With the iHeart layoffs this week, I've been thinking about some smaller, regional owners and whether they are in a better position because they haven't taken on as much debt as the largest owners.
In the Mid-Atlantic region, I'm thinking of: Times-Shamrock in Scranton (which just sold its one Baltimore station); Draper Media that has radio and TV in Delmarva/Eastern Shore and radio stations in Wilmington, DE; Seven Mountains Media which has stations across PA; Press Communications with stations in NJ; Bold Gold in Scranton and southern New York state.
These owners have varying amounts of local talent (but, now, more local than iHeart). Some make use of local or regional voicetracking: a morning jock on one station might track afternoons on another; one DJ might do an evening show on several regional stations.
Of course there are downsides to being smaller. But some of these groups seem to have grown conservatively and positioned themselves better in their markets than stations from larger groups like iHeart.
I briefly worked for a regional radio owner ... in the late 1980s. I'm just wondering if regional owners, like the examples I've given, are in better shape, relatively speaking, than the larger groups today. Plus: what are other, similar regional companies in other parts of the country?
In the Mid-Atlantic region, I'm thinking of: Times-Shamrock in Scranton (which just sold its one Baltimore station); Draper Media that has radio and TV in Delmarva/Eastern Shore and radio stations in Wilmington, DE; Seven Mountains Media which has stations across PA; Press Communications with stations in NJ; Bold Gold in Scranton and southern New York state.
These owners have varying amounts of local talent (but, now, more local than iHeart). Some make use of local or regional voicetracking: a morning jock on one station might track afternoons on another; one DJ might do an evening show on several regional stations.
Of course there are downsides to being smaller. But some of these groups seem to have grown conservatively and positioned themselves better in their markets than stations from larger groups like iHeart.
I briefly worked for a regional radio owner ... in the late 1980s. I'm just wondering if regional owners, like the examples I've given, are in better shape, relatively speaking, than the larger groups today. Plus: what are other, similar regional companies in other parts of the country?