When Clear Channel purchased Majac in 2000, I was shocked that anyone could believe the stations justified the price.
Now we see what has become of our whole economy...one based on speculation instead of productivity. The unfortunate shareholders of Clear Channel purchased our stations. I doubt Lowry Mays and his people have suffered any more than AIG corporate types. The shareholders lost their asses. Clear Channel traded at $95 a share in 2000. Why? Speculation. The same reason house values doubled and bogus loans were made to unprepared owners.
It does not please me that the stations in Binghamton (not just CC, but Citadel as well) have suffered. It appears darker days lie ahead.
For the record, I made a very serious inquiry 2 years ago to buy back the Majac group, but was rebuffed by corporate to provide the very same detailed financials that I had provided them 6 years earlier. Profit and Loss statements were loaded with trades, auction revenues and discontinued one time only event revenues.
Again, for the record, NTR was nothing more than corporate double talk. In every case I have seen, this "non traditional" revenue cost as much as it made, and did nothing but artificially pump up the top line revenue figures.
I sit here and see the debris that was once local radio, and I see the same misinformation and greed that I see in our banking and lending institutions. At the time I sold the group, I wondered how CC could possibly make out. Now I know who really footed the bill. And for that I am truly sorry.
Had our government not allowed the corporations to take over our small and medium markets, there would still be a place for good people to work in the industry. Well funded local owners could weather tough economic times without carelessly firing people.
While my wife, dog and I are at peace in our little bubble in Florida, we now are seeing what the country has reaped from the seed planted so long ago. You wanna talk special interest groups and lobbyists? Look no further than the corruption in the FCC that allowed the monopolies, and forced people like me to sell prematurely. I was 43 when I was forced out. I did what I had to do for myself and my family. But it should never have come to that.
The days after the sale, as Bob Dunphy and his hack cronies told our staff that "Marc's days in radio are over", little did they know how right they were. Despicable men like these destroyed the entrepreneurial spirit of local radio, and created a financial den of iniquity.
This is not a sentimental recollection of radio the way it used to be. This is a personal indictment against the people who have destroyed something I loved very much. May the golden parachute boys in San Antonio and others like them rot in hell with their public money scam and their dependence on government handouts. That was the only way they could gain a foot hold and wrestle properties away from good local owners.
Marc Steenbarger
Not dead, not buried
Rendered insignificant by a government that caved to special interests
My sincerest best wishes to Thunder, as well as the many who have been eradicated by corporate malfeasance.
Now we see what has become of our whole economy...one based on speculation instead of productivity. The unfortunate shareholders of Clear Channel purchased our stations. I doubt Lowry Mays and his people have suffered any more than AIG corporate types. The shareholders lost their asses. Clear Channel traded at $95 a share in 2000. Why? Speculation. The same reason house values doubled and bogus loans were made to unprepared owners.
It does not please me that the stations in Binghamton (not just CC, but Citadel as well) have suffered. It appears darker days lie ahead.
For the record, I made a very serious inquiry 2 years ago to buy back the Majac group, but was rebuffed by corporate to provide the very same detailed financials that I had provided them 6 years earlier. Profit and Loss statements were loaded with trades, auction revenues and discontinued one time only event revenues.
Again, for the record, NTR was nothing more than corporate double talk. In every case I have seen, this "non traditional" revenue cost as much as it made, and did nothing but artificially pump up the top line revenue figures.
I sit here and see the debris that was once local radio, and I see the same misinformation and greed that I see in our banking and lending institutions. At the time I sold the group, I wondered how CC could possibly make out. Now I know who really footed the bill. And for that I am truly sorry.
Had our government not allowed the corporations to take over our small and medium markets, there would still be a place for good people to work in the industry. Well funded local owners could weather tough economic times without carelessly firing people.
While my wife, dog and I are at peace in our little bubble in Florida, we now are seeing what the country has reaped from the seed planted so long ago. You wanna talk special interest groups and lobbyists? Look no further than the corruption in the FCC that allowed the monopolies, and forced people like me to sell prematurely. I was 43 when I was forced out. I did what I had to do for myself and my family. But it should never have come to that.
The days after the sale, as Bob Dunphy and his hack cronies told our staff that "Marc's days in radio are over", little did they know how right they were. Despicable men like these destroyed the entrepreneurial spirit of local radio, and created a financial den of iniquity.
This is not a sentimental recollection of radio the way it used to be. This is a personal indictment against the people who have destroyed something I loved very much. May the golden parachute boys in San Antonio and others like them rot in hell with their public money scam and their dependence on government handouts. That was the only way they could gain a foot hold and wrestle properties away from good local owners.
Marc Steenbarger
Not dead, not buried
Rendered insignificant by a government that caved to special interests
My sincerest best wishes to Thunder, as well as the many who have been eradicated by corporate malfeasance.