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NAB To FCC: We Want a Better Reg Fee Process

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 7 months ago

How can the FCC improve the regulatory fee process for broadcast licensees of radio and television stations?

The NAB has some suggestions, and offered them to the Commission in a filing submitted Thursday (10/22) by the leading lobbying voice in Washington for AMs, FMs, UHFs and VHFs across the U.S.

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Adam Jacobson

Passing The Torch, At Forecast 2022

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 7 months ago

As 2022 begins, NAB COO Curtis Legeyt will assume the role of President/CEO of the nation’s leading voice in Washington for the broadcast media industry.

Gordon Smith is winding down a 12-year tenure at the association, and with the cancellation of the 2021 NAB Show, there’s only one place radio and TV industry executives will get the chance to personally wish Smith well as he heads into retirement.

FORECAST 2022, presented by the Radio + Television Business Report and Radio Ink, is that locale. Scheduled for November 16 at the Harvard Club in New York, this year’s event promises to be dynamic and full of insightful, intelligence-filled panel discussions largely free of press coverage.

You read that correctly. Only Radio Ink and RBR+TVBR will offer select highlights from Forecast 2022 — and that includes an afternoon Conversation with Gordon Smith and Curtis Legeyt, sponsored by Katz Media Group.

What is the state of the broadcast industry from the Inside the Beltway view?

What are the key legal, regulatory and legislative initiatives that the NAB under Gordon Smith has championed, and are already working to define the future for broadcast media in the U.S.?

QUU CEO Steve Newberry, who worked closely with Smith and Legeyt during his own tenure at the NAB, will moderate the discussion — only at FORECAST 2022.

SECURE YOUR SEAT NOW BY CLICKING HERE TO REGISTER!

 

Adam Jacobson

CPB Names a DEI Leader

Radio World
3 years 7 months ago

CPB now has an executive whose job is to assure diversity and inclusion in its HR process.

The Corporation for Public Broadcasting named Dr. Stephen Wilkins as senior vice president of human resources and diversity, equity and inclusion, what has become known as DEI in organizational circles. He will start Dec. 6.

“In this new position, he will be responsible for the development and implementation of a human resources strategy that builds on CPB’s commitment to diversity and inclusion,” the organization stated.

[Visit Radio World’s People News Page]

He will report to President/CEO Patricia Harrison. She praised Wilkins for his “organizational leadership, academic training and operational skills that will enable him to work with leaders and staff across the organization to advance a culture grounded in CPB’s commitment to collaboration, teamwork and DEI.”

Wilkins was chief human resources officer and then chief of staff at Alexandria City Public Schools in Alexandria, Va. “During the pandemic, he served on the senior leadership team that restructured the organization, recruited diverse leaders for schools and departments, and developed the division’s five-year strategic plan focused on equity and inclusion.”

Earlier he was on the Pentagon staff and served on the faculty at West Point as an assistant professor of political science. CPB said he “speaks fluent Spanish and has worked in Mexico, Central America, South America, the Caribbean and Canada.”

He has degrees from West Point, Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government and the senior service college at Carlisle Barracks, Pa., as well as a doctorate in administration and leadership from the Richard W. Riley College of Education at Walden University.

Send news of engineering and executive personnel changes to radioworld@futurenet.com.

 

The post CPB Names a DEI Leader appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Missed Opportunity: Radio and Black Baseball

Radio World
3 years 7 months ago
Sherman “Jocko” Maxwell debuted a five-minute radio show on WNJ in Newark by early 1930.

In radio’s formative years, most stations were only on the air for several hours in the evening, and the majority of what they broadcast was music. There were a few stations that provided news headlines and sports scores, but listeners did not expect breaking news coverage, nor live play-by-play broadcasts of their favorite teams.

Throughout the early 1920s, as the programming day gradually expanded, so did what was on the air. By the mid-1920s, radio was covering important news events, and many stations began broadcasting major league baseball games, much to the delight of the fans.

But there was one group of fans whose favorite teams never got on the air. If you followed the Chicago American Giants, the Kansas City Monarchs, the Indianapolis ABCs or the other teams in the Negro Leagues, radio ignored you.

In fact, the only way to find out how your team did was to either go to the game or read about it in the Black press. Because America was segregated, it was mainly sportswriters at Black newspapers like the Chicago Defender, Pittsburgh Courier, and Baltimore Afro-American that offered extensive coverage of Negro Leagues teams.

Jocko

No matter how well-attended Negro Leagues games were or how much talent the players displayed, radio stations weren’t interested.

Perhaps that wasn’t surprising: In the 1920s, all station owners were white, and they seemed convinced that white listeners wouldn’t care about Negro Leagues baseball — even though newspaper accounts noted that many white people went to the games.

It wasn’t until late 1929 or early 1930 (the exact date is uncertain) when the first Black sportscaster went on the air: Sherman “Jocko” Maxwell was a former semipro baseball player and manager from Newark, N.J. He debuted a five-minute radio show on WNJ (later WNJR) in Newark.

At first, he mainly read sports headlines, but his show went over well with local fans and by 1932, Maxwell was hosting a 15-minute program. By 1933, he was on the air in New York City at WRNY, and then at WHOM, where he hosted his increasingly popular sports show several nights a week.

By 1937, Maxwell was on the air at WWRL, where he was named the station’s sports director in 1942 — the only Black sports director in radio at that time.

Sportswriter and broadcaster Sam Lacy in an undated photo. Courtesy National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum

Maxwell had an audience of both Black and white listeners, and he had so much credibility that Major League players would often stop by his show for a chat.

He was also a correspondent for the Sporting News, and during the 1930s, he covered some of the Newark Eagles’ Negro Leagues games. This gave him an opportunity to discuss the games on his radio shows, where he sometimes compared certain Black players to their major league counterparts, something most other sports commentators were not doing.

Meanwhile, in Washington, D.C., another Black sportscaster went on the air in the mid-1930s.

Sam Lacy was already a sportswriter for the Washington Tribune who would go on to have a long career with the Baltimore Afro-American.

Hal Jackson, shown in a 1970s photo, was mentored by Sam Lacy.

In the autumn of 1935, he began doing a sports show for WOL. Like Jocko Maxwell, Lacy was a big fan of the Negro Leagues, and both men had served as public address announcers at their team’s ballparks.

After Lacy returned to his sportswriting job, he mentored a young man named Harold Jackson, later better known as Hal Jackson and a major force in Black radio.

Jackson wanted to be a sportscaster, but no station owner in the D.C. area would hire him. He finally got on the air in 1939 at WINX, hosting a music and interview program, and thanks to Lacy, he also was hired as the public address announcer for the Homestead Grays games at Washington’s Griffith Stadium.

Grays vs. Elite Giants

But it wasn’t until Aug. 9, 1942, 22 years after the Negro Leagues had been founded, that the first play-by-play broadcasts of Negro Leagues games finally occurred, with Jackson as one of the announcers.

Sponsored by the Baltimore Afro-American, Washington station WWDC broadcast the series featuring the Homestead Grays and the Baltimore Elite Giants. WWDC also agreed to broadcast several other Homestead Grays games, including one against the Kansas City Monarchs in September.

No Negro Leagues games seem to have been broadcast during the next several years. Meanwhile, Sam Lacy and Harold Jackson collaborated on a once-weekly sports show on WINX in 1944, during which they interviewed Negro Leagues players and recapped the games from that week.

Contrary to some internet claims, there is little evidence of any regular play-by-play broadcasts until 1948, when the Cleveland Buckeyes got on the air at station WSRS; the station’s sportscaster Danny Landau did the play-by-play, assisted by sportswriter A.S. “Doc” Young, who covered the Negro Leagues for the Cleveland Call and Post.

But an effort to broadcast the Atlanta Black Crackers games over WEAS in Decatur, Georgia in mid-May 1948 was not as well-received: After one game between the Black Crackers and the Nashville Cubs got on the air, a subsequent broadcast had to be canceled after complaints from what one Black newspaper referred to as “Southern bigots.”

Ironically, by the time more games were about to be broadcast, the Negro Leagues were in decline. Major League Baseball had finally begun to integrate in 1947 with the arrival of Jackie Robinson, and soon, there were questions about whether the Negro Leagues would survive.

The Negro National League disbanded in 1948; the Negro American League struggled on, in weakened form, through the 1950s.

As a media historian and a baseball fan, I am saddened that most radio stations ignored the Negro Leagues when they were at their best. Because so few stations broadcast any of their games — and not until the 1940s — baseball fans were deprived of the chance to follow the exploits of talented (and record-breaking) 1930s players like slugger Josh Gibson and speedster “Cool Papa” Bell or hear about how pitcher Satchel Paige’s legendary career developed.

It was a loss for the fans. But it was a missed opportunity for radio.

Donna Halper is an associate professor of communication and media studies at Lesley University, former broadcaster and radio consultant. She also writes for the Society for American Baseball Research.

The post Missed Opportunity: Radio and Black Baseball appeared first on Radio World.

Donna L. Halper

In the Matter of Online Political Files of 97.5 Licensee TX, LLC, Licensee of Commercial Radio Station(s)

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 7 months ago
97.5 Licensee TX, LLC enters into consent decree to resolve political file investigation

In the Matter of Online Political Files of Villecom, LLC, Licensee of Commercial Radio Station(s)

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 7 months ago
Villecom, LLC enters into consent decree to resolve political file investigation

Tascam Podcast Editor Software Debuts

Radio World
3 years 7 months ago

Tascam has released a new, free application for audio editing — Tascam Podcast Editor.

Intended for the production of voice content such as podcasts, internet radio, audiobooks and voice logs, it is a standalone application available for Windows, MacOS, iOS, and in a future update, Android OS. The Podcast Editor software integrates with Tascam’s Mixcast 4 podcast mixer hardware, and supports various functions necessary to publish a program with straight-forward, easy operation.

[Check Out More Products at Radio World’s Products Section]

Users can cut and paste voice snippets, record to each track, insert background music and jingles, insert sound effects, and control the level of individual tracks. The software is equipped with multiple “voice content export options” that correspond to the desired application, such as internet radio, podcast, and YouTube. Tascam Podcast Editor export files with MP3 and WAV format, but it also has a function to export an image along with audio, aiding users who publish files on YouTube. After exporting the contents, users launch a web browser with the shortcut button of each preferred media hosting site to access the desired upload screen.

Since the Podcast Editor interfaces with the Tascam Mixcast 4 Podcast Station, users can record directly without complicated track routing and assignments using the Mixcast 4. Users can read the data recorded on the SD card of the Mixcast 4 by pressing the Read Mixcast File button, and other options are also available.

The software supports editing with a maximum of 12 tracks/20 channels that can be switched between mono and stereo. VST-plug-ins are supported, enabling users to utilize available VST plug-ins from their own library in addition to the Mixcast 4’s internal effects library.

The Tascam Podcast Editor supports 2Mix, multitrack with WAV, and export with Poly file — enabling one to choose a file format that is easy to use in other editing software. Further, the application is equipped with a “time adjust function” that enables one to adjust the speed of playback without changing the pitch of the voice, along with an “automatic cleanup tool” that makes it easy to remove noise and normalize the recorded voice all at once.

The Tascam Podcast Editor does not require a driver when used with the Mixcast 4, though Windows 10, Version 1909 (Fall 2019 Update) or later is required.

The Podcast Editor can be downloaded from tascam.com.

Send your new equipment news to radioworld@futurenet.com.

Info: http://tascam.com

 

The post Tascam Podcast Editor Software Debuts appeared first on Radio World.

Mix Editorial Staff

Global TV Consumption vs. Ad Spend: A Disconnect

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 7 months ago

Here’s something you may want to read while not consuming anything hot: Advertiser spend on TV and social media is twice as high as daily consumption.

That’s the not-so-pleasant takeaway from new WARC analysis, conducted on a global level, of more than 715,000 consumers across 100 markets.

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Adam Jacobson

MBM Spins An AM in Laredo

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 7 months ago

At 1490 kHz on the AM dial, a 1kw Class C facility with a largely directional signal serves the Laredo, Tex., area.

Until now, it has been associated with regional entity MBM. Soon, an individual will be the licensee of this station, pending FCC approval.

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Adam Jacobson

Pfaff Promoted To Katz Digital Video Head

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 7 months ago

There’s a new President for Katz Digital Video, the division within national ad sales operation Katz Media Group.

It’s an individual who first began his career in media sales in 1984, as a radio and television specialist working for President Reagan’s reelection campaign.

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RBR-TVBR

Savannah Smile: Hefner Earns DFW Role at Nexstar

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 7 months ago

SAVANNAH, GA. — Nexstar Media Group has selected a company leader with more than 25 years of broadcast management and sales experience to serve as the new VP/GM of “The CW 33” in Dallas — KDAF-TV.

Taking the position is Marc Hefner, the four-year VP/GM of the NBC affiliate serving Georgia’s Coastal Empire, WSAV-3.

Before that, Hefner spent a decade as VP/GM of The CW Network affiliate serving Jacksonville, Fla., and Brunswick, Ga., WCWJ-TV.

Earlier in his career Hefner worked in sales positions at television stations in Kansas City and Nashville, respectively.

Traci Wilkinson, Nexstar’s broadcasting division SVP/Regional Manager,

“Marc’s familiarity with Nexstar and our broadcasting group will be a real advantage for him as he assumes his new role in Dallas, the country’s fifth largest market,” Wilkinson said. “Over the course of his career, he has consistently demonstrated the ability to significantly grow revenue and profitability by increasing existing advertising market share, identifying non-traditional accretive revenue streams, and developing a variety of innovative cross-platform marketing strategies and sponsorship opportunities. At both WCWJ-TV and
again at WSAV-TV, Marc grew ratings, revenue, and market share, and deepened the station’s relationship with the greater community.”

The growth at WSAV since 2017 is noteworthy, as Savannah is an extremely competitive media market. Here, Gray Television’s WTOC-11 has long dominant the television ratings. In recent years, the CBS affiliate’s competition has strengthened, with Dale Julin and the news team at The E.W. Scripps Co.’s WJCL-22 making significant ratings improvements alongside WSAV. Also in the mix: WTGS-28, the FOX affiliate owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group.

Commenting on his promotion and move to Dallas, Hefner said, “I am genuinely pleased to begin this new role and grateful to Nexstar for giving me the opportunity to manage its broadcasting and digital operations in Dallas. KDAF-TV and its related digital and social media channels are an integral part of the Dallas community and I am looking forward to expanding our audience on-air and on-line and to providing our advertisers with solutions specifically tailored to fit their unique needs. I can’t wait to get started.”

In Savannah, Hefner serves as Treasurer for United Way of the Coast Empire and is a member of the organization’s executive committee.

Adam Jacobson

Univision: Now Hiring In The Newsport

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 7 months ago

MIAMI — For more than a decade prior to Wade Davis becoming CEO of Univision Communications, the Univision News arm of the company accomplished a lot with what some insiders lamented was a permanent skeleton crew.

Now under new leadership, those who’ve had something to say about getting more talent in the newsroom have had their wishes come true: Univision is on a hiring spree.

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Adam Jacobson

A ‘New Work Environment’ Declaration for iHeartMedia Employees

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 7 months ago

The top two executives at the helm of the nation’s No. 1 audio content creation and distribution company have distributed an internal memo to all employees that describes in detail how all will “never ‘return to the office’ as well all knew it.”

Instead, iHeartMedia is returning to a “New Work Environment,” CEO Bob Pittman and COO/CFO Rich Bressler said.

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Adam Jacobson

Vaccination? No. A Weekly Live On-Air COVID-Test? Yes

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 7 months ago

Five years ago, a Jacksonville, Fla.-based radio personality was generating headlines for his avid use of Snapchat, integrating that activity with the on-air content tied to a Top 40 radio station where he served as the morning co-host.

Today, he’s in the late Rush Limbaugh‘s old noon-3pm time slot on a co-owned News/Talk station serving Florida’s First Coast. And, he’s in the news for his decision to undergo weekly COVID-19 testing live on the air, instead of providing proof of vaccination to his employer.

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Adam Jacobson

2wcom Signs With International Sales Team

Radio World
3 years 7 months ago

International Sales Team said it signed an agreement to sell 2wcom broadcast products in the United States.

Founded earlier this year, International Sales Team offers what it calls “sales teams as a service,” or STaaS. It is based in Australia but services any country.

It quoted Werner Drews, managing director of 2wcom, saying, “International Sales Team represents a cost-effective way for us to get our range of professional broadcast products to a market that is complicated and difficult for us to address from our offices in Germany.”

The announcement was made by Charlie Day, partner manager for International Sales Team.

2wcom makes hardware and software audio broadcast equipment including the recently introduced 4audio series.

IST launched in March from Australia, targeting OEMs to help them with their sales. It describes itself as a “worldwide network of highly experienced broadcast and media industry sales professionals for hire and deployment.”

Director Darren Frearson said in the earlier launch announcement, “We’re all familiar with the concept and implementation of SaaS, PaaS [Platform as a Service] and IaaS [Infrastructure as a Service] as beneficial outgrowths of ever-advancing technology. … STaaS offers broadcast and media manufacturers a cost-effective and culturally appropriate means of expanding globally.”

He said at the time that IST was actively recruiting to expand its network, particularly in North America.

 

The post 2wcom Signs With International Sales Team appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Bonneville to Deploy GBS SFN in San Francisco

Radio World
3 years 7 months ago

GeoBroadcast Solutions said Bonneville International is deploying its SFN technology in San Francisco.

A concept image from the GBS website.

A five-node single-frequency MaxxCasting network is scheduled to be completed in March, serving FMs KOIT (96.5 MHz), KMVQ (99.7 MHz) and KBLX (102.9 MHz).

Each station will share antenna infrastructure through a multiplex system. GBS said the improved signal should also increase penetration with Nielsen PPM Portable People Meters.

“The three stations were acquired by Bonneville from Entercom in 2018,” the supplier noted in a project summary.

“A particular challenge to all stations in the region is the terrain of the East Bay hills. By implementing a MaxxCasting SFN system, the technology provides a solid, interference-free signal, sound, and HD Radio in the East Bay for all three Bonneville stations. Bonneville will use the MaxxCasting system to simulcast the main signal for the three stations to provide greater coverage in the East Bay.”

[See Our Who’s Buying What Page]

Partners working on the project include GatesAir, supplier of Flexiva transmitters; Goldman Engineering Management for the project architecture; Jampro Antennas; SCMS for equipment sales and staging; Covington & Burling, LLP and partner Gerard J. Waldron for legal advice; Rich Redmond, managing partner at Strativa Advisors; and Gary Krantz, CEO of Krantz Media Group.

GBS says its MaxxCasting SFN system expands the coverage area of a FM signal and allows for potential geographic targeting and fencing of text advertising and messaging, though the latter applications are not currently authorized by the commission. The synchronized transmitter infrastructure uses cellular network design broadcast, and SFN software tools that incorporate high-resolution terrain data, analysis of vehicular traffic and other parameters.

Send news for Who’s Buying What to radioworld@futurenet.com.

 

The post Bonneville to Deploy GBS SFN in San Francisco appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

What’s The Best Way Broadcast Media Can Protect Its Employees?

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 7 months ago

On Monday (10/21), popular Westwood One-syndicated talk host Dan Bongino, whose radio program also appears on FOX Nation, took to the airwaves and challenged WWO owner Cumulus Media‘s COVID-19 vaccination mandate. Although Bongino is vaccinated, he took a stand in solidarity of now-former colleagues who lost their jobs for sticking to their personal choice of remaining unvaccinated.

Then came an on-air declaration from a Jacksonville talk host that, rather than show proof of vaccination as a condition of employment, he and his producer would instead do a “weekly COVID-19 test” option live on his show.

What’s a radio or TV station owner to do to keep employees safe from COVID-19 and its Delta variant while balancing the need to have HR send out termination notices to unvaccinated employees? This encore InFOCUS Podcast, presented by dot.FM, may provide some valuable insight and guidance on what path a media company should take.

In this episode, originally distributed on July 29, Hall Estill labor and employment partner Keith Wilkes offers his take on workplace issues that could come to fruition as the vaccinated and unvaccinated congregate in one building. This includes enforcing anti-bullying policies.

“I would encourage station management and all employers to reinforce, or reintroduce, those workplace COVID safety policies and precautions that were implemented across the board last year and to seriously consider amending those policies to account for vaccinated and unvaccinated employees,” says Wilkes, who is based in Tulsa. “That’s not singling out the unvaccinated, without justification. It is in the interest in the health and welfare of all of those who are in the workplace and those frequenting businesses.”

When deciding what steps to take, “employees should also monitor and keep monitoring their local and regional communities,” Wilkes says.

Wilkes offers more in this 15-minute encore podcast, which includes references to the now-deceased talk show host Phil Valentine. It is accessible through our embedded player by clicking below.

 

Listen to “The InFOCUS Podcast: Keith Wilkes, Employment Attorney” on Spreaker.

Adam Jacobson

Flat Revenue, Lower Net Income: Rogers In Q3

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 7 months ago

TORONTO — One of North America’s biggest communications companies on Thursday released its third quarter financial results.

How did Rogers perform? Quarterly earnings were in line with the Zacks Consensus Estimate. But, its revenue fell short of Zacks’ expectations by a slim 1.04%.

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RBR-TVBR

Audacy, iHeart Affirm Q3 2021 Earnings Release Dates

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 7 months ago

Two of the nation’s largest audio media content and distribution companies have set the days on which they will release their Q3 fiscal report cards.

For iHeartMedia, it will come on a busy day that also sees Saga Communications, Gray Television and TEGNA holding earnings call. For Audacy, their earnings call will come on the second Tuesday of November.

iHeart will issue financial results for the quarter ending September 30 on Thursday, Nov. 4. The company’s CEO, Bob Pittman, and COO/CFO Rich Bressler will host a conference call at 4:30pm Eastern to review the results. A business outlook will also be provided.

For the former Entercom, the company led by CEO David Field will report its 2021 third quarter financial results before the market opens on Tuesday, November 9. The company will host a conference call at 10am Eastern to review the results and “recent progress against its strategic initiatives,” Audacy notes.

Audacy stock in recent weeks has been sputtering, and is at $3.52 in early after-hours trading on Thursday (10/21). It’s year-to-date low of $2.96 came on August 19, and since then Audacy’s high has been $3.92, achieved in early October. By comparison, AUD topped the $5 mark in late April and surpassed $6.25 per share in February.

For iHeart, shares have enjoyed a year-long growth spurt, reaching $27.93 in late June. On Thursday, IHRT closed at $22.10. IHRT is up from $13.28 at the start of 2021.

RBR-TVBR

Will The Media Deal Dollar Drought End In 2022?

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 7 months ago

Has COVID-19, and now the delta variant, crippled broadcast transaction values forever?  It’s a tough question asked to top media brokers by RBR+TVBR in our Fall 2021 Special Report.

For some, station valuations for radio were sliding before the coronavirus cratered the marketplace. For others, there’s green on the horizon for both radio and TV broadcasters. Will the green — specifically, greenbacks — come in 2022?

A Forecast 2022 panel session featuring Guggenheim Securities Senior Advisor Drew Marcus could offer some clarity on the subject. Marcus will moderate a panel of investment specialists who are poised to take a hard look at 2021 and what lies ahead in 2022 and beyond for broadcast investments. It’s a “fact-based, tire kicking” session you won’t want to miss.

What did some of the nation’s leading media brokers have to say?

“A better story needs to be told about radio,” said Lou McDermott of Kalil & Co. “The only story I can tell is what I’m seeing transactionally, and that is radio groups that are successful and recovering from the pandemic are continuing to annualize growth. They are looking at properties that make sense for them. Offers are being made. And we’re positive.
We see signs of life. We have activity, and that activity is growing.”

Dick Foreman, President of media brokerage and consultancy RAFAMEDIA, like McDermott, believes the television dealmaking landscape is full of buyers. The problem, like in the automotive industry, is simple. “There is no inventory,” Foreman says. “That’s it.
Period. And the prices being paid for television are eight to nine times trailing cash
flow. But you can’t find anything.”

Media broker Michael J. Bergner of Bergner & Co. sees the TV transactions landscape in a slightly different manner. “The traditional TV deal is dead,” he lamented when interviewed for RBR+TVBR’s Fall 2021 Special Report. “It’s just all about fill-ins. Everything is consolidated. If your livelihood is about being a TV station broker, you’re on thin ice.”

Secure your seat today at Forecast 2022, November 16 at the Harvard Club in New York. Space is limited. Don’t hesitate. CLICK HERE TO RSVP TODAY
RBR-TVBR

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