique set of stations set in unique areas which, together, allow it to work.)
Josh - broadcasting is an expensive business to run and operate. Many of the properties you have described are being sold at a firesale rate for a reason. Perhaps one needs extensive engineering work (like, maybe a grounding system...and they are not cheap.), another one might have equipment out of the 1960's that barely works, another may be a great facility in a small ghost town that has only 3 businesses in it, and you have to drive 30 miles to the nearest WalMart. Like the college textbook says, you have to look seriously before you buy.
Even an FM station in a small town may not make it, if the town can't support it. I am aware of an FM just out of Cincinnati that went through a number of "local" owners for a number of years...because, at that time, the area it was in could not support it.
People who look at broadcasting and think "If I build it, they will come", are often seriously disappointed.