FTVLive

View Original

Expect Job Losses with Lin/Media General Merger

While LIN and Media General were hosting about their big merger on Friday, they did not take about what everyone expect is coming.

Job losses. 

“It certainly wouldn't surprise me to see job losses and other ‘efficiencies’ from this merger,” former news director Steve Kraycik, who's now Director of Student Television at Penn State University and a talent agent with MediaStars, told TheWrap. “It's happened after other deals and I think there's a good chance it will here too.”

The problem is in cities where both companies already operate a local station, such as in Mobile, there will almost certainly be job cuts once the merger is approved.

“From the corporate perspective, many times it makes sense — consolidate, save money and increase the profit margin for shareholders,” Kraycik said.

LIN currently operates 43 small and medium market stations, including CBS affiliate KRQE in Albuquerque, NBC affiliate KXAN in Austin and Fox affiliate WALA in Mobile, Alabama. Media General has 31 stations including MyNetworkTV affiliate KRON in San Francisco, NBC affiliate WFLA in Tampa and CBS affiliate WKRG in Mobile.

The merger would make the combined company the second largest pure-play broadcast business in the United States. The move would also give it more leverage to compete with media giants such as Comcast, Time Warner Cable and DirecTV for local TV advertising revenue.

“They're merging because they're seeing some of their competitors in the pay TV arena that are getting a lot larger in terms of scale,” Dennis Wharton, Executive V.P. of Communications for the National Association of Broadcasters told TheWrap. “Broadcasters, I think, believe that they have to have scale to compete against providers who are not giving away their programming for free.”

However, Wharton played down the possibility of newsroom layoffs. “If there are, potentially there will be job losses in the back offices –  in the areas of finance, human resources and IT,” he said.

But history shows big media mergers also lead to newsroom layoffs.

Stay tuned.....