In that case, the news should be confirmed soon.
HR issues are not publicly "confirmed". This is not subject for a press release.
In that case, the news should be confirmed soon.
HR issues are not publicly "confirmed". This is not subject for a press release.
Alright then. I assume Entercom will do swaps for their remaining spinoffs in Boston, Seattle, San Francisco, and Sacramento.
I'm sure Sky is smiling from ear to ear!!! This is a big boost to get new listeners to The New 88.5FM in LA and OC. No word when KSBR HD2 will be heard in Orange Co. Joe GThat's good news for the only quality pop/rock AAA station in town (in my point of view) The New 88.5 (former KCSN 88.5).And it is remarkable, KSWD has once started as an AAA station, but failed quickly and never got the chance and became a mainstream classic rock station like KLOS.
At this point, there is nothing that can be "assumed". They will do whatever is necessary and expedient to get DoJ and FCC approval. If they can, they will avoid tax implications, but if that is not possible they will have to do straight sales.
I'm sure Sky is smiling from ear to ear!!! This is a big boost to get new listeners to The New 88.5FM in LA and OC. No word when KSBR HD2 will be heard in Orange Co. Joe G
Alright then. I assume Entercom will do swaps for their remaining spinoffs in Boston, Seattle, San Francisco, and Sacramento.
Mike: You're proving the old adage about "assume". Sit back, watch and learn. You've spent six months on these boards playing armchair CEO, suggesting swaps and format changes that simply show you're not very well-versed about what actually happens in these situations.
Helpful hint: In today's radio, if you're divesting, the first thing you want to do, if possible, is get the station into the hands of someone who won't use it against you. Ethnic, brokered, religious...whatever.
Mike: You're proving the old adage about "assume". Sit back, watch and learn. You've spent six months on these boards playing armchair CEO, suggesting swaps and format changes that simply show you're not very well-versed about what actually happens in these situations.
Helpful hint: In today's radio, if you're divesting, the first thing you want to do, if possible, is get the station into the hands of someone who won't use it against you. Ethnic, brokered, religious...whatever.
I would rather see Entercom swap stations in markets to companies who aren't maxed out for stations in markets where Entercom isn't maxed out, which would be the most likely case for Entercom's other divestitures. I consider selling stations to non-commercial operators a last resort.
Well, we know the aggregate purchase price suggests that KSWD went for slightly under $55 million. Given the minimal cash flow and billings and the lesser signal, that fits right in with the $82 million price for KPWR two months ago.
Well, we know the aggregate purchase price suggests that KSWD went for slightly under $55 million.
While I'm still surprised about the sale of KSWD to EMF considering the conflict over the K-Love branding with Univision...
That's your preference. Very different from a prediction. And very, very different from a strategy...especially a winning one. Selling stations to non-comms, or commercial broadcasters who program in different languages, gets you cash and takes a potential competitor off the board, which increases your chances of a healthy market share.
Mike Novak, the CEO of EMF, is a pro (one of the best jocks at KFRC in the 70s and 80s). He's been planning the introduction of the K-Love brand in Los Angeles for some time. You can bet there's been conversations between EMF and Univision and that there will be some announcement fairly soon.
Safe assumption.
How many years has KLVE been K-Love? I remember seeing the billboards in the 1980s.