Daily Archives: July 1, 2009

Theater owner Bill Warren turns down $2.25 million in advertising

warren.jpgWICHITA — At a time when most businesses are working to bring in more money, Warren Theatres owner Bill Warren is turning it down.

He says he rejected an offer from a national company that represents advertisers to make $450,000 annually in advertising over the next five years. That’s $450,000 net for each year.

“We’re probably one of the only theater companies in the nation that do not do screen advertising in our luxury theaters,” Warren says of places like his Warren Theatre East and Warren Theatre West.

“It was tempting,” he says.

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You don’t say

WICHITA — “You know, as a weather guy we know which days to take off.”
KSN, Channel 3, meteorologist Andrew Kozak, who spent Wednesday at the lake

Baskin-Robbins to open at Cambridge Market in August

baskinWICHITA — As expected, David and Cheryl Cortez are moving ahead with their Baskin-Robbins at Cambridge Market at 21st and Webb.

They first shared plans for the new location in April, but it wasn’t a done deal at the time. Now, construction is under way.

“Everything is just going the way it needs to,” David Cortez says. He expects to be open in the middle of August or by the end of the month at the latest.

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Bankruptcy won’t stop Bob Walterscheid

Bob Walterscheid and his children Alec and Debbie have dissolved the 40-year-old Walterscheid Productions and each declared personal bankruptcy.

Bob Walterscheid has $177,879 in assets and $304,387 in liabilities. Alec Walterscheid has $143,076 in assets and $432,142 in liabilities. Bob Walterscheid says his daughter’s liabilities are in the same range.

“We had a number of projects that looked like they were going to be worthwhile and profitable, but they didn’t turn out to be,” he says.

Walterscheid says he and his children had personally loaned the company money through credit cards, and the business dissolved without any debt.

Walterscheid says he’ll still operate his film, video and advertising business under the same name, but not as a corporation.

The 76-year-old has no plans for retirement.

“When you retire, you die,” he says. “I’ll keep working until that happens or nobody will listen to me anymore.”

Walterscheid says he has no regrets, but he would do one thing differently.

“Part of my problem was most of my clients retired, sold their business or died. If I was to do it over again, I would deal with younger clients,” he says with a laugh.

Walterscheid says he had several clients for as long as 26 years.

“We did a lot of great things,” he says. “We made a lot of people a lot of money in Wichita and around the state through our efforts.”