Sinclair to sell WGN to business partner
CHICAGO — Sinclair Broadcast Group is selling Chicago broadcast property WGN-TV to a Maryland auto dealer but would remain in control of the station in what critics say is a bid to skirt ownership limits and win federal regulatory approval for its proposed $3.9 billion acquisition of Tribune Media.
That means “Terrorism Alert Desk” and other programming staples of politically conservative Sinclair may yet be headed to Chicago’s airwaves.
Under the terms of the $60 million station sale, filed Wednesday with the Federal Communications Commission, Sinclair would provide everything from programming to advertising sales to the buyer, essentially running WGN (Channel 9) through a services agreement.
The licensee of WGN would be a newly formed company headed by Steven Fader, a longtime business associate of Sinclair Executive Chairman David Smith. Sinclair will have an option to buy back the station for the same price, subject to adjustments, within eight years. The services agreement puts Sinclair in charge of advertising sales and gives it the right to provide local news and other programming to WGN. Sinclair would keep 30 percent of all ad sales and receive a $5.4 million monthly service fee for operating the station during the first year, with annual increases and performance bonuses. haul saw the catch fall to its lowest level since 2011 last year, yet the industry is still strong and the crustaceans remain easily available to consumers, regulators said Friday.
Maine fishermen caught a little more than 110.8 million pounds of lobster last year, following a stretch of five consecutive years in which the state topped 120 million pounds annually, the state Department of Marine Resources announced.
Fishermen in Maine, who typically catch about 80 percent of America’s lobster, also made slightly less money. They were paid $3.91 per pound at the docks for lobsters last year, down from about $4.08 per pound in 2016, the state said. Prices remained steady to consumers, who usually pay $8 to $10 per pound for Maine’s signature seafood item, the live lobster.