gr8oldies said:It's not Citadel's call; only the owner can release the calls. And he isn't.
secondchoice said:gr8oldies said:It's not Citadel's call; only the owner can release the calls. And he isn't.
As I said If Citadel spends $$$ (they have some cash now) and they can work a deal with 100.3 they could get WNOX. The ownership of 100.3 let it be LMAed for years, and was "out" cashing checks. I think if Citadel or somebody else ponyed up enough bucks they could buy or LMA 100.3. After all why have the hassel of dealing with employees when you just go to the mailbox and take the check to the bank.
secondchoice said:As I said If Citadel spends $$$ (they have some cash now) and they can work a deal with 100.3 they could get WNOX. The ownership of 100.3 let it be LMAed for years, and was "out" cashing checks. I think if Citadel or somebody else ponyed up enough bucks they could buy or LMA 100.3. After all why have the hassel of dealing with employees when you just go to the mailbox and take the check to the bank.
jetfli said:secondchoice said:As I said If Citadel spends $$$ (they have some cash now) and they can work a deal with 100.3 they could get WNOX. The ownership of 100.3 let it be LMAed for years, and was "out" cashing checks. I think if Citadel or somebody else ponyed up enough bucks they could buy or LMA 100.3. After all why have the hassel of dealing with employees when you just go to the mailbox and take the check to the bank.
Outside of Knoxville, there's a "chicken-and-egg" debate about whether Citadel willingly lost 100.3 because it wasn't paying off, or whether JP saw an opportunity during the court-mandated non-payment term of bankruptcy to regain control while generating tons of publicity. But make no mistake about it, Citadel's desire to pursue 100.3 is nil. If they were looking to regain a 100k signal in Knoxville again, they'd more likely pursue the radio business of South Central, which would not only give them two 100k signals in K-town, but also double their freqs in Nashville and give them a new market in Indiana. If you are still thinking Citadel is just waiting around to try to get their hands on 100.3 again, you are thinking far too small.
jetfli said:secondchoice said:As I said If Citadel spends $$$ (they have some cash now) and they can work a deal with 100.3 they could get WNOX. The ownership of 100.3 let it be LMAed for years, and was "out" cashing checks. I think if Citadel or somebody else ponyed up enough bucks they could buy or LMA 100.3. After all why have the hassel of dealing with employees when you just go to the mailbox and take the check to the bank.
Outside of Knoxville, there's a "chicken-and-egg" debate about whether Citadel willingly lost 100.3 because it wasn't paying off, or whether JP saw an opportunity during the court-mandated non-payment term of bankruptcy to regain control while generating tons of publicity. But make no mistake about it, Citadel's desire to pursue 100.3 is nil. If they were looking to regain a 100k signal in Knoxville again, they'd more likely pursue the radio business of South Central, which would not only give them two 100k signals in K-town, but also double their freqs in Nashville and give them a new market in Indiana. If you are still thinking Citadel is just waiting around to try to get their hands on 100.3 again, you are thinking far too small.
gr8oldies said:All that debt is gone now, they've got cash and there is talk of Citadel buying again
Big Bopper said:Limits on the number of stations one can own in a market make a Citadel purchase of South Central impossible. Knoxville's FM limit is 4 or 5. A merger of these 2 clusters would unite 9 or 10, if my count is correct.
jetfli said:Big Bopper said:Limits on the number of stations one can own in a market make a Citadel purchase of South Central impossible. Knoxville's FM limit is 4 or 5. A merger of these 2 clusters would unite 9 or 10, if my count is correct.
To quote Muhammad Ali: "Impossible is not a fact. It's an opinion."
Of course it's not impossible! All they have to do is settle on the freqs they want to keep, then pop the rest into a trust with a plan to sell them off. Happens quite frequently with radio cluster sales and mergers.
Honestly, we're talking about one of the top three major players in the industry. Think big.
Tennessee Cowboy said:That would be almost as big as the crater Citadel made here in May. And the one it made here in June. And definitely bigger than the crater it made a week ago Monday.
boogiecheck said:Tennessee Cowboy said:That would be almost as big as the crater Citadel made here in May. And the one it made here in June. And definitely bigger than the crater it made a week ago Monday.
You are correct. And then they would "move" B97 to 106.7.
BillBattle said:Citadel still has debt and angry stockholders and board of directors.
Kent said:I certainly won't argue the creditors who ended up with Citadel want to run it. Those creditors wanted, and still want, money, not radio stations. However, they're not as stupid as they seem, even if they have kept Farid at the top. After all, they still want their money back, and the only way they're going to get their money back is to grow the business. Whether they'll be successful or not is a different issue. I have my doubts as most of these people don't understand the business of radio. There's also the fact that they've kept the executive team, which is something almost every other credit hasn't done. If I'd gotten ahold of Citadel, I'd have fired the executive leadership as soon as I got the keys!
By the way, don't think Farid's intimidated by these people and is afraid of reporting to them. If anything, he's probably emboldened. After all, he just pulled off the coup of the century by being able to stay on the job and keep his team. On top of that, he's outlasted his old boss, Mel Karmazin, the Mays brothers, Tom Castro, David Kennedy and many others. I'm sure that's feeding his ego.