I still have trouble understanding their profit/non profit status...maybe someone smarter than I can explain exactly how it works...
A non-profit company is one that does not distribute earnings to shareholders. Instead, it uses the money that comes in to cover operations and, if there is any excess, expand what they are doing or contribute to other non-profits.I still have trouble understanding their profit/non profit status...maybe someone smarter than I can explain exactly how it works...
K Love is continuing to grow! Nothing wrong with that! Educational Media Foundation breaks ground on Franklin world headquartersA non-profit company is one that does not distribute earnings to shareholders. Instead, it uses the money that comes in to cover operations and, if there is any excess, expand what they are doing or contribute to other non-profits.
A non-profit is "owned" by an organization chartered to not seek profits than can be distributed as it has, in a sense, no "owners". A for-profit intends to make a profit each year and to distribute all or some of the profits to the people who own it.
Because they do not have profits, non-profit groups pay no income tax. In most states and jurisdictions, they also do not pay property tax on assets and land and buildings. They also are generally exempt from sales tax on things they buy.
WJIB Cambridge, MA, whose owner, Bob Bittner, died just recently. mostly MOR music on AM with a peashooter FM translator, no streaming. Did it for the love of radio and old music.I don't have to exact numbers but isn't KLove setting on a large pile of cash? My wife was listening a couple of weeks ago and they were saying (not an exact quote) if you want to keep Klove now is the time to donate.
Assuming their air staff makes 6 figures each I doubt they are paying more than 3 million a year in salaries. I was told they pay cash for their stations so most locations only have a contact engineer, tower rent, maybe two hundred square feet rent at the tower for a couple of racks of equipment, an internet connection and the power bill.
Has any commercial operater ever tried skipping commercials and ask for direct funding from audience to keep the station commercial free?
They have, as most non-profit groups do, a reserve fund and they try to always have cash for new acquisitions.I don't have to exact numbers but isn't KLove setting on a large pile of cash? My wife was listening a couple of weeks ago and they were saying (not an exact quote) if you want to keep Klove now is the time to donate.
www.forbes.com
Just the CEO makes a bit over $700,000. People like their head of finance, program director, operations manager, head of fund raising, head of outreach, etc. are all going to be in the mid-6 figures. Without counting the air staff and office staff and staff engineers, I'd say management salaries alone are around $5 million.Assuming their air staff makes 6 figures each I doubt they are paying more than 3 million a year in salaries.
They have over 200 employees that will work starting next year at their new 17,000 square foot Nashville buildingI was told they pay cash for their stations so most locations only have a contact engineer, tower rent, maybe two hundred square feet rent at the tower for a couple of racks of equipment, an internet connection and the power bill.
Some have asked for listener donations or subscriptions, such as the Beautiful Music station in Prescott, AZ, used to do. And the Bittner stations in MA and ME ran as listener supported with no ads.Has any commercial operater ever tried skipping commercials and ask for direct funding from audience to keep the station commercial free?
Right down the Road from Dave Ramsey.K Love is continuing to grow! Nothing wrong with that! Educational Media Foundation breaks ground on Franklin world headquarters
EMF does not buy AM stations, so that neither directly nor indirectly affects them unless we consider that it reduces the availability of viable stations.
Newspapers have not been a radio factor in nearly all of the three decades EMF has existed. When the press lost the main revenue sources of cars, employment and home sales to the web, it was downhill from there. But most of the huge revenue sucked up by print went to new media.
They've been known to do it when they get a better full-power signal
That happened in Lafayette, IN (that might have been what you were thinking of). A facility I once worked for as a commercial operator was sold to EMF, they picked up a signal in the non-comm band and sold the commercial band signal to another commercial operator.I seem to remember EMF recently buying an AM station in New England, though it almost certainly did so for the FM translator that came with it. If the translator isn't permanently married to the AM, it will probably get rid of the AM at some point in some manner in the not too distant future.
(UPDATE: It was a Boston area station that EMF has since either sold or stopped LMA'ing after the purchase of 107.3.)
Newspapers have also seen consolidation. A couple of big mergers, at least one of which was north of $1 billion, just before the Great Recession were also devastating to the newspaper industry.
I can think of one example off the top of my head where EMF acquired a station in the non-comm portion of the band and sold the full-power commercial band signal off for the money it would bring. It wasn't even in a big market. The likelihood of seeing a transaction like that today is probably lower with prices being what they are.
That happened in Lafayette, IN (that might have been what you were thinking of). A facility I once worked for as a commercial operator was sold to EMF, they picked up a signal in the non-comm band and sold the commercial band signal to another commercial operator.
What you talkin’ bout, Willis Broadcasting Company?I’m just glade it ain’t Willis’ Broadcasting Company.
What you talkin’ bout, Willis Broadcasting Company? Willis never paid his people
The question then becomes - will Cumulus look to shop WDVD? There are few synergies between WDVD and WJR.
radioinsight.com
Will this help WYCD in the ratings??Radio Insight and Country Aircheck are reporting that Cumulus country WDRQ is "on the verge of being sold to a Christian broadcaster."
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Family Life Broadcasting System Acquires 93.1 WDRQ Detroit
Family Life Broadcasting System is acquiring Cumulus Media's "New Country 93.1" WDRQ Detroit for $10 million. The station will convertradioinsight.com