kinetic said:
Fine. To whom? You can't pick the new owners. Meet the new boss, same as the old boss. New owners come in with basically the same interest: Make money. Worse would be if new owners come in with political or religious agendas. We see that at a lot of AM properties that have sold at fire sale prices.
kinetic said:
2) Change the rules under which the owners operate,
You mean like they did in 1996? How'd that work out? Any time you create new regulation, you open the door for agendas that might not be what were intended. Also, when you start to over-regulate, you end up with an industry that is simply unprofitable for private companies, as we saw with railroads in the early 20th century, and you're starting to see now with the auto industry. That leads to government ownership. Ad-supported media is under such strain right now, John Kerry is saying the whole thing could go away. Not because of debt, but because ad revenues aren't enough to cover the costs.
kinetic said:
3) Oh, and there's the third possibility we could entertain: Is there a better radio business model?
Only one problem: Taste and demand for entertainment is becoming more individual. Fewer music formats that attract the mass audiences. Jokes that offend. Political correctness. Schedules that prefer on-demand content to real time content. And as taste and demand become more individual, it becomes harder and harder to attract advertising. The only way it works is the satellite radio model, where one company owns all the formats each reaching small audiences, spread the costs out, and hopefully the combined mass provides enough to sell. I think we know the results there.
Here's what we know: Music audiences want personalization. They don't like interruptions. And they want their music for free, which means fewer commercials and thus less income. Where does investing more in DJs fit into that model?
In short, the future is not good, which is why stock prices for radio companies are so low. Sure they have debt, but the bigger problem is the prospects for improving income aren't great. Plus the potential for a new $2 billion music royalty. How do you pay for that?
Too many radio stations, combined with too many other sources for entertainment, the infinite dial, and a splintering of
music taste. That's the situation. We can all see how newer media is operating: Smaller more nimble staffs, less regulation, and more personalized programming options for customers. And even then, they're being killed by the same royalties that are about to hit broadcasting.
All of this will be much harder for small companies to absorb. The thing that killed radio companies is that they were radio-only companies. Back when radio stations were owned by diversified companies, they could absorb changes in the advertising market. But when all your income comes from one place, and that one place is in trouble, then you have no place to go. That means bigger, not smaller. That way the content you create for one platform can be reused over and over, charging money each time. Economies of scale. Here we go again. That brings us back to Premium Choice and similar models.