Would that happen quietly? I genuinely don't know the answer, not trying to be sarcastic or anything. Depends on whether the Cubs thought they could drive up the price with a bidding war or not. Or how much either party wanted to keep it a secret. My feeling is any Cubs sale would be somewhat of a surprise when it happens. I don't think you'd see it negotiated in the press for months on end. Corporations are very good at keeping deals quiet if they want to. And it's a lot easier to sell off an entity within a corporation than to sell the entire business, which would require shareholder votes. As I said in the original post on this during the winter, Tribune is probably not the entity who is going to decide to sell the Cubs. A financial buyer will come in and sell off the pieces to strategic buyers. I.e., the TV stations would be sold to a larger TV operater, the newspapers to a media publisher, in order to get premium prices. There will be no "Tribune Corporation" as we now know it. Lefty, I missed that original post during the winter. What's going on at Trib Co that would result in such a mass liquidation? TRB has rallied about 15% since the beginning of April. Someone on Wall St must have liked the stock buyback plan -- in fact Goldman Sachs upgraded the stock just this morning. Private Equity is swimming with money. The stock has rallied, but it still has a very modest market cap, and hasn't done anything for years. Back to Private Equity: Tribune is a perfect target given the environment. It has very little debt. A financial buyer can borrow most of the purchase price, sell some assets, clean up the operations, and IPO what's left with a huge debt burden and take out all their equity. My initial winter post said it would happen this year if the junk bond market held up until Fall. It has been shaky the past month. If it rights itself I think we are on target. When I originally posted there was no talk of any buyback or other in-house finanacial engineering, but this is how it starts. The execs try to do something internally to forestall change from the outside. But today the financial buyers have more power. This will happen.