Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Start Your Engines: AM Revitalization – FM Translator Window is About to Open

Womble Carlyle's Gregg Skall discusses the implications of the FM translator window opening for

Broadcast Ownership Report Changes Critical to You

Pillsbury attorney Lauren Lynch Flick explains the FCC's new broadcast ownership forms.
Gavel

Broadcast Station Acquisitions: MYTH No. 10: Under-Stationed Markets Are Attractive

Erwin Krasnow, Doug Ferber & Bishop Cheen de-bunk the myth that under-stationed markets are attractive.
Michael DeLier

A Good Debate Needs All of These

Michael DeLier says a good debate needs several elements.
Gavel

Broadcast Station Acquisitions: MYTH No. 9: Anyone Can Be a Turnaround Artist

Erwin Krasnow, Doug Ferber & Bishop Cheen debunk the myth that anyone can be a turnaround artist.
Gregg Skall

TV’s Future May Depend on ATSC 3.0 Transition

Womble Carlyle attorney Gregg Skall on benefits, conversion costs of ATSC 3.0.
Gregg Skall

ATSC 3.0 On the Doorstep

The implementation of an ATSC 3.0 standard brings challenges and opportunities, says Womble Carlyle attorney Gregg Skall.
Gavel

Broadcast Station Acquisitions: MYTH No. 8: Banking On a 100% Leveraged Purchase

Erwin Krasnow, Doug Ferber & Bishop Cheen discuss the myth about banking on a 100% leveraged purchase.
FCC

How to Lose Your Station’s FCC License

As is turns out, there are a number of ways that this can happen

Allocation Policies Have Hurt AM

Radioactive's CEO Randy Michaels says several allocation policies have hurt AM.

4 Types Of Leaders And How They Affect Bottom-Line Success

Randy H. Nelson coaches executives to become Qualified Entrepreneurs.
Gavel

Broadcast Station Acquisitions: MYTH No. 7: Real Estate: Gaining Lots of Value

Erwin Krasnow, Doug Ferber & Bishop Cheen discuss the myth that real estate gains you much deal value.
Michael DeLier

‘True, But Misleading’ Debate Answers

Michael DeLier of the DeLier Group critiques Saturday's night's Democratic debate.
Michael DeLier

Network Execs Can Take Chances Again

Michael DeLier says if TV network execs took chances, ratings would improve.