salemjedi54 said:Yall are way undervaluing WRR. It could be bought for 45-70 million. The Friends of WRR would have a fit if were sold.
salemjedi54 said:The Friends of WRR would have a fit if were sold.
newsmark said:salemjedi54 said:The Friends of WRR would have a fit if were sold.
As they do every few years when the city considers selling. Last time, IIRC, they were looking at a frequency swap that would have put them on 91.7. Then someone with the city finally realized they would lose money if they had to rely on donations and underwriting on a non-commercial frequency.
amisdead said:salemjedi54 said:Yall are way undervaluing WRR. It could be bought for 45-70 million. The Friends of WRR would have a fit if were sold.
If the WRR and the classical format moved to 91.7, why would the Friends of WRR be mad?
amisdead said:The City of Dallas will not sit on WRR until the end of time. It may not be next year, but at some point they will divest themselves of a valuable non-core asset. The Friends of WRR might not like it, but they will be overruled.
amisdead said:The City of Dallas will not sit on WRR until the end of time. It may not be next year, but at some point they will divest themselves of a valuable non-core asset. The Friends of WRR might not like it, but they will be overruled.
I believe the current environment makes a deal even more likely: The city's short and long-term budgets are worse than in previous times and a viable full-market non-commercial signal could be a real possibility. Never have the currents been so favorable.
As far as the previous swap goes, it isn't really even comparable. 105.7 is a terrible signal everywhere in the City of Dallas. Even in the most northwestern part of Dallas County around Coppell, 105.7 only maxes out at 68 dBu. 91.7 puts a city-grade over not only the entire city but virtually all of the country and most of the market.
Last time the swap was seriously considered, 91.7 was running preaching shows with no sign of changing. Now they are playing a lot of bad and obscure music and the clock is ticking on the financial viability of the station in it's current format.
critic319 said:Wow. Everyone has KXT in the grave. No one thought they would make money on KXT. Its public radio! It is what is is. It will take time but it could come to resemble a station like WXPN. It hasn't even been on a year. The audience is slowly growing with no advertising. I hope the city doesn't sell WRR any time soon and I hope KXT is given a chance over time. Both stations are assets to the Dallas airwaves whether you like the music or not. If you want to hear hits you have plenty of choices.
~C![]()
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