Share Ideas Working Now with RBR, MBR and SMARTMEDIA, a partnership in radio today.
Ideas Working Now Membership
Welcome to RBR's Daily Epaper
Volume 24, Issue 169, Jim Carnegie, Editor & Publisher
Wednesday Morning August 29th, 2007

Radio News ®

Clear Channel sues over disintegrating deal
Clear Channel has now sued in a Texas state court to try to hold American Securities Capital Partners (ASCP) to its 452.1 million bucks deal to buy 187 radio stations. ASCP has fired back with its own lawsuit filed in a New York state court, so look for lots of legal wrangling ahead. The San Antonio-Express News reports that Jeff Warshaw is also named as a defendant in the Clear Channel lawsuit for trying to negotiate the price down by 102 million. As you would expect, Warshaw isn’t commenting, except to confirm to RBR that “I’m still a consultant to American Securities Capital Partners.” RBR first reported in July that Warshaw, who already heads Connoisseur Media, would step in after ASCP parted ways with Dean Goodman and changed the name of the acquiring company from GoodRadio.TV to Frequency License LLC. ASCP has never formally designated Warshaw as the President or CEO of its radio-company-to-be and now, of course, the legal action calls into question whether ASCP will actually become a radio owner.

RBR observation: With this deal now in doubt, the first and third largest deals of the Clear Channel’s divestiture of 488 smaller market stations are both on the fence. And we would note that #2, the 139 million bucks sale of 52 stations to GAP Broadcasting, has not yet gotten to the closing table. ASCP put 20,344,500 in escrow for its pending purchase, so look for Clear Channel to battle in court for that cash if it can’t come to terms with the would be buyer.
Mark and Randall Mays could have avoided all of this divestiture drama, of course, if they had accepted a preemptive bid from former Clear Channel Radio CEO Randy Michaels for the entire block of stations. You may have read elsewhere that he and Oak Hill Capital Partners offered around 800 million. We have it on good authority, though, that the actual bid was over 900 million, but that the Mayses held out for 1.1 billion. When all is said and done, will Clear Channel now even come close to that mark?

Washington Post Radio to become talker “3WT”
As we reported Monday, Bonneville has now confirmed it will dissolve the year and a half partnership with The Washington Post, which has operated “Washington Post Radio WTWP.” The trio of stations will be rechristened 3WT, WWWT, on Sept. 20. Ratings culled from the Washington Post Radio signals of 1500 AM, Warrenton, VA's 107.7 FM, and Frederick, MD's 820 AM never made expectations. The new slogan will be "Left, Right, and Whatever We Want." David Burd and Jessica Doyle will continue to do their local morning show. Tony Kornheiser is expected to return to do late mornings. Local car expert Pat Goss will be joined by nationally syndicated personalities like Neal Boortz, Bill O'Reilly, Phil Hendrie, Glenn Beck and Stephanie Miller. Play-by-play sports will also be part of the station's programming.
Washington Post Radio, O&O’d by Bonneville International, was a collaborative effort which launched in March 2006 and featured station hosts interviewing editors, reporters and columnists at The Post. Said Bonneville D.C. SVP Joel Oxley: "While many advertisers were satisfied with the results the station generated, we just did not garner the Arbitron ratings we had hoped for. When we launched the 'Tony Kornheiser Show,' it was met with such success that we realized we needed to take the station in the direction of personality-driven talk with more opinion and less hard news. Since this did not meet the original vision of Washington Post Radio, The Post and Bonneville mutually agreed to end the broadcast alliance. We'll continue to work together as media professionals as we always have. The Washington Post has a huge array of talented people that we've featured for years on our radio stations in many capacities, and we will continue to do so."

RBR observation: There are a tremendous number of News/Talk and information outlets in the DC market. Just referring to the English-speaking stations, DC has three NPR outlets, C-SPAN Radio, WTOP-FM, WJFK-FM and Washington Post Radio on FM. On AM, the market has WTNT, WMAL, WDMV, WMET, the two Washington Post AMs and WFED. It’s very competitive and it will be interesting to see if 3WT fares any better than WaPo Radio.

Clean sweep in Erie
Connoisseur Media CEO Jeff Warshaw may not have much to say about his legal wrangling with Clear Channel, but he is happy to talk about his company’s latest rating in Erie, PA. Having just purchased the cluster last year, the Spring Arbitron book (Erie is a 2 book per year market) has Connoisseur’s FMs ranked #1, #2, #3 and #4 for 12+, 18-34 and 25-54. Warshaw said Arbitron has verified that this is the first such sweep in any market. WXBB “Bob 94.7” jumped to the front of the pack 12+ with its Adult Hits format that was launched in January, displacing CHR sister WRTS, which held onto #2. Third place went to Rock WRKT and Connoisseur’s Country WTWF was tied for 4th place with Citadel’s AC WXKC.



Hearst-Argyle to consider buyout offer

Hearst-Argyle Television’s board of directors has named two independent directors to a special committee to consider an offer by Hearst Corporation to buy out Hearst-Argyle’s public shareholders for 600 million bucks, or 23.50 per share. Hearst-Argyle’s stock price has shot up above that in anticipation of a higher bid. Serving on the special committee are David Pulver, who has been a director of Hearst-Argyle Television and a predecessor company, Argyle Television, since 1994, and who is President of Cornerstone Capital, a private investment firm; and Caroline L. Williams, a director of Hearst-Argyle Television and of Argyle Television, since 1994, and who is Director of Shareholder Activities for The Nathan Cummings Foundation, for which she previously served as Chief Financial and Investment Officer. The formal announcement was careful to note that the Hearst Corporation offer was not made pursuant to any agreement with Hearst-Argyle. “If Hearst Corporation does commence a tender offer, then within 10 business days following such commencement, Hearst-Argyle Television will advise stockholders of its position regarding the offer,” the statement said.

RBR observation: How are WBAL-AM and WIYY-FM Baltimore affected by the potential buyout of Hearst-Argyle’s public shareholders? Not at all, really. The AM-FM combo has long been owned by Hearst Corporation and they were the only radio properties that the company did not sell off. They are still owned by Hearst Corporation, not Hearst-Argyle, although they have been managed by Hearst-Argyle under an LMA since Hearst Corporation merged its TV group with Argyle Television in 1997.

Will Internet kill the radio star?
Unfortunately, for traditional radio operators, someone is touching that dial. "Internet radio, satellite radio, podcasting, high-definition radio and mobile audio services are revolutionizing a radio industry that had remained virtually unchanged for a century," said Ben Macklin, eMarketer senior analyst and author of the new report, Radio Trends: On Air and Online. "Traditional radio is rapidly being subsumed into a new, broader sector called 'audio.'" One key indicator of the change is advertising. "Few factors are more important in analyzing media trends than looking at where the ad dollars are going—or not going," Macklin said. By 2008, online advertising spending in the US is projected to surpass radio advertising spending for the first time. eMarketer estimates that US online ad spending will reach 21.7 billion this year, while radio spending will grow only slightly to 20.4 billion. Of course, the radio audience is still huge. According to Bridge Ratings, terrestrial radio commands a weekly cumulative audience of nearly 283 million Americans. Nevertheless, data from a number of researchers indicates that traditional radio is losing its significance in people's lives. US adults are spending more time each day on the Internet and watching TV than listening to the radio.
Figures from Arbitron and Edison Media Research also show that Americans regard radio as less important in their lives than TV or the Internet. "It is for this very reason that the radio industry must quickly and comprehensively come to terms with how to adapt to this changing environment," Macklin said. Macklin also has advice for advertisers. "There are in fact many synergies between radio and the Internet, and for the most part they complement rather than compete with each other," he said. "Marketers should not abandon radio in favor of the Web — they should combine both mediums to take advantage of the unique attributes of both."

RBR observation: All media — new and traditional — need to realize multimedia pitches are the way of the future. Don’t just sell your medium and eschew the benefits of other media. Combined, multimedia campaigns are the most effective. Learn how to become a part of them and then go to the agency.


No Appointment Necessary.
Advertisement

BE is always there for you
That's why, at the NAB, Broadcast Electronics will be focusing on stations like yours; stations in mid- and small-markets, bringing fresh, profit-making ideas to the show along with our advanced technologies. See us in booth 417.
Learn more.


Ad Business Report TM

AT&T's 2 billion dollar media account in review
AT&T has put its 2.3 billion buying and planning account in review. In a statement, AT&T said it will be issuing RFPs to incumbent agencies, which include OMD, Mediaedge:cia and GSD&M. It is expected to be completed at year's end. "This move will consolidate all of AT&T's media planning and buying at one agency and is part of the company's ongoing efforts to maximize efficiencies created, in part, by AT&T's acquisition of BellSouth at the end of last year," AT&T said in a statement. "AT&T is pleased with the work of all of its agencies to date." We can only assume the spending will increase dramatically, with the full acquisition Cingular Wireless. Cingular, previously a joint property of AT&T and BellSouth, now belongs exclusively to AT&T. Cingular spent 1.3 billion in 2005 and 1 billion through September 2006, per Nielsen Monitor-Plus. BellSouth spent 130 million in 2005 and 110 million through September 2006. The overall budget for AT&T, BellSouth and Cingular Wireless was reportedly 3.35 billion in 2006.


Media Business Report TM

Scripps puts Albuquerque paper on the auction block
Albuquerque, NM is among the shrinking number of cities that still has two daily newspapers – but perhaps not for long. E.W. Scripps Company says it is seeking a buyer for the Albuquerque Tribune, and if no buyer is found, it will shut down the paper. The investment bankers at Broadwater & Associates have been retained to shop the afternoon daily, which publishes Monday through Saturday. “"The Albuquerque Tribune, with its outstanding reputation for journalistic excellence, has been enlightening readers in New Mexico for more than 80 years. Unfortunately, readers in Albuquerque, as in nearly all cities across America, are choosing other media alternatives to afternoon newspapers," said Rich Boehne, Executive VP and COO for Scripps, who flew to New Mexico to met with Tribune staff members.
As it stands, the Tribune is in the nation’s longest-running joint operating agreement, dating back to 1933, with the morning Albuquerque Journal, but that JOA will be terminated with the sale. The Tribune has a daily paid circulation of about 11,000 copies compared with The Journal's paid circulation of 106,000 daily and 145,000 Sunday. Paid circulation of the afternoon Tribune, which stood at 42,000 in 1988, has been in persistent decline for more than two decades, Scripps said.


Media Markets & Money TM

CCU finds a buyer in the Northwest
Another of the small markets being divested by Clear Channel Radio has a buyer. Kenneth Dennis’ Bicoastal Media LLC will buy KELA-AM & KMNT-FM in Centralia, WA, which is not an Arbitron rated market, in the latest deal brokered by Kalil & Co. It is an easy fit for Bicoastal, which owns or operates 33 stations in Oregon, Washington and California.

Miller expands in unrated SC
WQMC-AM Sumter is going commercial. Morris College has decided to spin the station to for-profit Miller Communications Inc., headed by Harold T. Miller and including among the principals Theresa Miller, William Duncan and Frank Avent. The price works out to 110K, but the terms guarantee Morris College will continue to have a relationship with the station. The compensation package includes a 5K escrow deposit, 45K cash at closing, a 10K lease agreement, and - here's the ongoing part - 50K worth of advertising for the College capped at 3K per month until that total is reached. Miller owns several other stations in the area, including WDXY-AM/WICI-FM Sumter, WWKT-FM Kingstree and WIBZ-FM Wedgefield.

Connoisseur trades up in Wichita
“Bob-FM” (KIBB) is getting a brother in Wichita. Connoisseur Media announced a deal to swap KTCM-FM Kingman, KS, located one county southwest of Wichita, and an unspecified amount of cash, for KGGG-FM. The latter is currently located in Hutchinson, KS, one county northwest off Wichita, but has a CP to relocate to Haven, KS, which will put it firmly in the Wichita market. The other party in this deal is Ad Astra Per Aspera Broadcasting, headed by Cliff Shank. “It is a classic win-win opportunity for Connoisseur Media and Ad Astra Per Aspera Broadcasting. Connoisseur Media has a great track record in the rated markets, and our expertise is in small town, small market radio,” said Shank.


Washington Media Business Report TM
WDCG pedals to license renewal
Complaints by North Carolina bicycle enthusiasts that the “Bob and Madison Show” on WDCG-FM Raleigh-Durham put them in danger have failed to convince the FCC to reject its license renewal. Seven people had filed complaints, six of them seeking to deny the license renewal, because the morning show hosts allegedly urged motorists to run bikes off the road or throw bottles at them. Owner Clear Channel was not oblivious to the public outcry, but rather suspended the duo for a time and took actions to promote bike safety, including more than 1,200 PSAs run on its cluster of stations in the market. In his letter granting the license renewal, FCC Peter Doyle had this to say: “The Commission's role in overseeing program content is very limited. The First Amendment and section 326 of the Act prohibit the Commission from censoring program material and from interfering with broadcasters' freedom of expression. There is no statutory provision or Commission rule that directly prohibits the complained-of broadcasts. Consequently, the only question before us is whether the broadcasts raise a substantial question about the licensee’s basic qualifications.” He then noted that no court had found that the broadcasts met the FCC’s “clear and present danger” test, and indeed that the objectors had not indicated that there had been any civil or criminal court action over the broadcasts that occurred on September 22 and 23, 2003. Case dismissed.



Internet Media Business Report TM
CBS and Washington Post team up online
CBSNews.com and washingtonpost.com announced a content-sharing partnership for coverage of the 2008 Presidential campaigns. The collaboration is limited to their respective Internet sites, but the Washington Post site will get video from CBS News correspondents. “Our goal is to be the premier political information destination and to bring the best of the web to our readers, including the likes of Bob Schieffer, Jeff Greenfield and others,” said Michael Sims, Vice President, Editorial, CBSNews.com. According to Jim Brady, Executive Editor of washingtonpost.com, “The history and strength of both organizations’ political reporting offers the unique opportunity for the Washington Post’s renowned reporters and columnists to collaborate with colleagues from CBS News to further enhance the unparalleled coverage that our audiences expect.”
Under the terms of the agreement, CBSNews.com and washingtonpost.com will share political content throughout the duration of the 2008 Presidential campaign. washingtonpost.com will feature video coverage from CBS News correspondents, producers and off-air reporters while news, analysis and commentary from the Washington Post’s political reporters and columnists will appear on CBSNews.com. Each site will promote the partnership by linking to the other’s political coverage. The partnership will provide readers the opportunity to engage with each news organization’s reporters and correspondents, who will jointly participate in live chats and other online activities.


Ratings & Research

Baby Boomers and Echo Boomers predict a cashless society
According to new data released by Visa USA, an overwhelming majority of both Baby Boomers (79%) and Echo Boomers (74%) believe that our society will one day operate without cash and checks and will conduct all payment transactions electronically. Visa estimates by the year 2015, Echo Boomers and Baby Boomers will account for more than 50% of total consumer spending, 2.45 trillion and 4.6 trillion respectively. Currently, industry estimates show that Echo Boomers are responsible for 0.4 trillion in annual spending compared to 3.8 trillion by Baby Boomers. Findings reveal that younger consumers between the ages of 18-28 are defying conventional wisdom when it comes to stereotypes often associated with their generation.
According to the study, Echo Boomers are demonstrating a more practical and mature approach to spending beyond their years, they view spending as a way to give back to others, they prefer retail categories that help relieve feeling time-stretched and look to older generations for buying cues. Nearly half of Echo Boomers (48%) describe themselves as savers. Even at their young age, more than 70% of Echo Boomers are concerned about having enough money for retirement, a degree of concern similar to the about-to-retire Baby Boomers (78%). 88% of Echo Boomers like to buy things for others more often than buying things just for themselves. Echo Boomers cited dining out at restaurants as their second largest expense (45%), after housing costs (69%) in a given month. Echo Boomers said their spouses (70%), children (63%) and parents (48%) had the most influence on their spending. 37% of Echo Boomers believe older generations have an influence on their spending behavior.


Transactions

17,500,348 KAYU-TV Spokane WA (Fox/28); KFFX-TV Yakima-Pasco-Richland-Kennewick WA (Pendleton OR, Fox/11); and KMVU-TV Medford-Klamath Falls OR (Medford OR, Fox/26). 66.02417% of Mountain Licenses/Broadcasting Licenses LP, subsidiaries of Northwest Broadcasting Inc. from Alta Subordinated Debt Partners III LP et al to Brian W. Brady. 10,500,348 in cash, 7M in subordinated notes. [File date 8/6/07.]

1.075M WRSX-FM Salisbury-Ocean City MD (Ocean City MD) from Atlantic Radio Broadcasting LLC (Ronald Gillenardo) to WYPR License Holding LLC, a subsidiary of Your Public Radio Corporation (Anthony S. Brandon). 50K escrow, balance in cash at closing. Buyer is noncommercial. [File date 8/3/07.]

450K KOLE-AM Beaumont-Port Arthur TX (Port Arthur TX) from Citygate Media Inc. (Ralph H. McBride) to Birach Broadcasting Corp. (Sima Birach). 30K escrow, balance in cash at closing. [File date 8/6/07.]


Stock Talk
Stocks take a fall
A drop in The Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index sent stock prices lower on Tuesday. The Dow Industrials fell 280 point, or 2.1%, to 13,042.
Virtually all radio stocks were lower. The Radio Index dropped 3.161, or 2.5%, to 123.150. Saga had the worst day, falling 5.3%. Lincoln Financial was down 4.9% and Radio One Class D dropped 4.3%.


Radio Stocks

Here's how stocks fared on Tuesday

Company Symbol Close Change Company Symbol Close Change

Arbitron

ARB

48.86

-1.30

Google

GOOG

506.40

-6.86

Beasley

BBGI

7.16

-0.03

Hearst-Argyle

HTV

25.41

0.05

CBS CI. B CBS

30.11

-1.14

Journal Comm.

JRN

10.30

-0.03

CBS CI. A CBSa

30.14

-1.05

Lincoln Natl.

LNC

59.23

-3.02

Citadel CDL
4.13 -0.08

Radio One, Cl. A

ROIA

3.61

-0.11

Clear Channel

CCU

35.84

-0.47

Radio One, Cl. D

ROIAK

3.60

-0.16

Cox Radio

CXR

13.16

-0.44

Regent

RGCI

2.70

-0.10

Cumulus

CMLS

10.29

10.04

Saga Commun.

SGA

7.03

-0.39

Debut Bcg.

DBTB

1.25

0.00

Salem Comm.

SALM

10.39

-0.20

Disney

DIS

33.20

-0.64

Sirius Sat. Radio

SIRI

2.79

0.00

Emmis

EMMS

6.09

-0.23

Spanish Bcg.

SBSA

2.81

-0.05

Entercom

ETM

20.44

-0.41

SWMX

SMWX

0.08

0.00

Entravision

EVC

8.82

-0.36

Westwood One

WON

2.83

-0.09

Fisher

FSCI

47.69

-0.55

XM Sat. Radio

XMSR

11.60

0.11


Bounceback

Send Us Your OpinionsWe want to
hear from you.

This is your column, so send your comments and
a photo to [email protected]


Below the Fold

Ad Business Report
AT&T's 2 billion dollar
Media account has put its 2.3B account in review and look for spending increases…

Media Markets & Money
CCU finds a buyer
In the Northwest another of the small markets being divested…

Washington Media Business Report
WDCG pedals to license renewal
Complaints by NC bicycle enthusiasts
that “Bob and Madison Show” put them
in danger have failed…

Ratings & Research
Baby Boomers and Echo Boomers
Visa is predicting a cashless and if you
are into future Stats this one is worth a look…




Stations for Sale

Market your Stations For Sale
in our daily epapers.

Contact
June Barnes
[email protected]


Radio Media Moves

Arbitron board addition
Motorola Executive VP David Devonshire has been elected to the board of directors at Arbitron, bringing the board membership to eight. Devonshire, who was previously DFO of Motorola, will serve on the Audit and Technology Strategy committees of the Arbitron board.



More News Headlines


KRDE brings NAU Football to Phoenix
KRDE 94.1 Phoenix and Northern Arizona have inked a contract which makes KRDE the exclusive outlet for NAU football and basketball for the 2007 season. Like other news and sports events, NAU has joined the move to FM in the Phoenix metro area. Veteran Mitch Strohman will be the voice for NAU again in the 2007. NAU has some 15,000 students at its Flagstaff campus and at its distance learning centers throughout Arizona.

CNN.com inks ad deal with Google
CNN.com and Google announced an agreement that enlists Google's AdSense ad program to deliver site targeted advertising to CNN.com. AdSense places contextually relevant ads alongside CNN.com content, allowing both small and large advertisers to target CNN.com specifically and connect with high quality content and traffic. Under the terms of the deal, Google will serve as the exclusive provider of auction-based text ads throughout CNN.com.

Community Broadcasters puts on benefit concert for vets
Community Broadcasters, with seven radio stations in the Watertown, NY and St. Lawrence Valley markets, announced that “Operation Rock,” a benefit concert held 8/25, for members of the Fort Drum 10th Mountain Division returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, was a huge success. The concert featured national recording artists Drowning Pool and Candlebox, along with local bands like Caustic and Torment the Vein, and was sponsored by Community Broadcasters’ radio stations Rock 100.7 WOTT-FM and The Border, which includes stations 106.7 WBDI-FM and 92.7 WBDB-FM. Part of the proceeds of the concert will be donated to the “Climb to Glory” fund, which supports the soldiers of the Fort Drum and the 10th Mountain Division, and the soldiers’ families. With 2,800 seats sold, Operation Rock will provide significant financial support to veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts. Additionally, Drowning Pool donated a dollar per ticket to The United Service Organization and the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America in an effort to raise awareness for House Resolution 1354, a health care bill for veterans pending in the House of Representatives.





RBR Radar 2007
Radio News you won't read any where else. RBR--First, Accurate, and Independently Owned.

Changes working at CBS Radio
Despite a slight year-over-year decline in ratings, Wachovia analyst Marci Ryvicker notes that CBS Radio was up in the Spring Arbitron ratings from the previous book, so the changes being made by new CEO Dan Mason appear to be working. She also says Emmis may finally have hit bottom, although she’s not ready to make that a firm call. So, who does the analyst really like? Entercom has done well ratings-wise with its recent acquisitions, although the remainder of its station portfolio is still showing weakness in her view. Ryvicker expects ratings growth to return and Entercom gets her only “outperform” stock rating among the pure-play radio companies. She also believes Spanish-specialist Entravision is a good long-term investment.

RBR note: For a complete look at this analysis see RBR.
08/28/07 RBR #168

In praise of Houston PPM Coverage last week
Thanks for spending the time this week getting to understand some of these PPM issues. I think I said before, I know we as an industry need electronic measurement, but it has to be right. I am afraid Arbitron has rushed into something that they are ill prepared for. This whole "seasonal" thing makes me nuts.....with all of the testing they've done didn't they see that they would have these problems with panel management?... Bob Neil, Cox Radio CEO.

RBR note: To read Neil’s complete comments see this issue of RBR.
08/27/07 RBR #167

Bonneville-Washington Post Radio in
DC may be gone by Labor Day
That is what multiple DC area media outlets are forecasting. The year-and-a-half all-news partnership with the paper may be gone, or at least changed to a hybrid after Labor Day, when syndicated programming is added to WTWP-FM-AM DC. RBR already knows TRN’s Phil Hendrie is coming on board, but it has been reported that Bonneville will continue a non-Post radio talker on the station as soon as 9/4, with nationally syndicated personalities

RBR observation: We still think Spanish language is the way to go. WTWP-FM’s signal covers Northern Virginia suburbs south of the beltway very well—an area rich with Spanish-speaking immigrants, and an area not well covered by the only Spanish language FM in the region—CBS Radio’s WLZL-FM Annapolis.
08/27/07 RBR #167

Nielsen ends separate Spanish ratings
The major Spanish TV networks transitioned to using the same National People Meter (NPM) panel as their English brethren as much as two years ago – and some, we might add, have been posting strong ratings – so the shutdown of the National Hispanic People Meter (NHPM), effective Monday 8/27, is pretty much a non-event. With US Hispanics now 14% of the entire population, some 38.9 million people, Nielsen says the sub-sample of Hispanics within its NPM panel is more representative than the separate Hispanic panel of only 1,000 households nationwide. It also notes that ad spending on Spanish-language TV and cable networks has grown from an estimated 1.8 billion in 2001 to more than 3.05 billion last year.

TVBR observation: If you follow the weekly Nielsen ratings in TVBR, you know that Univision-TeleFutura, Telemundo and Azteca America have all made the transition to the NPM panel alongside ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox, CW, Ion and MyNetworkTV. In fact, the biggest of the Spanish nets, Univision, sometimes tops one or more of the Big 4 in some of the key demos.
08/28/07 TVBR #168


Visit MediaHeadHunters.com

Sales Associate
A fast growing network radio company seeks a Sales Assistant for its Chicago office. The ability to multi-task and prioritize are paramount in this position, as is the willingness and desire to learn in a fast paced environment. Please send resumes with cover letter to: [email protected]
See Radio Careers

Hard finding that key person
to fill the important position at your organization? Media HeadHunters is the place that key media firms use to get results. See Media HeadHunters and get results with service.

Find Your Radio Career

Post Your Companies Job Openings


Other Links

Help Desk

__EMAIL__ :
Having problems with our epapers?
Please send Questions/Concerns to:
[email protected]

If you wish to remove your name completely from our database use this link __UNSUB__

RBR Epaper -- 108 annual
or just 9 a month

©2007 Radio Business Report, Inc. All rights reserved.
Radio Business Report -- 2050 Old Bridge Road, Suite B-01, Lake Ridge, VA 22192 -- Phone: 703-492-8191