RKO General

RKO General Inc.
Formerly
  • General Teleradio Inc. (1952–55)
  • RKO Teleradio Pictures Inc. (1955–59)
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryBroadcasting
Founded1952; 72 years ago (1952)
Defunct1991; 33 years ago (1991) (ceased operations; still nominally extant)
FateRadio and television stations sold to other companies
SuccessorRaven Capital Management
Headquarters,
Area served
  • Canada
  • United States
Parent

RKO General Inc. (previously General Teleradio Inc. and RKO Teleradio Pictures Inc.) was an American broadcasting company that, from 1952 through 1991, served as the main holding company for the noncore businesses of the General Tire and Rubber Company and later on GenCorp. The concern was based around the consolidation of its parent company's broadcasting interests, which dated to 1943 and were brought together under the General Teleradio umbrella in 1952. The company was renamed RKO Teleradio Pictures following its 1955 purchase of the RKO Pictures film studio, and then RKO General in 1959 after dissolving the motion picture division. Headquartered in New York City, the company operated six television stations and more than a dozen major radio stations around North America between 1959 and 1991.

RKO General still exists, at least nominally, registered as a Delaware corporation and a subsidiary of GenCorp successor Aerojet Rocketdyne Holdings. [1] Most of the RKO film library copyrights are still registered to RKO General, Inc. In addition to broadcasting, its operations included soft-drink bottling and hotel enterprises. The original Frontier Airlines was a subsidiary from 1965 to 1985.[2] In 1978, the company revived RKO Pictures on a small scale, with the first of its few coproductions reaching theaters in 1981; the business was sold off six years later. It is as a broadcaster, though, that RKO General left its mark. It owned some of the most influential radio stations in the world and was a pioneer in subscription television service. However, RKO General also became known for the longest licensing dispute in television history, one that ultimately forced the company out of broadcasting.

  1. ^ Brilmayer, Lea, and Jack Goldsmith, Conflict of Laws, 5th ed. (New York: Aspen, 2002), 464; SEC EDGAR Submission 0000040888-18-000003 form 10-K, filed February 21, 2018; EX-21.1: Wholly-Owned Subsidiaries form 10-K, filed February 21, 2018. Retrieved 02/21/18. The many unsourced online claims that RKO General (a) was sold, (b) folded, and/or (c) had its name changed to RKO Pictures are all mistaken. In sum: its primary assets were sold; its broadcast operations folded; and its RKO Pictures subsidiary was spun off. But the company still exists as an Aeroject Rocketdyne Holdings subsidiary.
  2. ^ Frontier Airlines Timeline part of Old Frontier Airlines/FLamily web circle. Retrieved 6/3/24. See also Dial, Scott, "Tailspin of Frontier," Stapleton Innerline, August 29, 1986 (this article and much other information on the relationship between General Tire/RKO General and Frontier available via The Death of Frontier Airlines).