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WABC's Return to Ratings Top Ten

Danny Kaye was a partner in the Kaye-Smith group (KJR Seattle and others). Dick Van Dyke owned KXIV Phoenix; on The New Dick Van Dyke Show his character was a host at a fictional KXIV-TV.
 
IIRC, musician Bruce Hornsby had some sort of stake in 92.3, The Tide in his hometown of Williamsburg, Virginia. I don't know the extent of his involvement with WTYD or if he's even still affiliated with it. The Tide is a pretty good AAA station and is about the only place locally that will play new music from classic artists like Bruce Springsteen, Steve Winwood and Eric Clapton. I haven't listened in a while, but they used to feature some Americana as well.
 
50 years ago, when I went to college in Binghamton, NY, Merv owned the AM-FM combo in neighboring Endicott, NY. The AM station was WENE, and the FM station was WMRV!
I was doing afternoon drive at The Big E, WENE from 1974-1977. It was a great steppingstone station. Many major market jocks worked there on the way up.
 

Here is another one Former New York City TV anchor now Gray TV host Ernie Anastos at one point had ownership in radio stations in the Albany, NY area.
 
Danny Kaye was a partner in the Kaye-Smith group (KJR Seattle and others). Dick Van Dyke owned KXIV Phoenix; on The New Dick Van Dyke Show his character was a host at a fictional KXIV-TV.
KFAS in Casa Grande, AZ was owned by none other than Francis Albert Sinatra. Why? You tell me.
 
look at the list of celebrities that are named above, and remember the time frame when they owned.

Want to end up with a million dollars by owning a radio station, invest 10 million.

IMHO in the last 20 years if anyone famous bought a stand alone or a couple of small market stations it was a vanity project.

If you have money to invest, and you want to make the highest and best return on that investment, I wouldn't think radio or TV would be the place to put money, unless you needed a loss to offset capital gains.

When the ownership caps were gutted, and radio stations were being sold for stupid money, much of the celebrity ownership sold.

Curt Gowdy bought WCGY/WCCM in 1963 ..... how much do you think they cost him? He sold some 30 years later ..... can you say massive profit
 
If you have money to invest, and you want to make the highest and best return on that investment, I wouldn't think radio or TV would be the place to put money, unless you needed a loss to offset capital gains.

Such as John Cats. But as you said at the top of your post, consider the time frame.

So now, the companies that seem to be best positioned to buy radio are non-profits. Most of them are religious, although a lot of them are community groups. But what's to stop a non-profit such as the R&R Hall of Fame or some similar music based group from getting into the institutional broadcasting business?
 



Here is another one there are two broadcasting entities that are tied to the Disney family. Note these two companies are not directly tied to Disney Inc but they are spinoff companies that owned broadcasting outlets. Shamrock Broadcasting is tied to a Roy Disney used to own radio stations once the radio stations were sold to different companies then Shamrock became known as a private equity group. Retlaw Enterprises tied to Walt Disney's heirs owned TV Stations up until the 1990's.

KJEO (Now KGPE Fresno), KMST(Now KION Monterey) were owned by Retlaw at one point.
 
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There was a time when a lot of artists and celebrities owned radio stations. Buck Owens, Pat Zajak, the Oak Ridge Boys. They've all sold. They may have been good investments at one time, but not any more. Plus, you read all the complaints people have about radio playlists. If you're an artist, the negativity hurts your image and legacy.
Didn't Van Halen at one time own at least part of a station in the NW? I think it may have been in Portland. Maybe the old Q-105?
 
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