The market for syndicated programming is moribund. It's single handidly kept Byron Allen afloat with all his crappy court shows but not by much.
Because in this market of higher interest rates, overall stagnation, and general declines in linear television viewership across-the-board, it is overpaying.
These signals in question are better off as diginet trees run off the bird, many of which are better programmed anyway. But that ain't going to be the value CBS would want.
And I'm being bold enough to say that, unlike spuriously starting fantasy television trading based on a loose interpretation of a Hollywood Reporter article, the chances of any deal happening are imperceptible because no buyers exist.
Absurd. None of the major transactions since 2012 among television group mergers and acquisitions have been piecemeal. They've always been as whole units with small divestitures to meet the bare minimum of federal regulations. If CBS were to sell anything (unlikely) it'd be as a whole group.