Mounting debt and a sharp drop in advertising at many radio  broadcasters have led to a slashing of their valuations to fire-sale  levels.
  Up to the late 1990s, broadcast radio
was highly profitable, weathering  challenges from TV, the Internet and other rivals. But now all that  has changed. "It's grim, absolutely the worst I've seen,"" says Farid  Suleman, CEO of Citadel
Broadcasting, owner of a radio network and 200  radio stations in the nation's largest markets.
                        
                    
                    
                        
Read the whole story at The Wall Street Journal »