Worth a mention, because the buzz on this negotiation was that Cumulus was looking to dump Sean Hannity, not the other way around. To say that there may be bad blood in play is putting it mildly, although nothing official has been announced yet:
Conservative radio superstar Sean Hannity has reportedly fired Cumulus Media, telling the network that he definitely wont be re-signing when his contract expires.
The way Cumulus treats its employees is, apparently, one reason Hannity is leaving is Cumulus. The company treats its employees like dirt, sources tell Inside Music Media, to which Talkers magazine attributes a Hannity quote:
Hannity is fed up with the Dickey Brothers and the alleged bullying culture of Cumulus Media saying privately, The Dickey Brothers are the single worst operators in the history of radio.
Last night, Dylan Byers reported that a split was likely, but wisely cautioned readers to wait for the press releases:
In the latest plot-twist in negotiations over rights to Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannitys radio programs, Cumulus now looks set to drop its affiliation with Hannity entirely while re-upping its deal with Limbaugh in virtually all markets, according to sources familiar with the contract negotiations.
POLITICO learned of the plans on Thursday night when Cumulus-syndicated radio host Michael Savage told his listeners that he anticipated taking over Hannitys time slot later this year on Cumulus stations.
Limbaugh and Hannity are the number-one and number-two ranked talk radio hosts in the country, respectively. To date, Cumulus carries each Limbaugh and Hannitys shows on more than 40 stations around the country, with some overlap in certain markets.
And a cautionary note: Until you read the press release, these deals remain fluid. In late July, Cumulus was set to drop both hosts; two days later both negotiations were back on the table. What youre reading is where things stand as of the timestamp.
Bear that last part in mind when considering how this was getting spun until this afternoon. Some assumed Cumulus wanted to dump Hannity, supposedly over falling ad revenue. Instead, it looks like both sides played hardball and according to Inside Music Media, Clear Channel may be poised to scoop up Hannity and eat Cumulus lunch. Or heck, Cumulus may end up coughing up a better bid, too.
Right now, it might be best to follow Byers advice and wait for the press releases, or at least a scorecard.