Showing posts with label KFUO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label KFUO. Show all posts
Friday, October 9, 2009
More on KFUO ...
After talking with a herd of Lutherans, I'm discovering a great deal of unhappiness with the pending sale within Church membership.
Most of those with whom I spoke think that there is little to no chance that Gateway will make it through the full term of the sale. Here's a look at their financials from 2007. There seems to be no way that they can parlay listener contributions and the sale of tickets to concerts into a balloon payment totalling almost $18million.
And may I remind the LCMS that even though Kermit Brashear, their attorney, is providing his legal services at no charge, the client who pays his lawyer nothing gets advice that's worth exactly that. What an arrogant, self-important dick this guy is!
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Wednesday, October 7, 2009
FCC says this and that ...
And I've been examining the FCC database for the last few hours. This KFUO thing is important to me.
Matthew Bross, of Four Him Enterprises, LLC, 4600 Executive Centre Parkwy, Suite A, St. Peters MO, seems to own the two stations, KPVR and KHZR, used currently by Gateway. His phone number is 636-928-5400. If you call him or email him, be polite and considerate.
The radio company was incorporated in 2000 and was based then in Foristell, Missouri, and transferred the stations to Gateway for local management.
He's a True Believer, but that's not withstanding, probably this is the guy that we should be talking to about saving KFUO-FM.
Matthew Bross, of Four Him Enterprises, LLC, 4600 Executive Centre Parkwy, Suite A, St. Peters MO, seems to own the two stations, KPVR and KHZR, used currently by Gateway. His phone number is 636-928-5400. If you call him or email him, be polite and considerate.
The radio company was incorporated in 2000 and was based then in Foristell, Missouri, and transferred the stations to Gateway for local management.
He's a True Believer, but that's not withstanding, probably this is the guy that we should be talking to about saving KFUO-FM.
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
More on the sale of KFUO ...
What's wrong with the potential sale of KFUO? Quite a lot, it seems.
The attorney who handled the sale refused to deal with any other potential buyers and has steadfastly refused to make public the financials.
The LCMS intends to "hold the paper" on the sale, lending the purchasers almost the full purchase price of $18million, with a balloon payment due at the end of a ten-year term. Since the potential purchasers currently operate their JoyFM stations on an LMA (the frequencies are actually owned by a third party) who's to say that a few years down the road, with a recovering economy and revived station prices, the actual owner won't sell the station for a massive profit, killing off the newly-empowered JoyFM and giving the market yet one more badly operated corporate station?
Which, of course, is his absolute right and privilege.
There are several "administrative issues" within the day-to-day operation of KFUO that are questionable. More on these as stumbling blocks later.
This sale must be stopped or at least placed on hold until all issues can be resolved.
How to go about it:
If you are a listener to KFUO, or a sponsor or a contributor, you have standing before the Federal Communications Commission and may file as an interested party a Petition To Deny the transfer of the license. You may also file comments that outline or define relevant issues regarding the transfer. The information on how to do this and what form the Petition and comments should take is readily available at www.fcc.gov.
And, yes, there is a precedent for this. In the mid-to-late 1970's, RKO General, one of the most respected and successful broadcast groups in the United States attemptd to purchase Classical Music formatted WGMS in Washington DC. Their plan was to turn it into one of their highly rated FM Top 40 stations.
Enraged citizenry stood up to RKO's financial and legal might and quashed the deal, with the full backing of the FCC. Granted, Classical Music listeners in Washington DC were likely to have had inside-the Beltway clout that we who listen to KFUO don't have here. But the position is the same. And it clearly shows that the FCC will get involved in a bad sale when the programming is unique and desired by the market.
For 61 years, under the sole ownership of the Lutheran Church, KFUO has thoroughly weaved itself into the cultural and civic fabric of the St. Louis region. I have nothing against Christian radio. I'm a Christian myself. But destroying what KFUO has provided for their listeners, for all those years, is unconscionable.
There is at least one other group that would make an offer if allowed. That group intends to retain the Classical format and they must be given a chance to do so.
Discuss on the STL Media Message Board. (Registration required)
The attorney who handled the sale refused to deal with any other potential buyers and has steadfastly refused to make public the financials.
The LCMS intends to "hold the paper" on the sale, lending the purchasers almost the full purchase price of $18million, with a balloon payment due at the end of a ten-year term. Since the potential purchasers currently operate their JoyFM stations on an LMA (the frequencies are actually owned by a third party) who's to say that a few years down the road, with a recovering economy and revived station prices, the actual owner won't sell the station for a massive profit, killing off the newly-empowered JoyFM and giving the market yet one more badly operated corporate station?
Which, of course, is his absolute right and privilege.
There are several "administrative issues" within the day-to-day operation of KFUO that are questionable. More on these as stumbling blocks later.
This sale must be stopped or at least placed on hold until all issues can be resolved.
How to go about it:
If you are a listener to KFUO, or a sponsor or a contributor, you have standing before the Federal Communications Commission and may file as an interested party a Petition To Deny the transfer of the license. You may also file comments that outline or define relevant issues regarding the transfer. The information on how to do this and what form the Petition and comments should take is readily available at www.fcc.gov.
And, yes, there is a precedent for this. In the mid-to-late 1970's, RKO General, one of the most respected and successful broadcast groups in the United States attemptd to purchase Classical Music formatted WGMS in Washington DC. Their plan was to turn it into one of their highly rated FM Top 40 stations.
Enraged citizenry stood up to RKO's financial and legal might and quashed the deal, with the full backing of the FCC. Granted, Classical Music listeners in Washington DC were likely to have had inside-the Beltway clout that we who listen to KFUO don't have here. But the position is the same. And it clearly shows that the FCC will get involved in a bad sale when the programming is unique and desired by the market.
For 61 years, under the sole ownership of the Lutheran Church, KFUO has thoroughly weaved itself into the cultural and civic fabric of the St. Louis region. I have nothing against Christian radio. I'm a Christian myself. But destroying what KFUO has provided for their listeners, for all those years, is unconscionable.
There is at least one other group that would make an offer if allowed. That group intends to retain the Classical format and they must be given a chance to do so.
Discuss on the STL Media Message Board. (Registration required)
Bad day for Beethoven ...
The KFUO sale is apparently complete, transferring the Classical Music station to JoyFM, who will turn it into a religious facility. More later.
Discuss on the STL Media Message Board. (Registration required)
Thursday, August 27, 2009
If you like the Classics, you're gonna hate this ...
From STLToday.com:
As early as tomorrow, KFUO, 99.1 on your FM dial ("Classic 99"), could be sold. The prospective buyer is Gateway Creative Broadcasting Inc., a not-for-profit corporation that broadcasts Christian contemporary music from Des Peres as "JOY FM" on two small FM transmitters on the distant fringes of the metro area.
Throughout much of the St. Louis area, JOY FM's two signals barely can be heard. KFUO, on the other hand, has a "big stick," a 100,000-watt transmitter and a 1,027-foot tower. To pay for the reported $18 million deal, JOY FM might have to ditch its commercial-free, listener-supported business model.
I know all the reasons for and against this deal, and I understand why the LCMS needs to sell. If my company was running a $5million annual deficit I'd be posting everything I had on CraigsList.
But there's still something troubling about this deal. Maybe witnessing the passing of this station, which I truly enjoy, reminds me that my Father's favorite radio station, WFLN-FM/Philadelphia, was transferred to the University of Pennsylvania and dropped its classical format on the day he died in 1997.
Final words from STLToday:
In the last two years, area music lovers have raised $800,000 to support KFUO and have offered $8 million for it. In return, they've been offered JOY FM's two weak signals and a chance to piggyback a high-definition signal on KFUO's tower. But if you have to buy an HD radio receiver, you might as well buy a satellite radio and get three classical stations.
We take no position on church finances or its mission, or even on musical tastes. We only would note that when it comes to stirring souls, there's nothing on the Christian contemporary playlist that can match Beethoven's 7th.
Discuss on the STLMedia Message Board. (Registration required)
As early as tomorrow, KFUO, 99.1 on your FM dial ("Classic 99"), could be sold. The prospective buyer is Gateway Creative Broadcasting Inc., a not-for-profit corporation that broadcasts Christian contemporary music from Des Peres as "JOY FM" on two small FM transmitters on the distant fringes of the metro area.
Throughout much of the St. Louis area, JOY FM's two signals barely can be heard. KFUO, on the other hand, has a "big stick," a 100,000-watt transmitter and a 1,027-foot tower. To pay for the reported $18 million deal, JOY FM might have to ditch its commercial-free, listener-supported business model.
I know all the reasons for and against this deal, and I understand why the LCMS needs to sell. If my company was running a $5million annual deficit I'd be posting everything I had on CraigsList.
But there's still something troubling about this deal. Maybe witnessing the passing of this station, which I truly enjoy, reminds me that my Father's favorite radio station, WFLN-FM/Philadelphia, was transferred to the University of Pennsylvania and dropped its classical format on the day he died in 1997.
Final words from STLToday:
In the last two years, area music lovers have raised $800,000 to support KFUO and have offered $8 million for it. In return, they've been offered JOY FM's two weak signals and a chance to piggyback a high-definition signal on KFUO's tower. But if you have to buy an HD radio receiver, you might as well buy a satellite radio and get three classical stations.
We take no position on church finances or its mission, or even on musical tastes. We only would note that when it comes to stirring souls, there's nothing on the Christian contemporary playlist that can match Beethoven's 7th.
Discuss on the STLMedia Message Board. (Registration required)
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