As TV3 and MediaWorks heads into another period of upheaval the question is why its bankers used receivership to restructure the firm.
The Herald has been forecasting restructuring of MediaWorks most of this year and on Friday tipped a major announcement this week.
The banks' decision to put the company in receivership means the company clears the decks, effectively writing off $600 million and reducing the onerous interest loading.
That will mean that equity holders like Ironbridge Capital and Ironbridge and Goldman Sachs will take a big hit, that was always going to be the case in any restructure of the firm.
But other debt holders such as Texas Pacific Group and Oaktree Capital Management - who bought out debt as part of a back-door takeover - had been working with banks for some time on a plan that would not have involved the intermediary step of receivership.
By all accounts the operations of the firm will not be affected, staff and suppliers will not be out of pocket.
But the big question will be the shape of this new company, Newco, that is planned to take over from receivers and will be headed by Rod McGeoch and with Julie Christie on the board.
Then question is whether Christie - who has recently sold her stake in production company Touchdown Television - will take a financial stake and what are the interests that new chairman Rod McGeoch represents?