Tuesday, June 16, 2026

NPR / National Public Radio

Kid Causes Partial NPR Outage

A child caused a partial network outage for NPR.
Deal

A Pennsylvania Trio is Sold

Farm & Home Broadcasting sells 3 Pennsylvania stations & an FM translator.

Can You Avoid the Highway to Business Hell?

M&A specialist Rod Robertson says success isn’t something most new businesses experience.
Sold

Last Wilks Station Sold

The paperwork for the sale of Jeff Wilks last station is now at the commission.

Auction Spectrum Clearing Target Set

FCC sets 126 MHz as the clearing target for TV spectrum at auction.
Jim Meyer

Like Cable, SiriusXM Looks for the ‘Better Bundle’

SiriusXM's business model is a good one, Jim Meyer tells Wall Street.
Tim Westergren

What’s Pandora’s End Game?

With Tim Westergren back at the helm, Pandora negotiates with labels over its planned on-demand service.
FCC

How Being Off the Air Lost Hyde a License

Too many off-air stints meant this licensee lost its license.

ASCAP Tops $1 Billion in Revenue

ASCAP reported record-breaking royalty distributions in 2015.
TV Remote

Stronger TV Upfront Predicted

Television network and ad agency execs predict a stronger TV upfront for 2016-2017.
Comcast

Why Comcast Bought DreamWorks

Comcast said this week it will pay $41 a share in cash to purchase DreamWorks Animation.
Meredith

How Meredith Bucks Spot TV Ad Trend

Meredith Corp. did very well with political advertising early in the year.
Erwin Krasnow

Select a Broker Carefully

Erwin Krasnow explains the roles of brokers and buyers in a transaction.
Handshake

Two Noncoms Make a Deal

Georgia-based Toccoa Falls College is selling four stations and two FM translators. The stations are: WRAF and WTXR, Toccoa Falls, Georgia; WEPC, Belton, South Carolina and WPFJ, Franklin, North Carolina. {lock} Lakeland, Florida-based Radio Training Network is the buyer. Jim Campbell is president/CEO and holds 17% of the equity. The price is $2.1 million cash. The buyer agreed to make a $100,000 deposit which will be placed in escrow and applied to the total purchase price. All four stations are noncommercial and the buyer has sked the FCC to waive the main studio rule so it can operate them as a satellite of WLFJ-FM, Greenville, South Carolina. The two FM translators are licensed to Franklin, N.C. and Lilburn, Georgia. WRAF is a Class C1 FM with an ERP of 100,000 watts @ 564’ HAAT; it operates on 90.9 MHz. WTXR is off the air; it has an ERP of 400 watts @ 138’ HAAT; it operates on 89.7 MHz. WEPC is a Class C2 FM with an ERP of 50,000 watts @ 299’ HAAT; it operates on 88.5 MHz. WPFJ is a Class B AM with 5,000 watts day/13 watts night; it operates on 1480 kHz from a single tower.

Farmers Nearly Equally Loyal to AM, FM Bands

Farmers and others associated with the agriculture industry overwhelmingly listen to AM/FM the most for their news.