EBOOK

Right of the Dial

The Rise of Clear Channel and the Fall of Commercial Radio

Alec Foege
(0)
Pages
320
Year
2009
Language
English

About

In Right of the Dial, Alec Foege explores how the mammoth media conglomerate evolved from a local radio broadcasting operation, founded in 1972, into one of the biggest, most profitable, and most polarizing corporations in the country. During its heyday, critics accused Clear Channel, the fourth-largest media company in the United States and the nation's largest owner of radio stations, of ruining American pop culture and cited it as a symbol of the evils of media monopolization, while fans hailed it as a business dynamo, a beacon of unfettered capitalism. What's undeniable is that as the owner at one point of more than 1,200 radio stations, 130 major concert venues and promoters, 770,000 billboards, 41 television stations, and the largest sports management business in the country, Clear Channel dominated the entertainment world in ways that MTV and Disney could only dream of. But, in the fall of 2006, after years of public criticism and flattening stock prices, Goliath finally tumbled-Clear Channel Inc. sold off one-third of its radio holdings and all of its television concerns while transferring ownership to a consortium of private equity firms. The move signaled the end of an era in media consolidation, and in Right of the Dial, Foege takes an insightful look at the company's successes and abuses, showing the ways in which Clear Channel reshaped America's cultural and corporate landscapes along the way.

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Reviews

"Read this book and you will want to scream. Alec Foege tells a tale of rapacity and financial engineering that could drive one to socialism. Not really, but close. In the hands of the Mays family, Clear Channel Communications became America's radio behemoth. With its 2,000 radio stations, it devised ways to economize and centrally automate the music the stations played, the news it presented. For a time, it was good for investors, and for the Mays family. But as this book lucidly demonstrates, it was bad for citizens and bad for American culture."
Ken Auletta
"The story of Clear Channel's binge and purge says so much about media in our time. Alec Foege tells that complex story with characteristic insight and balance. He never settles for the easy take, only for the truth, which he illuminates with impressive clarity."
Anthony DeCurtis, Contributing Editor, Rolling Stone

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