SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

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[ ]  Soliciting Material pursuant to Rule 14a-11(c) or 14a-12

                               WESTWOOD ONE, INC.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

                                       N/A
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)

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                                  WESTWOOD ONE



Dear Shareholders:

     Enclosed  with this  letter  is a Proxy  Statement  and proxy  card for the
Annual Meeting of  Shareholders of Westwood One, Inc. (the "Company") to be held
on May 19, 2005 at 10:00 a.m.,  Pacific Time, in the Salon Royal II Meeting Room
of the  Wyndham  Bel Age,  1020 North San  Vicente  Boulevard,  West  Hollywood,
California  90069.  A copy of the  Company's  Annual Report on Form 10-K for the
year ended  December 31,  2004,  which report  contains  consolidated  financial
statements and other information of interest with respect to the Company and its
shareholders is also included with this mailing.

     The purpose of the Annual Meeting is to elect four directors, to ratify the
appointment of the Company's independent accountants, to approve the 2005 Equity
Compensation Plan and to conduct such other business as may properly come before
the meeting.  At the Annual Meeting,  the holders of Common Stock, voting alone,
will elect two independent members of the Company's Board of Directors.  Holders
of  Common  Stock  and  Class  B  Stock,   voting   together,   will  elect  two
non-independent  members  of  the  Company's  Board  of  Directors,  ratify  the
appointment  of the Company's  independent  accountants,  and conduct such other
business as may properly come before the meeting

     IT IS IMPORTANT  THAT YOU MARK,  SIGN,  DATE AND RETURN THE ENCLOSED  PROXY
CARD IN THE PROVIDED POSTAGE-PAID ENVELOPE IF YOU DO NOT INTEND TO BE PRESENT AT
THE MEETING.  IF YOU DO LATER DECIDE TO ATTEND, YOUR PROXY WILL AUTOMATICALLY BE
REVOKED IF YOU VOTE IN PERSON.  ACCORDINGLY,  YOU ARE URGED TO MARK,  SIGN, DATE
AND  RETURN  THE  PROXY  CARD  NOW IN ORDER  TO  ENSURE  THAT  YOUR  SHARES  ARE
REPRESENTED AT THE MEETING.

     We appreciate your continued support.

                                                        Sincerely,

                                                        WESTWOOD ONE, INC.



                                                        /S/ NORMAN J. PATTIZ
                                                        --------------------
                                                        Norman J. Pattiz
                                                        Chairman of the Board


April 29, 2005


                                  WESTWOOD ONE
                         40 West 57th Street, 5th Floor
                               New York, NY 10019


                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                           To Be Held on May 19, 2005

To Our Shareholders:

     The  Annual  Meeting  of  the  Shareholders  of  Westwood  One,  Inc.  (the
"Company")  will be held in the Salon  Royal II Meeting  Room of the Wyndham Bel
Age, 1020 North San Vicente Boulevard,  West Hollywood,  California 90069 on May
19, 2005 at 10:00 a.m., Pacific Time for the following purposes:

     (1)  To elect four members of the Company's Board of Directors;

     (2)  To ratify the selection of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as the Company's
          independent accountants for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2005;

     (3)  To approve the 2005 Equity Compensation Plan; and

     (4)  To  consider  and act upon such other  business as may  properly  come
          before the meeting.

     Shareholders  of record at the close of  business on April 19, 2005 will be
entitled  to notice  of and to vote at the  Annual  Meeting,  and a list of such
shareholders will be available for examination during ordinary business hours at
least ten days prior to the Annual Meeting by any  shareholder,  for any purpose
germane to the Annual Meeting, at the Company's offices at 9540 Washington
Boulevard, Culver City, California 90232 (telephone [310] 204-5000).

     Whether or not you intend to be present at the meeting,  please mark, date,
sign and mail  the  enclosed  proxy in the  provided  postage-paid  envelope  as
promptly as possible. You are cordially invited to attend the Annual Meeting and
your proxy will be revoked if you are present and vote in person.

                                              By Order of the Board of Directors




                                              /S/ DAVID HILLMAN
                                              -----------------
                                              David Hillman
                                              Assistant Secretary

Apri1 29, 2005

                                  WESTWOOD ONE

                               40 West 57th Street
                               New York, NY 10019
                            -------------------------
                                 Proxy Statement
                            -------------------------

                                     GENERAL

     This proxy  statement  (first mailed to  shareholders on or about April 29,
2005) is furnished in connection  with the  solicitation  of proxies by Westwood
One, Inc., a Delaware corporation (the "Company" or "Westwood"),  for use at the
Annual  Meeting of  Shareholders  of the  Company to be held on May 19,  2005 at
10:00 a.m.,  Pacific Time, in the Salon Royal II Meeting Room of the Wyndham Bel
Age, 1020 North San Vicente Boulevard, West Hollywood, California 90069, and any
adjournments thereof, for the purposes set forth in the accompanying Notice of
Annual Meeting of Shareholders.

     The Company's  Annual  Report on Form 10-K for the year ended  December 31,
2004,  including   consolidated  financial  statements  and  other  information,
accompanies  this  Proxy  Statement  but  does  not  form  a part  of the  proxy
soliciting material.
                                ABOUT THE MEETING

What is the purpose of the annual meeting?

     At our annual meeting,  shareholders  will act upon the matters outlined in
the Notice of Annual Meeting of Shareholders  accompanying this proxy statement,
including the election of directors,  the  ratification  of the selection of the
Company's independent accountants, approval of the 2005 Equity Compensation Plan
and such other  business as may properly  come before the meeting.  In addition,
management will report on the performance of the Company during 2004 and respond
to questions from shareholders.

Who is entitled to vote at the meeting?

     Only shareholders of record at the close of business on April 19, 2005, the
record  date  for  the  meeting,  are  entitled  to  receive  notice  of  and to
participate in the annual  meeting.  If you were a shareholder of record on that
date,  you will be entitled to vote all of the shares that you held on that date
at the meeting,  or any postponements or adjournments of the meeting.  As of the
record  date,  there  were  92,333,315  shares  of Common  Stock of the  Company
("Common Stock")  outstanding,  excluding treasury shares, and 291,796 shares of
Class B Stock of the Company ("Class B Stock") outstanding.

What are the voting rights of holders of the Company's Common Stock and Class B
Stock?

     Under  the  Company's   certificate  of   incorporation,   each  holder  of
outstanding  Common  Stock is  entitled  to cast one (1) vote for each  share of
Common Stock held by such holder and each holder of Class B Stock is entitled to
cast fifty (50) votes for each share of Class B Stock held by such holder.  Only
the Common Stock is publicly traded.

Who can attend the meeting?

     All  shareholders  as of the record date, or their duly appointed  proxies,
may attend the  meeting.  If you  attend,  please note that  cameras,  recording
devices and other electronic devices will not be permitted at the meeting.

     Please  also note that if you hold your  shares in "street  name" (that is,
through a broker or other nominee), you will need to bring a copy of a brokerage
statement reflecting your stock ownership as of the record date in order to gain
entrance.

                                       1

What constitutes a quorum?

     With respect to the election of the  directors to be elected by the holders
of the Common Stock voting alone,  the presence at the meeting,  in person or by
proxy,  of the  holders  of at least  one-third  of the  shares of Common  Stock
outstanding on the record date and the presence at the meeting,  in person or by
proxy, of the holders of a majority of the aggregate  voting power of the Common
Stock and the Class B Stock  outstanding  on the record date will  constitute  a
quorum,  permitting  the holders of Common  Stock to take action on that matter.
With respect to all other matters to be voted on at the meeting, the presence at
the  meeting,  in  person or by  proxy,  of the  holders  of a  majority  of the
aggregate voting power of the Common Stock and the Class B Stock  outstanding on
the record date will  constitute a quorum,  permitting the  shareholders to take
action on those matters.

     Proxies  received but marked as  abstentions  and broker  non-votes will be
included in the  calculation of the number of votes  considered to be present at
the meeting for purposes of determining a quorum.

How do I vote?

     If you complete and properly sign and date the accompanying  proxy card and
return  it to the  Company,  it  will  be  voted  as you  direct.  If you  are a
registered  shareholder  and attend the meeting,  you may deliver your completed
proxy card in person. "Street name" shareholders who wish to vote at the meeting
will need to obtain a proxy form from the institution that holds their shares.

Can I change my vote after I return my proxy card?

     Yes. Even after you have submitted your proxy,  you may change your vote at
any time  before the proxy is  exercised  by filing  with the  Secretary  of the
Company  either a notice of revocation or a duly executed  proxy bearing a later
date.  In  addition,  the powers of the proxy  holders  will be suspended if you
attend the meeting in person and vote,  although  attendance at the meeting will
not by itself revoke a previously granted proxy.

What are the Board's recommendations?

     Unless you give other instructions on your proxy card, the persons named as
proxy holders on the proxy card will vote in accordance with the recommendations
of the  Board  of  Directors  of the  Company  (the  "Board"  or the  "Board  of
Directors").   The  Board's  recommendation  is  set  forth  together  with  the
description  of  each  item in this  proxy  statement.  In  summary,  the  Board
recommends a vote:

     o    FOR the election of the nominated directors;

     o    FOR the ratification of the appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP
          as the Company's independent accountants for fiscal 2005; and

     o    FOR the approval of the 2005 Equity Compensation Plan.

     Management is not aware of any matters,  other than those specified  above,
that will be  presented  for  action  at the  annual  meeting,  but if any other
matters do properly  come before the  meeting,  the proxy  holders  will vote as
recommended  by the Board of Directors  or, if no  recommendation  is given,  at
their discretion.

What vote is required to approve each item?

     With  respect  to each  matter to be voted on,  the  affirmative  vote of a
majority of the votes entitled to be cast and  represented in person or by proxy
at the meeting  will be required to approve  each such  matter.  Other than with
respect to the election of Mr.  Greenberg and Mr. Herdman,  the Common Stock and
the Class B Stock vote together as a class on all matters proposed. With respect
to the  election  of Mr.  Greenberg  and Mr.  Herdman,  the Common  Stock  votes
separately  as a class and the Class B Stock is not entitled to vote. A properly
executed proxy marked  "WITHHOLD  AUTHORITY" with respect to the election of one
or more  directors  will not be voted with  respect to the director or directors
indicated, although it will be counted for purposes of determining whether there


                                       2


is a quorum. A properly executed proxy marked "ABSTAIN" with respect to any such
matter  will  not be  voted,  although  it  will  be  counted  for  purposes  of
determining whether there is a quorum.  Accordingly, an abstention will have the
effect of a negative vote.

     If you hold your shares in "street name" through a broker or other nominee,
your broker or nominee may not be permitted to exercise  voting  discretion with
respect to some or all of the matters to be acted upon. Thus, if you do not give
your broker or nominee  specific  instructions,  your shares may not be voted on
those  matters  and will not be  counted  in  determining  the  number of shares
necessary for approval.  Shares  represented  by such "broker  non-votes"  will,
however, be counted in determining whether there is a quorum.

What is beneficial ownership?

     Beneficial  ownership has been  determined  in  accordance  with Rule 13d-3
under the  Securities  Exchange Act of 1934,  as amended (the  "Exchange  Act").
Under Rule 13d-3,  certain shares may be deemed to be beneficially owned by more
than one person (such as where persons share voting power or investment  power).
In  addition,  shares  are  deemed to be  beneficially  owned by a person if the
person has the right to acquire the shares  (for  example,  upon  exercise of an
option) within 60 days of the date as of which the  information is provided.  In
computing  the  percentage  of  ownership  of any  person,  the amount of shares
outstanding is deemed to include the amount of shares beneficially owned by such
person (and only such person) by reason of such acquisition rights. As a result,
the  percentage  of  outstanding  shares of any person as shown in the following
table does not necessarily reflect the person's actual voting power at any
particular date.

How much stock do the Company's largest shareholders and directors and executive
officers own?

     The following  table shows the amount of the Common Stock and Class B Stock
beneficially  owned (unless  otherwise  indicated)  by our largest  shareholders
(those who own more than 5% of the outstanding class of shares),  our directors,
the executive officers named in the Executive  Compensation  Summary Table below
and those  directors  and  executive  officers as a group.  Except as  otherwise
indicated,  all  information  is as of April 19, 2005. At April 19, 2005,  there
were 92,333,315 shares of Common Stock outstanding and 291,796 shares of Class B
Stock outstanding.


                                                                                                    

                                                          Aggregate  Number  of Shares  Beneficially Owned  (1)
                                                          -----------------------------------------------------
                                                              Common Stock                       Class B Stock
                                                      --------------------------------------------------------------
                                                        Number            Percent          Number            Percent
                                                        ------            -------          ------            -------
Infinity Network, Inc., a subsidiary of
  Infinity Broadcasting Corporation (2)               16,000,000(3)       17.3%              -                 -
  40 West 57th Street
  New York, NY  10019
Goldman Sachs Asset Management (2)                     8,239,763(5)        8.9%              -                 -
  One New York Plaza
  New York, NY  10004Massachusetts
Lazard Asset Management LLC (2)                        6,117,583(6)        6.6%              -                 -
  30 Rockefeller Plaza
  New York, NY  10112
AXA Financial, Inc. (2)                                6,084,237(7)        6.6%              -                 -
  1290 Avenue of the Americas
  New York, NY  10104
Massachusetts Financial Services Company (2)           5,115,940(8)        5.5%              -                 -
  500 Boylston Street, 15th Floor
  Boston, MA 02116
Norman J. Pattiz (3)                                     772,000(9)         *             291,710            99.9%
  9540 Washington Blvd.
  Culver City, CA  90232
Shane Coppola                                            280,000(10)        *                -                 -
David L. Dennis                                          183,210(11)        *                -                 -
Gerald Greenberg                                          35,000(10)        *                -                 -
Robert K. Herdman                                          4,000(10)        *                -                 -




                                       3





                                                                                                          

Joel Hollander                                           351,200(12)        *                -                 -
Dennis F. Holt                                            84,000(13)        *                -                 -
Maria D. Hummer                                           39,000(14)        *                -                 -
Leslie Moonves                                              -               -                -                 -
Steven A. Lerman                                          74,000(10)        *                -                 -
George L. Miles, Jr.                                      10,000(10)        *                -                 -
Joseph B. Smith                                            62,000(13)       *                -                 -
Farid Suleman                                           1,362,000(15)      1.5%              -                 -
Charles I. Bortnick                                       215,000(10)       *                -                 -
Peter Kosann                                              127,000(10)       *                -                 -
Andrew Zaref                                               10,000(10)       *                -                 -
All Current Directors and Executive                     3,608,410(16)      3.9%            291,710            99.9%
  Officers as a Group (15 persons)



---------------------


*    Represents less than one percent (1%) of the Company's  outstanding  shares
     of Common Stock.

(1)  The  persons  in the table  have sole  voting  and  investment  power  with
     respects to all shares of Common Stock and Class B Stock,  unless otherwise
     indicated.
(2)  Tabular information and footnotes 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9 are based on information
     contained in the most recent Schedule 13D/13G filings and other information
     made available to the Company.
(3)  These shares are owned by Infinity Network, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary
     of Infinity Media Corporation,  which in turn is a wholly-owned  subsidiary
     of  Infinity   Broadcasting   Corporation   ("Infinity"),   a  wholly-owned
     subsidiary  of  Viacom  Inc.  ("Viacom"),  but  may  also be  deemed  to be
     beneficially owned by: (a) NAIRI, Inc. ("NAIRI"),  which owns approximately
     71% of Viacom's  voting stock,  (b) NAIRI's  parent  corporation,  National
     Amusements,   Inc.  ("NAI"),  and  (c)  Sumner  M.  Redstone,  who  is  the
     controlling shareholder of NAI.
(4)  Mr. Pattiz owns Common Stock and Class B Stock  representing  approximately
     16.6% of the total voting power of the Company.
(5)  As of December 31, 2004,  Goldman  Sachs Asset  Management  has sole voting
     power with respect to 6,425,130 shares, shared voting power with respect to
     635,743 shares, sole dispositive power with respect to 7,604,020 shares and
     shared dispositive power with respect to 635,743 shares.
(6)  As of December 31, 2004,  Lazard Asset Management LLC has sole voting power
     with respect to 5,275,745 shares and sole dispositive power with respect to
     6,117,583 shares.
(7)  As of December  31,  2004,  AXA  Financial  Inc. has sole voting power with
     respect to 1,972,069 shares,  shared voting power with respect to 3,899,050
     shares and sole dispositive power with respect to 6,084,237 shares.
(8)  As of December 31, 2004,  Massachusetts Financial Services Company has sole
     voting power with respect to 5,015,210  shares and sole  dispositive  power
     with respect to 5,115,940.
(9)  Includes  stock options for 322,000  shares  granted under the Company 1999
     Stock Incentive Plan (the "1999 Plan").
(10) Represents stock options granted under the 1999 Plan.
(11) Includes  stock options for 134,000  shares  granted under the Company 1989
     Stock Incentive Plan (the "1989 Plan") and the 1999 Plan (collectively, the
     "Stock Incentive Plans").
(12) Includes stock options for 322,000 shares granted under the 1999 Plan.
(13) Represents stock options granted under the Stock Incentive Plans.
(14) Includes stock options for 34,000 shares granted under the 1999 Plan.
(15) Includes  stock  options  for  1,262,000  shares  granted  under  the Stock
     Incentive Plans.
(16) Includes  stock  options  for  2,985,000  shares  granted  under  the Stock
     Incentive Plans.

                                       4


How is the Board of Directors structured and what are their terms?

     The Board of  Directors  is divided  into three  classes  (Class I, II, and
III), each class serving for three-year  terms,  which terms are staggered.  The
Board of Directors  currently is  comprised  of thirteen  individuals.  Only one
class of  directors  is  elected  at each  annual  meeting.  At least 33 1/3% of
directors must be independent outside directors.  Such independent directors are
elected by holders of Common  Stock  voting  alone as a class.  Pursuant  to the
Company's  certificate of incorporation,  holders of Common Stock, voting alone,
have the right to elect 20% of the Board of Directors,  which is currently three
directors.  At least one of the independent directors will be elected each year,
as set forth  below.  The  remaining  members  of the Board are  elected  by all
shareholders voting together as a single class.

How many Board members are Independent under the listing standards of the New
York Stock Exchange?

     Pursuant  to our  Corporate  Governance  Guidelines,  a copy  of  which  is
available  on our website  (www.westwoodone.com  - under the  caption  "Investor
Relations"),  the Board of Directors is required to affirmatively determine that
a majority of the directors is  independent  under the listing  standards of the
New York Stock Exchange (the "NYSE").  In accordance  with the  Guidelines,  the
Board of Directors undertakes an annual review of director independence.  During
this review, the Board considers all transactions and relationships between each
director  or any  member  of his  immediate  family  and  the  Company  and  its
affiliates.  The  purpose  of this  review  is to  determine  whether  any  such
relationships or transactions is considered a "material relationship" that would
be inconsistent with a determination  that a director is independent.  The Board
has  not  adopted  any  "categorical   standards"  for  assessing  independence,
preferring  instead to consider and  disclose  existing  relationships  with the
non-management  directors and the Company.  The Board  observes all criteria for
independence established by the NYSE and other governing laws and regulations.

     As a result of this review, the Board of Directors affirmatively determined
that  seven  directors,  representing  a  majority  of the  Board  members,  are
"independent" under the listing standards of the NYSE. The independent directors
are Messrs. Dennis, Greenberg, Herdman, Holt, Miles and Smith and Ms. Hummer. In
determining that these seven directors are  independent,  the Board reviewed the
NYSE  corporate   governance  rules  and  also  determined  that  the  following
relationship  is not a material  relationship  and therefore does not affect the
independence  determination:  Mr. Holt has been the  Chairman,  Chief  Executive
Officer and owner  (along with his spouse) of U.S.  International  Media LLC and
Chairman,  Chief Executive  Officer and owner (along with his spouse) of Patriot
Communications  LLC,  which  purchased   approximately   $89,983  and  $183,900,
respectively,  of advertising time from the Company on behalf of its clients for
2004. The Board determined that this relationship is not material based upon the
fact that the value of the advertising time purchased is immaterial  financially
to either the  Company,  on the one hand,  or U.S.  International  Media LLC and
Patriot Communications LLC (either combined or separately), on the other hand.

How does the Board select nominees for the Board?

     The  Nominating  and  Governance   Committee,   which  consists  solely  of
independent  directors,  considers  candidates for Board membership suggested by
its members and other Board members,  as well as management and shareholders.  A
shareholder  who wishes to recommend a prospective  nominee for the Board should
notify the Company's  Secretary or any member of the  Nominating  and Governance
Committee in writing and include supporting materials the shareholder  considers
relevant to the potential candidate's qualifications.

     Once  a  prospective  nominee  has  been  identified,  the  Nominating  and
Governance Committee,  either with or without Board input, determines whether to
conduct a full  evaluation of the candidate.  The preliminary  determination  is
primarily based on the need for additional Board members to fill vacancies or to
expand  the  size  of the  Board  as  well  as a  result  of its  review  of the
composition  of the  Board  in  light of the  characteristics  of  independence,
diversity, age, skills, experience,  availability of service to Westwood One and
other  Board  needs,  including  but not  limited to audit  committee  financial
expertise.  After  completing  their  evaluation,  the Nominating and Governance
Committee makes a recommendation to the full Board as to who should be nominated
and the Board determines the nominee.


                                       5


Who are the current Board  members,  what Board  Committees do they serve on and
what are their backgrounds and qualifications?

     The continuing directors and nominees for director of the Company are:


                                                                                            

                                                                                             Committee Assignments
                                                                                 ----------------------------------------------
                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                   Nominating
                                                  Director             Term        Audit         Compensation     and Governance  
         Name                              Age     Since     Class   Expires     Committee        Committee          Committee 
         ----                              ---    --------   -----   -------     ---------       ------------     --------------  
Norman J. Pattiz                           62       1974       I       2007
Leslie Moonves                             55       2004       I       2007
Joseph B. Smith (Independent)              77       1994       I       2007          *               *
Dennis F. Holt (Independent)               68       1999       I       2007                                            *
Shane Coppola                              39       2003       I       2007
Farid Suleman                              53       1994       II      2006
David L. Dennis (Independent)              56       1994       II      2006          **              *                 *
Maria D. Hummer  (Independent)             60       2000       II      2006                                            *
George L. Miles, Jr. (Independent)         63       2002       II      2006          *
Gerald Greenberg   (Independent)           62       1994      III      2005                          **                *
Steven A. Lerman                           58       1995      III      2005
Joel Hollander                             49       1999      III      2005
Robert K. Herdman (Independent)            56       2003      III      2005          *                                 **


        *Member
      **Chair

     The principal occupations of the four director nominees (Messrs. Greenberg,
Lerman,  Hollander and Herdman) and each of the other nine continuing  directors
are as follows:

     Mr.  Greenberg  - has been a director of the  Company  since May 24,  1994.
Since  February  2001,  Mr.   Greenberg  has  been  President  of  Mirage  Music
Entertainment,  a company which owns the Mirage Record label. From April 1993 to
January  2001,  Mr.  Greenberg  served  as  President  of MJJ  Music,  a Michael
Jackson/Sony owned record label.

     Mr. Lerman - has been a director of the Company since April 19, 1995. Since
1986,  Mr.  Lerman  has  been a  member  of the  Washington,  D.C.  law  firm of
Leventhal,  Senter and Lerman,  PLLC and is currently  the manager of that firm.
Mr. Lerman, while not an employee of Infinity,  serves as the General Counsel of
Infinity.  Mr.  Lerman was a director of Infinity  from  February  1992  through
December  1996.  Mr.  Lerman is a member of the Board of Directors  and the Vice
President-Development  of  the  Mid-Atlantic  Regional  Advisory  Board  of  the
University  of  Pennsylvania.  Mr.  Lerman  is also a member  of the  University
Committee for Undergraduate Financial Aid of the University of Pennsylvania.

     Mr.  Hollander  - has been a director of the Company  since  September  22,
1999.  Mr.  Hollander  has been the  Chairman  and Chief  Executive  Officer  of
Infinity since January 2005. Mr.  Hollander was the Chief  Operating  Officer of
Infinity  from June 2003 to  December  2004.  Mr.  Hollander  was the  Company's
President  and Chief  Executive  Officer  from  October  1998 to June 2003.  Mr.
Hollander was Vice  President and General  Manager of Infinity's  New York radio
station WFAN from April 1992 to October 1998.  Mr.  Hollander is Chairman of the
CJ  Foundation  for SIDS and a member of the Board of  Directors  of  Tomorrow's
Childrens Fund.

     Mr.  Herdman - was  appointed  to the Board of  Directors of the Company on
October 1, 2003. Mr. Herdman has been a Managing  Director of Kalorama  Partners
LLC (a Washington,  D.C.  consulting  firm) since June 2003. Mr. Herdman was the
Chief  Accountant of the U.S.  Securities and Exchange  Commission  ("SEC") from
October 2001 until  November  2002.  Mr.  Herdman was a Vice Chairman of Ernst &
Young LLP  ("E&Y")  from  1989  through  September  2001,  and was E&Y's  senior
technical partner. Mr. Herdman was on the AICPA's SEC Practice Section Executive
Committee  from 1995- 2001 and was a member of the  AICPA's  Board of  Directors
from 2001 - 2002. Mr.  Herdman is a director and chairs the Audit  Committees of
HSBC Finance Corporation  (formerly Household  International,  Inc.) and of HSBC
North American  Holdings,  Inc. and is a member of the Board of Advisors of EPG,
Inc., a family-owned  business in Aurora,  Ohio and of Stadia Capital LLC, a New
York hedge fund.

                                       6

     Mr.  Pattiz - founded  the  Company  in 1974 and has held the  position  of
Chairman of the Board since that time. He was also the Company's Chief Executive
Officer  until  February 3, 1994.  In May of 2000,  Mr.  Pattiz was appointed by
President  Clinton and  reappointed  in 2002 by  President  Bush to serve on the
Broadcasting Board of Governors of the United States of America,  which oversees
all  U.S.  non-military   international   broadcast  services.  Mr.  Pattiz  was
responsible for conceiving and launching Radio Sawa and Alhurra Television,  the
U.S.  Government's  Arabic-language radio and TV services to the 22 countries of
the Middle East.  Mr. Pattiz serves as a Regent of the University of California.
He also  serves on the Board of the  Annenberg  School of  Communication  at the
University  of  Southern  California,  the Board of  Trustees  of the  Museum of
Television & Radio and is past president of the Broadcast Education Association.
He is a member of the Council on Foreign  Relations  and the Pacific  Council on
International Policy.

     Mr. Moonves - has been a director of the Company since October 5, 2004. Mr.
Moonves has been  Co-President  and Co-Chief  Operating  Officer of Viacom since
June 2004,  overseeing  all of Viacom's  domestic  and  international  broadcast
television   operations,   its  radio  division  and  its  outdoor   advertising
operations.  In addition,  Mr. Moonves continues to serve as Chairman of CBS. He
was promoted to Chairman and Chief  Executive  Officer of CBS in 2003, and prior
to that, was President and Chief Executive Officer,  CBS Television,  a position
he was elevated to in April 1998. He joined CBS in July 1995 as President of CBS
Entertainment.  Prior to  that,  Mr.  Moonves  was  President  of  Warner  Bros.
Television from July 1993.

     Mr. Smith - has been a director of the Company  since May 24, 1994.  He was
previously a director of the Company from February 1984 until  February 3, 1994.
Since April 1993, Mr. Smith has been the President of Unison Productions,  Inc.,
through  which he  serves  as an  industry  consultant  involved  in a number of
projects in the entertainment business.

     Mr. Holt - has been a Director of the Company since September 22, 1999. Mr.
Holt was a director of Metro Networks,  Inc. from October 1996 through September
22, 1999. Mr. Holt has been the Chairman and Chief Executive  Officer of Patriot
Communications  LLC since March 1999.  Patriot  Communications LLC is one of the
largest  telecommunications  service bureaus in the United States.  Mr. Holt was
also  the  Chairman  and  Founder  of   Initiative   Media   (formerly   Western
International  Media  Corporation)  since from the  Company's  founding  in 1970
through January 2002. In March 2004, Mr. Holt founded US International  Media, a
media buying  service.  Mr. Holt is a director of United Online (a member of its
Compensation Committee);  USC Annenberg School for Communication;  USC School of
Policy,  Planning and  Development;  St.  John's  Hospital;  and the Los Angeles
Police  Foundation.  Mr. Holt also  serves as a member of Skull and Dagger,  the
Silver  Shield  Foundation  and the  SKIRBALL  Cultural  Center.  Mr. Holt is an
associate of the California  Institute of Technology.  Mr. Holt was also awarded
the Horatio Alger Association award in 1998.

     Mr.  Coppola - was  appointed  to the Board of  Directors of the Company on
October 1, 2003.  Mr. Coppola became  President and Chief  Executive  Officer of
Westwood  One in May  2003.  From  May 2002 to May  2003,  Mr.  Coppola  was the
Managing  Partner of Columbus  Capital  Partners,  LLC,  which he founded.  From
September  1999 to May 2002,  Mr.  Coppola served as Executive Vice President of
the Company's Metro and Shadow Broadcasting  operations.  From 1992 to September
1999, Mr. Coppola was a Director and Executive Vice President of Metro.

     Mr.  Suleman - has been a director of the Company  since  February 1994 and
was the Company's  Executive  Vice  President and Chief  Financial  Officer from
February 1994 to March 2002. Mr. Suleman has been a Special Limited Partner with
Forstmann  Little & Co.  since  March 2002 and  Chairman  of the Board and Chief
Executive Officer of Citadel Broadcasting Corp. ("Citadel") since March 2002. He
was  President  and Chief  Executive  Officer of Infinity  from February 2001 to
March 2002. He was Executive Vice President,  Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer
and a director of Infinity  from  September  1998 to February 2001 when Infinity
was acquired by Viacom. Mr. Suleman was named the Senior Vice President, Finance
of CBS in August 1998 and Senior Vice President and Chief  Financial  Officer of
the CBS  Station  Group in June 1997.  Mr.  Suleman is a director  of McLeod USA
Incorporated.

     Mr.  Dennis - has been a director of the Company  since May 24,  1994.  Mr.
Dennis has been a Managing  Director  of Pacific  Venture  Group,  a  healthcare
venture capital firm, since November 2004. Mr. Dennis was a private investor and
consultant  from  December  2002 to November  2004.  Mr.  Dennis  served as Vice
Chairman,  Office of the President,  Chief Corporate Officer and Chief Financial
Officer of Tenet  Healthcare,  a hospital  owner and healthcare  provider,  from
March 2000  through  November  2002.  Mr.  Dennis  served as Managing  Director,
Investment Banking for Donaldson,  Lufkin & Jenrette Securities Corporation from
April 1989 to February 2000.

                                       7


     Ms. Hummer - has been a director of the Company  since March 29, 2000.  Ms.
Hummer has been Of Counsel to Manatt, Phelps & Phillips, LLP ("Manatt, Phelps"),
a law firm with offices in Los Angeles,  Orange County,  Palo Alto,  Sacramento,
New York and  Washington  D.C.,  since January 1999.  Prior to January 1999, Ms.
Hummer was a partner with Manatt,  Phelps  holding the  positions of Chairman of
the Management Committee and Co-Managing Partner. Ms. Hummer is currently on the
Board of Directors,  Los Angeles World Affairs Council; Board of Directors,  The
Blue Ribbon (a support group of The Music Center of Los Angeles  County);  Board
of  Directors,  The  Music  Center of Los  Angeles  County;  Board of  Trustees,
UCLA/Armand Hammer Museum of Art and Cultural Center;  Board of Trustees,  Mount
St. Mary's College; Board of Directors, Children's Institute International;  and
Board of  Directors,  The  Regency  Club.  Ms.  Hummer  is also a member  of The
Committee of 200 and the National Women's Forum.

     Mr. Miles - has been a director of the Company since  December 9, 2002. Mr.
Miles has been President and Chief Executive  Officer of WQED  Multimedia  since
1994.  Mr.  Miles  is  a  CPA  and  is  on  the  Board  of  Directors  of  WESCO
International,  Inc. (Chairman of the Governance Committee); Equitable Resources
(Chairman of Governance Committee);  Harley-Davidson, Inc. (serves on Governance
and Audit  Committees);  Citizen's  Financial Group,  Inc.;  ATS-Chester,  Inc.;
University of Pittsburgh; Allegheny Conference on Community Development; and the
UPMC Health System. Mr. Miles is also on the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra Board
of  Advisers  and  serves as a director  of the Mt.  Ararat  Community  Activity
Center's Executive Board.

What committees has the Board established and what are the roles of the
Committees?

     The Board of Directors has an Audit  Committee,  Nominating  and Governance
Committee and  Compensation  Committee.  The Board has adopted a written charter
for each of these  committees.  The full text of each charter and the  Company's
Corporate  Governance  guidelines  are  available  on the  Company's  website at
www.westwoodone.com  and are available in print to any shareholder upon request.
Committee  membership is composed entirely of non-employee,  independent members
of the  Board of  Directors.  Under  their  respective  Charters,  each of these
committees  is  authorized  and  assured  of  appropriate  funding to retain and
consult with external advisors, consultants and counsel.

The Audit Committee

     The current  members of the Audit  Committee  are Messrs.  Dennis  (Chair),
Herdman, Miles and Smith. Pursuant to the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (the "Act")
and the NYSE listing standards,  Messrs.  Dennis,  Herdman, Miles and Smith meet
the requirements of independence  proscribed thereunder.  In addition, the Board
has  determined  that  Messrs.  Dennis,  Herdman and Miles are "audit  committee
financial  experts"  pursuant  to the Act and the NYSE  listing  standards.  For
further information concerning each of the foregoing members'  qualifications as
"audit  committee  financial  experts",  see "Who are the current Board members,
what  Board  Committees  do they  serve on and what are  their  backgrounds  and
qualifications?" above.

     The  Audit   Committee  is  responsible   for,  among  other  things,   the
appointment,  compensation, retention and oversight of the Company's independent
auditor;  reviewing with the independent auditor the scope of the audit plan and
audit  fees;  and  reviewing  the  Company's  financial  statements  and related
disclosures.  The Audit Committee meets separately with senior management of the
Company, the Company's General Counsel, the Company's director of internal audit
and its independent  auditor on a regular basis.  For additional  information on
the Audit  Committee's role and its oversight of the independent  auditor during
2004,  see  "Report of the Audit  Committee".  There were eight  meetings of the
Audit Committee during fiscal 2004.

The Nominating and Governance Committee

     The current members of the Nominating and Governance  Committee are Messrs.
Herdman (Chair), Dennis,  Greenberg, and Holt and Ms. Hummer. Each member of the
Nominating and Governance  Committee meets the independence  requirements of the
NYSE. The Nominating and Governance  Committee is responsible for overseeing the
development  and  implementation  of the Company's  policies and practices  with
regard to corporate  governance.  The  Nominating  and  Governance  Committee is
charged  with  recommending  possible  qualified  candidates  to the  Board  for
election as directors of the Company and to recommend a slate of directors  that
the Board  proposes  for election by  shareholders  at the annual  meeting.  The
Nominating  and  Governance  Committee  will also  consider,  at meetings of the
Nominating and Governance Committee, those recommendations by shareholders which
are submitted,  along with biographical and business experience information,  to
the Nominating and Governance Company at its principal  executive office.  There
were two meetings of the Committee in 2004.

                                       8


The Compensation Committee

     The current  members of the  Compensation  Committee are Messrs.  Greenberg
(Chair),  Dennis and Smith. Each member of the Compensation  Committee meets the
independence  requirements of the NYSE. The Compensation  Committee establishes,
oversees and recommends to the Board the implementation of overall  compensation
policies for senior executive  officers as well as for compensation  provided to
officers  pursuant to the  Management  Agreement  and the Chairman of the Board;
reviews and approves corporate goals and objectives relative to the compensation
of senior  executive  officers;  reviews the results of and  procedures  for the
evaluation of other executive  officers by the Chief Executive  Officer;  at the
direction of the Board,  establishes compensation for the Company's non-employee
directors;  and oversees the  administration  of all qualified and non-qualified
employee  compensation  and benefit plans,  including the Stock  Incentive Plans
There were four meetings of the Compensation Committee in 2004.

     The  Board  may  from  time  to  time,  establish  or  maintain  additional
committees as necessary or appropriate.

How often did the Board meet during 2004?

     The Board met four times during 2004. Each director  attended more than 75%
of the total number of meetings of the Board and  Committees  on which he or she
served.  The Board  also  meets in  non-management  executive  sessions  and has
selected Mr.  Herdman as presiding  director  for the  non-management  executive
sessions.  All directors are expected to attend the Company's  Annual Meeting of
Shareholders,  and 11 of the 13 then-current  directors were present at the 2004
Annual Meeting of Shareholders.  The Company does not have a written policy with
regard to attendance of directors at the Annual Meeting of Shareholders.

How are directors compensated?

     Cash  Compensation:  Directors of the Company who are not officers received
$3,750 per  meeting  attended  for their  services as  directors  and $1,875 per
meeting attended for their services as committee  members.  The directors of the
Company  who  served as Chair of the  Compensation  Committee  (Mr.  Greenberg),
Nomination  and  Governance  Committee  (Mr.  Herdman) and Audit  Committee (Mr.
Dennis) received $5,000, $5,000 and $10,000, respectively, for their services as
the Chairs of such  committees in 2004.  For 2005,  the Directors of the Company
who serve as Chairs of the  Compensation  Committee,  Nomination  and Governance
Committee  and  Audit  Committee  shall  receive  $7,500,  $7,500  and  $15,000,
respectively,  for their services as the Chairs of such committees  during 2005.
During 2004, Messrs.  Dennis,  Greenberg,  Herdman,  Holt, Lerman, Miles, Smith,
Suleman and Ms. Hummer received $51,250,  $31,250,  $38,750,  $18,750,  $22,500,
$30,000,  $35,625,  $15,000  and  $18,750,  respectively,  in  Board  and  Board
Committee fees. Mr. Moonves has elected not to receive cash compensation for his
services as a director.

     Equity  Compensation:  Under  the  Company's  1999  Stock  Incentive  Plan,
Directors of the Company who are not officers receive a mandatory grant of stock
options to acquire  10,000 shares of Common Stock each year.  Each grant is made
on the date of the Company's annual shareholder  meeting or on the date they are
appointed to the Board. Mr. Moonves has elected not to receive  mandatory grants
of stock options  normally  provided to  non-officer  directors.  This mandatory
grant of stock options shall cease contingent and effective upon the approval of
the proposed 2005 Equity  Compensation Plan by Company  shareholders.  Under the
terms of the proposed 2005 Equity  Compensation Plan, a copy of which appears at
the end of this Proxy  Statement as Annex A, the Board will  determine the terms
and conditions of any award of equity  compensation to  non-employee  Directors.
The proposed  2005 Equity  Compensation  Plan does not provide for any mandatory
grant of equity compensation to non-employee Directors.

Does the Company have a Code of Ethics?

     Yes. The Company has a Code of Ethics that is applicable to all  employees,
officers and  directors of the Company.  In addition to its Code of Ethics,  the
Company has a Supplemental Code of Ethics for its Chief Executive Officer, Chief
Operating Officer, Chief Financial Officer and Executive Vice President-Finance.
Both the Code of Ethics and the Supplemental Code of Ethics are available on the
Company's website (www.westwoodone.com).

                                       9



Shareholder Communications with Directors

     The  Board  has  established  a  process  to  receive  communications  from
shareholders  by email or regular  mail.  Shareholders  may  contact  any of the
non-management  directors  as a group,  any Board  committee or any chair of any
such committee.  To communicate with the Board, any individual  directors or any
group or committee of directors, correspondence should be addressed to the Board
or any such  individual  directors  or group or committee of directors by either
name  or   title.   All  such   correspondence   should  be  sent  by  email  to
nonmanagdir@westwoodone.com  or by regular mail to Westwood  One,  Inc., 40 West
57th Street,  New York,  NY 10019,  Attention:  Non-Management  Directors - 15th
Floor.  The directors'  contact  information  also is available on the Company's
website (www.westwoodone.com).

                                       10

CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

     Messrs.  Moonves,  Hollander  and Coppola  are  officers  or  employees  of
Infinity,  which  beneficially  owns 16.5% of the Common  Stock of the  Company.
Infinity  manages the business  and  operations  of the Company  pursuant to the
terms of a Management Agreement ("Management Agreement"). Through the Management
Agreement,  Infinity  currently  provides to the Company the services of a chief
executive officer.  The Management  Agreement was entered into in March 1999 and
was subsequently amended to, among other things, extend the Management Agreement
until March 31,  2009.  Pursuant  to the  Management  Agreement,  the Company is
obligated to pay to Infinity an annual base fee subject to an annual increase by
a percentage  amount equal to the increase  based on a specified  consumer price
index.  The fee paid to Infinity in 2004  aggregated  to  $2,959,000.  Effective
April 1, 2004,  the Company  became  obligated to pay to Infinity an annual base
fee in the  amount of  $3,000,000  subject to an annual  increase  for each year
thereafter by a percentage amount equal to the increase in a specified  consumer
price index for the prior year.

     In addition,  the Company pays to Infinity  incentive bonus compensation in
an amount equal to 10% of the amount by which the Company's  operating cash flow
exceeds a target amount for the applicable year, subject to certain adjustments.
The Company  must also  reimburse  Infinity for certain  out-of-pocket  expenses
incurred by Infinity in performing the services  contemplated  by the Management
Agreement  consistent  with past  practice.  Infinity  did not earn an incentive
bonus  in  fiscal  2004.  As  additional  compensation  to  Infinity  under  the
Management  Agreement,  Infinity  was  granted  seven  warrants  to  purchase an
aggregate  4,500,000  shares of the  Company's  Common Stock  (comprised  of two
warrants to purchase  1,000,000  Common  shares per warrant and five warrants to
purchase 500,000 Common shares per warrant).  Of the seven warrants issued,  the
two one million  share  warrants  have an  exercise  price of $43.11 and $48.36,
respectively,  and become  exercisable  if the  average  price of the  Company's
Common Stock reaches a price of $64.67 and $77.38, respectively, for at least 20
out of 30 consecutive  trading days for any period  throughout the ten year term
of the warrants.

     The  exercise  price for each of the five  remaining  warrants  is equal to
$38.87,  $44.70,  $51.40, $59.11 and $67.98,  respectively.  These warrants each
have a term of 10 years and become  exercisable on January 2, 2005,  2006, 2007,
2008, and 2009, respectively,  subject to a trading price condition. The trading
price  condition  specifies the average price of the Company's  Common Stock for
each  of  the 15  trading  days  prior  to  January  2 of  the  applicable  year
(commencing on January 2, 2005 with respect to the first 500,000 warrant tranche
and each January 2 thereafter  for each of the remaining  four warrants) must be
at least  equal  to both  the  exercise  price  of the  warrant  and 120% of the
corresponding  prior  year 15 day  trading  average.  In the case of the  $38.87
warrants,  the  Company's  average  stock price for the 15 trading days prior to
January  2,  2005  must  equal or  exceed  $40.56  for the  warrants  to  become
exercisable.  The  Company's  stock did not equal or  exceed  $40.56  for the 15
trading  days  prior to January  2, 2005 and,  therefore,  the first of the five
warrants to purchase 500,000 common shares did not become  exercisable and is no
longer eligible to become exercisable.

     The Company and  Infinity  have also  entered  into a  registration  rights
agreement  with respect to the shares of Common Stock  issuable upon exercise of
the warrants pursuant to which the Company granted to Infinity  specified demand
and registration rights.

     The Management  Agreement  provides that all  transactions  (other than the
Management  Agreement  and  Representation  Agreement  (as  described  below) to
operate  the  CBS  Radio   Networks   which  were   ratified  by  the  Company's
shareholders)  between the Company and Infinity or its  affiliates  will be on a
basis that is at least as  favorable to the Company as if the  transaction  were
entered into with an independent third party. In addition,  subject to specified
exceptions,  all  agreements  between  the  Company  and  Infinity or any of its
affiliates must be approved by the Company's Board of Directors.

     The Company has a Representation Agreement with Infinity to operate the CBS
Radio  Networks  until March 31,  2009.  The Company  retains all revenue and is
responsible for all expenses of the CBS Radio Networks. In addition, a number of
Infinity's  radio stations are affiliated  with the Company's radio networks and
the Company purchases  several programs from Infinity.  During 2003, the Company
incurred expenses aggregating approximately $84,338,000 under the Representation
Agreement and for Infinity affiliations and programs.

     Mr. Suleman has been Chairman of the Board and Chief  Executive  Officer of
Citadel since April 2002.  Many of the radio stations owned by Citadel have been
broadcasting  programming  produced  by the  Company  both  before and after Mr.
Suleman  became an officer of Citadel.  During  2004,  the Company  paid Citadel

                                       11


owned stations  approximately  $3,854,000 pursuant to the terms of the stations'
affiliation  agreements with the Company. In addition,  the Company paid $14,000
to Aviation 1 LLC, a company owned by Forstmann Little, for aviation services.

     Mr. Lerman has been a member of the Washington, D.C. law firm of Leventhal,
Senter and Lerman,  PLLC since  1986.  From time to time,  the  Company  engages
Leventhal,  Senter and Lerman, PLLC in certain matters. The fees associated with
those  engagements  aggregated  approximately  $26,000  in  2004.  In  addition,
Leventhal,  Senter and Lerman PLLC provides  services to Infinity and Mr. Lerman
serves as Infinity's General Counsel.

     Mr.  Holt  has  been the  Chairman  and  Chief  Executive  Officer  of U.S.
International  Media LLC since March 2004 and the Chairman  and Chief  Executive
Officer of Patriot Communications LLC since March 1999. Mr. Holt, along with his
spouse,  owns 100% of Patriot  Communications LLC and U.S.  International  Media
LLC.  U.S.  International  Media LLC is a media buying  service  that  purchased
approximately  $89,983  of  advertising  time from the  Company on behalf of its
clients for 2004. Patriot Communications LLC is a provider of telecommunications
services that  purchased  approximately  $183,900 of  advertising  time from the
Company on behalf of its clients for 2004.

Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance

     Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act requires the Company's executive officers
and directors and persons who own more than ten percent of a registered class of
the  Company's  equity  securities,  to file reports of ownership and changes in
ownership with the SEC. Executive officers,  directors and more than ten percent
shareholders  are required by SEC  regulation to furnish the Company with copies
of all Section 16(a) forms they file.

     Based  solely on its review of the copies of such forms  received by it, or
written  representations from its directors and executive officers,  the Company
believes  that during 2004 its executive  officers,  directors and more than ten
percent beneficial owners complied with all SEC filing  requirements  applicable
to them, with the exception of Messrs. Bortnick, Coppola, Kosann and Zaref, each
of whom failed to timely file one report  (disclosing  a stock  option  grant on
October  5,  2004).  These  transactions  on behalf of the  aforementioned  have
subsequently been reported.

Report of the Audit Committee

     The Audit Committee operates pursuant to its Charter, which was revised and
approved by the Board of Directors  and is available  on the  Company's  website
(www.westwoodone.com).   The  Charter,   which  complies  with   applicable  SEC
regulations, and NYSE rules, addresses five broad areas of responsibility of the
Audit Committee:

     1)   Reviewing  and  discussing  the  preparation  of quarterly  and annual
          financial  reports with the Company's  management and its  independent
          auditors;
     2)   Supervising the  relationship  between the Company and its independent
          accountants,  including  discussing  the  matters  required  by SAS 61
          (Codification   of   Statements  on  Auditing   Standards)   with  its
          independent  auditors,  evaluating the independence of the auditors in
          accordance   with   Independence   Standards   Board  Standard  No.  1
          (Independence  Discussions  with Audit  Committees),  and recommending
          their  appointment  or removal and  reviewing the scope of their audit
          and non-audit services and related fees;
     3)   Overseeing   management's   implementation  of  effective  systems  of
          internal  controls;  
     4)   Reviewing and approving the internal  corporate audit staff functions;
          and
     5)   Reviewing and investigating any matters pertaining to the integrity of
          management, including conflicts of interest, or adherence to standards
          of business conduct.

     The Audit  Committee  or its Chair has reviewed  and  discussed,  with both
management and its independent  auditors all financial statements prior to their
filing with the SEC.  Management  advised the Audit  Committee in each case that
all financial  statements  were prepared in accordance  with generally  accepted
accounting principles, and reviewed significant issues with the Audit Committee.
The  Audit  Committee  also  held  discussions  with the  Company's  independent
auditors concerning the matters required to be discussed by SAS 61 (codification
of  Statements  on  Auditing  Standards  AU  ss.  380)  as may  be  modified  or
supplemented.

     The Audit  Committee  appointed  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP ("PWC") as the
Company's independent auditors for the year ended December 31, 2004 and reviewed
with the Company's financial managers, the independent auditors and the director
of internal audit, PWC's overall audit scopes and plans.

                                       12



     The Audit Committee also discussed with PWC their independence and received
from  PWC  the  written   disclosures  and  the  letter  from  PWC  required  by
Independence Standards Board Standard No. 1 (Independence Discussions with Audit
Committees). In addition, the Audit Committee pre-approved PWC'S audit and audit
related fees and has determined that the provision of non-audit  services by PWC
is compatible with maintaining their independence.

     The Audit  Committee  also has  discussed  with the  Company's  independent
auditors,  with and without management present, their recommendations  regarding
the  Company's  internal  accounting  controls  and the  overall  quality of the
Company's financial reporting and disclosures.

     The Audit Committee  frequently met in private session  separately with the
senior members of the Company,  the Company's  director of internal  audit,  the
Company's General Counsel and the Company's independent  auditors.  Based on its
reviews and discussions  referred to above,  the Audit Committee  recommended to
the Board of Directors  that it approve the inclusion of the  Company's  audited
financial  statements in the  Company's  Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year
ended December 31, 2004 filed with the SEC. The Audit Committee also recommended
to the Board the  approval of the  Company's  independent  auditors for the year
ending December 31, 2005.

Fees to Independent Auditors

     The following table presents fees for professional services rendered by PWC
for the audit of the Company's financial  statements for fiscal 2004 and 2003 as
well as fees  billed for  audit-related  services,  tax  services  and all other
services rendered by PWC for 2004 and 2003.

     (in thousands)                                        2004           2003
                                                           ----           ----
     (1)  Audit Fees                                       $830           $391
     (2)  Audit-Related Fees (a)                             35            225
     (3)  Tax  Fees                                          -              -
     (4)  All Other Services                                 -              -

     (a)  Such services included  employee benefit plan audits,  audits required
          by state  municipalities,  internal control reviews and  consultations
          regarding financial accounting and reporting standards.

     As discussed above, all  audit-related  services were approved by the Audit
Committee,  which  concluded  that the provision of such services by PWC did not
impair that firm's independence in the conduct of the audit.

Audit Committee Pre-Approval Policies and Procedures

     All audit and  non-audit  services  provided  to the Company by PWC in 2004
were  pre-approved  by the Audit  Committee.  Under the  Company's  pre-approval
policies  and  procedures,  the Chair of the Audit  Committee is  authorized  to
pre-approve  the  engagement  of PWC to  provide  certain  specified  audit  and
non-audit services, and the engagement of any accounting firm to provide certain
specified audit services.

Submitted by the Audit Committee

David L. Dennis, Chair of the Audit Committee
Robert K. Herdman
George L. Miles, Jr.
Joseph B. Smith

                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

Report of the Compensation Committee

What are the  duties  and  responsibilities  of the  Compensation  Committee  in
establishing compensation?

     The Compensation Committee has the following  responsibilities  pursuant to
its  Charter  (a  copy  of  which  is  available  on the  Company's  website  at
www.westwoodone.com):

                                       13



     --   Establish,  oversee and recommend to the Board the  implementation  of
          overall compensation policies for senior executive officers as well as
          for  compensation  provided  to officers  pursuant  to the  Management
          Agreement and the Chairman of the Board;
     --   Review and  approve  corporate  goals and  objectives  relative to the
          compensation of senior executive officers;
     --   Review  the  results of and  procedures  for the  evaluation  of other
          executive officers by the Chief Executive Officer;
     --   At  the  direction  of  the  Board,  establish  compensation  for  the
          Company's non-employee directors; and

     --   Oversee the administration of all qualified and non-qualified employee
          compensation and benefit plans, including Stock Incentive Plans.

     Each of the members of the  Compensation  Committee is independent with the
meaning  of the  Company's  Corporate  Governance  Guidelines  and  the  listing
standards of the NYSE.

     In  carrying  out  its  responsibilities,  the  Compensation  Committee  is
authorized to engage outside  advisors to consult with the Committee as it deems
appropriate.

What are the objectives of the Company's executive compensation policy?

     The objective of the Company's executive compensation policy is to attract,
retain and motivate  management in a manner that is in the best interests of the
Company's  shareholders.  To  meet  that  objective,   compensation  for  senior
executive Officers and other management is comprised of three components: a base
salary,  an annual  incentive bonus and periodic grants of equity-based  awards.
The  Compensation  Committee  believes the granting of equity-based  awards more
closely aligns the interest of executives and management to the interests of the
Company's shareholders.

     Tax  Deductibility  Under  Section  162(M).  Current  U.S.  tax  law  has a
$1,000,000  annual tax deduction limit on  compensation  the Company pays to the
Chief  Executive  Officer  ("CEO")  and the four other most  highly  compensated
executive officers. The limit does not apply to "performance-based" compensation
(as defined  under the  Internal  Revenue  Code of 1986,  as amended and related
regulations (the "Code"). In general,  compensation is performance-based only if
payment is contingent upon attainment of pre-established  objective  performance
goals that are set by the Compensation Committee. The Compensation Committee may
use  its  discretion  to  set  actual  compensation  below  the  maximum  amount
calculated by application of the Company performance  criteria.  The Committee's
general policy is to structure  compensation  programs that allow the Company to
fully  deduct  the   compensation   under  Section  162(M)   requirements.   The
Compensation  Committee also believes that the Company needs flexibility to meet
its incentive and retention  objectives,  even if the Company may not deduct all
of the compensation.

How is the compensation of the Company's Chief Executive Officer determined?

     The services of the Company's CEO are provided by Infinity  pursuant to the
terms  of  the  Management  Agreement,  which  was  approved  by  the  Company's
shareholders.   In  consultation  with  Infinity,   the  Compensation  Committee
determines the base salary and incentive bonus payable to the CEO. Additionally,
the Compensation  Committee determines the size and frequency of any stock-based
compensation provided to the CEO. In making that determination, the Compensation
Committee  considered  past  practices,  experience  and the  Company's  overall
financial performance.

How were the base salaries, bonuses and levels of stock option grants determined
for the Chairman of the Board and other executive officers?

Compensation for the Chairman of the Board

     Mr. Pattiz, in his role as Chairman of the Board of Westwood, has continued
to  emphasize  the  Company's  values and assist  the  Company in its  endeavors
throughout  2004.  The  Board  is  pleased  with  Mr.  Pattiz'  leadership,  and
accordingly,  in 2003 the  Compensation  Committee  together with the full Board
extended  Mr.  Pattiz'  existing  contract  for an  additional  five (5)  years,
commencing  December 1, 2003 and  continuing  through  November  30,  2008.  Mr.
Pattiz' base salary is $400,000 per annum. In addition Mr. Pattiz is entitled to
a grant of 50,000 stock options per year under the Company's stock option plan.

                                       14

Compensation of the Other Executive Officers

     Executive  officers  receive  annual   compensation   (excluding   employee
benefits),  which  is  comprised  of base  salary  and  incentive  compensation.
Incentive  compensation  consists of a cash bonus and equity  based  awards.  In
awarding  compensation,  we consider  the  financial  results of the Company and
individual  managerial  performance  as well as an  individual's  performance in
achieving  strategic  business  objectives.  We believe the  compensation of our
executives is sufficient to motivate our  executives to enable the Company to be
competitive to both attract and retain executives,  which we believe is critical
to the Company's long term success and the creation of shareholder value.

     In  determining  base  salary,  we  consider an  individual's  performance,
experience  and  responsibilities.  Base  salary  creates a secure  base of cash
compensation,  which is competitive  in the industry.  With regard to individual
performance,  we rely to a large extent on the CEO's evaluation of an individual
executive officer's performance. Incentive compensation, consisting of both cash
incentives  and  long-term   incentives   (equity),   reflects  overall  Company
performance  and  operating  group  performance,  where  appropriate.  Long-term
incentives  previously  provided in the form of stock options vest over a period
of five years.  We believe  that equity based  compensation,  the value of which
depends  on the  Company's  future  performance  and  stock  price,  provides  a
continuous  incentive  to executive  officers and aligns their  interests to our
shareholders.

Why is the Company proposing to adopt the 2005 Equity Compensation Plan?

     The Company is seeking  shareholder  approval of the 2005 Plan  because the
1999 Plan,  while not  expiring  until March 31, 2009,  has only limited  shares
available  under it. As a result,  the 2005  Plan will  replace  the 1999  Plan,
subject to the approval of Company shareholders. Upon approval of the 2005 Plan,
no  additional  grants  will be made under the 1999 Plan other than  shares that
become  available  for  issuance  if an award  granted  thereunder  expires,  is
canceled or otherwise terminates without being exercised.

     The  purpose  of the 2005 Plan is to enable  Westwood  to offer  employees,
consultants,  officers and non-employee  directors equity based and cash awards.
The Company believes this will help the Company  attract,  retain and reward our
employees,  officers, consultants and non-employee directors, and strengthen the
mutuality of interests between such individuals and Westwood's shareholders.

     A complete  summary of the  material  provisions  of the 2005 Plan  appears
later in this proxy statement beginning on page 23 and the text of the 2005 Plan
appears at the end of this proxy statement as Annex A.

Summary
-------

     We believe that attracting and retaining talented and motivated  executives
and employees is important in creating  shareholder  value.  We will continue to
evaluate and update our  compensation  programs and policies to assure that they
enable the  Company to be  competitive  and  retain the best  talent.  It is our
intention to reward Company  employees and keep them performance  driven as well
as foster equity ownership. We believe our 2004 program met those objectives.

The Compensation Committee

The Compensation Committee consists of the following individuals:

Gerald Greenberg, Chair of the Compensation Committee
David L. Dennis
Joseph B. Smith

                                       15


Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation

     As stated above, the Company's  Compensation  Committee is comprised solely
of independent  outside  directors.  The Compensation  Committee consists of Mr.
Greenberg,   Mr.  Dennis  and  Mr.  Smith.   The  Company  has  no  interlocking
relationships or other transactions  involving any of our Compensation Committee
members that are required to be reported pursuant to applicable SEC rules.

                               EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

     The following is a list of the Company's executive officers:

     Norman J. Pattiz.......   The Company's Chairman of the Board.

     Shane Coppola..........   The Company's CEO and President.

     Charles I. Bortnick....   The Company's Co-Chief Operating Officer.

     Andrew Zaref...........   The Company's Executive Vice President and 
                               Chief Financial Officer.

     Peter Kosann...........   The Company's Co-Chief Operating Officer and 
                               President, Sales.

     The  professional  background  of the  executive  officers who are not also
directors of the Company follows:

Charles I. Bortnick

     Charles I.  Bortnick (age 51) has been Chief  Operating  Officer one of the
Company since August 2002. From September 1999 to July 2002, Mr. Bortnick served
as  Chief  Operating   Officer/President  of  Westwood's  Metro  Networks/Shadow
Broadcasting Services. From 1996 until the Westwood One/Metro Networks merger in
September 1999, Mr. Bortnick served as President of Metro Networks. Mr. Bortnick
is a board  member of the Radio  Advertising  Bureau  and the March of Dimes AIR
Awards.

Andrew Zaref

     Andrew Zaref (age 39) serves as the Chief Financial  Officer of the Company
and is responsible for the Company's financial affairs and shareholder relations
activities. Prior to joining the Company in January 2004, Mr. Zaref served as an
Audit Partner in the Information,  Communications, and Entertainment practice of
KPMG LLP. While at KPMG,  Mr. Zaref played a key role in advising  numerous high
profile media and  technology  clients.  Mr. Zaref is a CPA licensed in New York
State.

Peter Kosann

     Peter Kosann (age 35) has been  President,  Sales at Westwood One since May
2003 and  Co-Chief  Operating  Officer  since  April  2005.  Mr.  Kosann was the
Company's Executive Vice President - Network Advertising Sales from January 2001
to May 2003; Senior Vice President - Affiliate Sales and New Media from December
1999 to  January  2001 and Vice  President  -  Affiliate  Sales from May 1999 to
December  1999.  Mr.  Kosann was  employed by Bloomberg  Financial  Markets from
November  1992 to May 1999 in  several  media  sales  and  business  development
capacities.

Employment Agreements

     The Company has a written employment  agreement with Mr. Pattiz,  effective
October 27,  2003,  pursuant to which Mr.  Pattiz is to serve as Chairman of the
Board of the Company for a five-year term ending  November 30, 2008 at an annual
salary of $400,000.  The agreement also provides that Mr. Pattiz will receive an
annual  stock  option  grant to acquire  50,000  shares on December  1st of each
contract year and provides additional benefits which are standard for executives
in the industry.  The agreement  generally will be terminable by Mr. Pattiz upon
ninety days' written notice to the Company; it will be terminable by the Company
only in the event of death,  permanent and total disability,  or for "cause." In
the event of permanent  and total  disability,  Mr. Pattiz will receive his base

                                       16


salary  for the  following  twelve  months  and 75% of his base  salary  for the
remainder of the term of the  agreement.  In the event of a "change of control,"
as defined in the  agreement,  any  unvested  options  granted  pursuant to this
agreement will become  immediately  exercisable  and Mr. Pattiz will continue to
receive any base  compensation  he would have otherwise been entitled to receive
for the remaining term of the agreement. In addition, Mr. Pattiz has full "piggy
back registration rights" and limited demand registration rights with respect to
any and all of the Common Stock owned by Mr. Pattiz.

     The Company has a written  employment  agreement with Mr. Bortnick  through
December 31, 2006,  pursuant to which Mr.  Bortnick is to serve as the Company's
Chief Operating Officer.  Mr. Bortnick's agreement provides for an annual salary
of  $450,000,  $475,000 and  $500,000,  respectively,  and a bonus  potential of
$325,000,  $350,000,  and $350,000,  in 2004,  2005 and 2006,  respectively.  In
addition,  the agreement  provides  additional  benefits  which are standard for
executives  in the industry,  including  participation  in the  Company's  stock
option plan.  If the  agreement is not  renewed,  Mr.  Bortnick is entitled to a
payment  equivalent  to ninety days' base pay. The agreement  generally  will be
terminable by Mr.  Bortnick upon ninety days' written notice to the Company;  it
will be  terminable  by the Company  only in the event of death,  permanent  and
total disability, or for "cause".

     The Company has a written  employment  agreement  with Mr. Zaref  effective
January 1, 2004,  pursuant to which Mr. Zaref is to serve as the Chief Financial
Officer for a  three-year  term ending  December  31, 2006 at an initial  annual
salary of $350,000.  Mr. Zaref's  salary  increases 7% each January 1 during the
contract  term.  In addition to his salary Mr. Zaref is eligible for a potential
initial  annual bonus of $150,000 and stock option  grants as  determined by the
Compensation  Committee of the Board of  Directors.  In addition,  the Agreement
provides  additional  benefits  standard for  executives  in the  industry.  The
Agreement  is  terminable  by the Company in the event of death,  permanent  and
total disability or for "cause".

     The Company has a written employment  agreement with Mr. Kosann,  effective
May 1, 2003,  pursuant to which Mr. Kosann is to serve as the President of Sales
for a  three-year  term  ending  April 30, 2006 at an initial  annual  salary of
$425,000.  Mr.  Kosann's  annual  salary  increases 3% each January 1 during the
contract term. In addition to his salary, Mr. Kosann is eligible for a potential
annual  bonus  of  $575,000  and  stock  option  grants,  as  determined  by the
Compensation  Committee of the Board of  Directors.  In addition,  the agreement
provides  additional benefits which are standard for executives in the industry.
The agreement  generally  will be terminable by the Company only in the event of
death, permanent and total disability, or for "cause".


                                       17

                      EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION SUMMARY TABLE

     The  following  table sets forth the  compensation  received by each of the
Company's Chief Executive Officer and each of Company's other executive officers
(the "Named  Executive  Officers") for the years ending  December 31, 2004, 2003
and 2002.



                                                                                              

                                                                             Annual Compensation
                                  ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                               Long-Term
                                                                                             Compensation
                                                                                              Securities
Name and                          Fiscal                                 Other Annual         Underlying          All Other
Principal Position                 Year    Salary ($)   Bonus ($)      Compensation ($)       Options (#)       Compensation ($)
------------------                 ----    ----------   ---------      ----------------       ----------        ----------------
                                                                             (1)

Norman J. Pattiz                  2004      $400,000       --                --                50,000                 --
  Chairman of the Board           2003       492,000       --                --                50,000                 --
                                  2002       500,000       --                --                  --                   --

Shane Coppola (2)                 2004         --           --           $18,000 (3)          175,000                 --
  CEO and President               2003         --           --             6,000 (3)          250,000                 --

Charles I. Bortnick (4)           2004      $459,000     $50,000             --                75,000              $3,000 (7)
  Co-Chief Operating Officer      2003       425,000        --               --                75,000               3,000 (7)
                                  2002       420,000     150,000         $70,000               50,000               2,569 (7)

Andrew Zaref (5)                  2004      $350,000    $150,000             --               125,000                 --
  Chief Financial Officer

Peter Kosann (6)                  2004      $450,000     200,000             --                75,000              3,000 (7)
  Co-Chief Operating Officer      2003       399,000    $ 60,000             --                75,000              3,000 (7)
 and President, Sales


---------------------------------

(1)  This  column  includes  the  aggregate  cost to the Company (if such amount
     exceeded the lesser of $50,000 or 10% of such  officer's  salary and bonus)
     of providing various prerequisites and other personal benefits.
(2)  Mr.  Coppola  assumed his position  effective  May 14, 2003 pursuant to the
     terms of the Management Agreement between the Company and Infinity.  Except
     as set forth below, Mr. Coppola does not receive any cash compensation from
     the Company for serving as its CEO and President and received the following
     compensation  from  Infinity for 2003 and 2004:  (a) for 2004,  $581,000 in
     salary,  $582,000 in bonus  compensation and $4,000 in other  compensation;
     and (b) for 2003,  $342,000 in salary,  $100,000 in bonus  compensation and
     $2,000 in other  compensation.  Mr. Coppola was granted  250,000 options to
     purchase Common Stock in 2003 and 175,000 options in 2004.
(3)  All Other  Compensation  consists of an automobile  allowance of $1,500 per
     month  from the  Company.  
(4)  Appointed Chief Operating Officer of the Company in July, 2002.
(5)  Mr. Zaref was appointed Chief  Financial  Officer of the Company on January
     1, 2004.
(6)  Appointed  President,  Sales in May 2003 and Co-Chief  Operating Officer in
     April 2005.
(7)  All Other Compensation  consisted of Company  contributions to the employee
     Savings and Profit-Sharing Plan.

                                       18




     The following two tables provide information on stock option grants made to
the Named Executive  Officers in 2004, options exercised during 2004 and options
outstanding on December 31, 2004.

                        OPTION GRANTS IN FISCAL YEAR 2004                      



                                                                                  

                                         Individual Grants
                        ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                   Potential Realizable Value at
                                                                                  Assumed Annual Rates of Stock
                        Securities       % of Total                                Price Appreciation for Option
                        Underlying    Options Granted Exercise or                               Term
                          Options     to Employees in  Base Price   Expiration    ------------------------------
    Name                 Granted (#)   Fiscal Year (3) ($/Share)       Date            5% ($)           10% ($)
    ----                ------------  --------------- -----------   ----------    ------------------------------
Norman J. Pattiz          50,000            3.6%         23.16       12/01/14       $  728,260     $  1,845,554
Shane Coppola            175,000(1)        12.8%         20.50       10/05/14        2,256,159        5,717,551
Andrew Zaref              50,000(2)         3.6%         30.97        4/05/14          973,843        2,467,910
Andrew Zaref              75,000(1)         5.5%         20.50       10/05/14          966,925        2,450,379
Charles I. Bortnick       75,000(1)         5.5%         20.50       10/05/14          966,925        2,450,379
Peter Kosann              75,000(1)         5.5%         20.50       10/05/14          966,925        2,450,379

                        
---------------------------

(1)  These  options  were  granted  under the 1999 Plan on  October  5, 2004 and
     become  exercisable 20% per year on each  anniversary date between 2005 and
     2009.
(2)  These  options were granted under the 1999 Plan on April 5, 2004 and become
     exercisable 20% per year on each anniversary date between 2005 and 2009.
(3)  Percentage  calculations exclude the impact of a mandatory grant of 100,000
     options at $26.96 per share on May 13, 2004 (10,000 each to Messrs. Dennis,
     Greenberg,  Herdman,  Hollander, Holt, Lerman, Miles, Smith and Suleman and
     Ms.  Hummer)  which in accordance  with the terms of the 1999 Plan,  become
     exercisable 20% per year on each May 13 between 2005 and 2009.



                                                                                                 
                                          AGGREGATED OPTION EXERCISES IN FISCAL 2004
                                              AND FISCAL YEAR END OPTION VALUES



                                                                 Number of Securities
                             Shares                                  Underlying                      Value of Unexercised,
                            Acquired            Value            Unexercised Options                 In-the-Money Options
    Name                  On Exercise (#)     Realized ($)         at Fiscal Year End (#)          at Fiscal Year End ($) (1)
    ----                  ---------------     ------------     ------------------------------    ------------------------------
                                                               Exercisable      Unexercisable    Exercisable      Unexercisable
                                                               -----------      -------------    -----------      -------------
Norman J. Pattiz                 --               --             322,000            90,000        4,019,380         188,500

Shane Coppola                    --               --             230,000           420,000          939,600       1,389,550

Charles I. Bortnick              --               --             215,000           210,000          939,600         746,550

Peter Kosann                     --               --             117,000           192,000          219,740         581,290

Andrew Zaref                     --               --                --             125,000           --             482,250



(1)  On December 31, 2004, the closing per share price for the Company's  Common
     Stock on the NYSE was $26.93.

                                       19




                      Equity Compensation Plan Information

     The following  table contains  information  regarding  equity  compensation
plans and  warrants  issued to Infinity  under the  Management  Agreement  as of
December 31, 2004:



                                                                                                  


                                      Number of securities to be
                                       issued upon exercise of      Weighted average exercise       Number of securities
                                         outstanding options,          price of outstanding        remaining available for
       Plan Category                    warrants and rights       options, warrants and rights        future issuance
       -------------                    -------------------       ----------------------------        ---------------

Equity compensation plans
approved by security holders
   Options (1)                                 7,996,018                      $24.90                       600,345
   Warrants (2)                                4,500,000                       49.44                         N/A

Equity compensation plans not
approved by security holders                      -                              -                            -
                                              ----------                                                   -------
Total                                         12,496,018                                                   600,345
                                              ==========                                                   =======



(1)  Options  included herein were granted or are available for grant as part of
     the Company's 1989 Plan and/or 1999 Plan that were approved by shareholders
     of the Company.  The Company's  1999 Plan provides for mandatory  grants of
     options to members of the Company's  Board of Directors on an annual basis.
     The  Compensation  Committee  of the Board of Directors  approves  periodic
     option  grants to  executive  officers and other  employees  based on their
     contributions to the operations of the Company.

(2)  Warrants  included herein were granted to Infinity in conjunction  with the
     Management  Agreement,  and were approved by shareholders of the Company on
     May 29, 2002. None of the warrants included herein constitute  compensation
     to individual employees, directors, consultants or officers of the Company.
     Of the seven  warrants  issued,  two  warrants to purchase an  aggregate of
     2,000,000  shares of Common Stock each have an exercise price of $43.11 and
     $48.36,  respectively,  and become exercisable only if the average price of
     the  Company's   Common  Stock  reaches  a  price  of  $64.67  and  $77.38,
     respectively,  for at least 20 out of 30  consecutive  trading days for any
     period throughout the ten year term of the warrants.  Of the remaining five
     warrants to purchase an aggregate of 2,500,000  shares of Common Stock, the
     exercise  price for each of the five  warrants is equal to $38.87,  $44.70,
     $51.40, $59.11 and $67.98,  respectively.  The five warrants have a term of
     10 years  (only if they  become  exercisable)  and  become  exercisable  on
     January 2, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009, respectively. However, in order
     for the warrants to become exercisable,  the average price of the Company's
     Common  Stock for each of the 15  trading  days  prior to January 2 of such
     year  (commencing  on  January 2, 2005 with  respect  to the first  500,000
     warrant  tranche and each  January 2 thereafter  for each of the  remaining
     four  warrants)  must be at least equal to both the  exercise  price of the
     warrant and 120% of the corresponding prior year 15 day trading average. In
     the case of the $38.87 warrants,  the Company's average stock price for the
     15 trading  days  prior to January 2, 2005 must equal or exceed  $40.56 for
     the  warrants to become  exercisable.  The  average  stock price for the 15
     trading days prior to January 2, 2005 did not equal or exceed  $40.56,  and
     therefore, this warrant did not become exercisable.

                                       20







                      SHAREHOLDER RETURN PERFORMANCE GRAPH

     The performance graph below compares the performance of the Company's
Common Stock to the Dow Jones Equity Market Index and the Dow Jones Media
Industry Index for the Company's last five and ten calendar years. The graph
assumes that $100 was invested in the Company's Common Stock and each index on
December 31, 1999 and December 31, 1994.

     The following tables set forth the closing price of the Company's Common
Stock at the end of each of the last five and ten calendar years.

                  FIVE-YEAR CUMULATIVE TOTAL SHAREHOLDER RETURN

CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN
-----------------------


                                                                               

  Base Year                                1999       2000      2001       2002       2003       2004
                                           ----       ----      ----       ----       ----       ----

  Westwood One                             $100       $51       $79        $98        $90         $71
  DJ Equity Market                         $100       $91       $80        $62        $81         $91
  DJ Media Industry                        $100       $71       $65        $44        $58         $59
  Westwood One Closing Stock Price         $38.00     $19.31    $30.05     $37.36     $34.21      $26.93




                                       21







                  TEN-YEAR CUMULATIVE TOTAL SHAREHOLDER RETURN

CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN
-----------------------


                                                                                       


Base Year                1994     1995    1996     1997      1998      1999      2000      2001     2002      2003      2004
                         ----     ----    ----     ----      ----      ----      ----      ----     ----      ----      ----

Westwood One             $100     $145    $171     $381      $313      $779      $396      $616     $766      $702      $552
DJ Equity Market         $100     $137    $167     $220      $274      $337      $306      $269     $210      $274      $307
DJ Media Industry        $100     $129    $146     $228      $294      $468      $330      $304     $208      $273      $278
Westwood One Closing
Stock Price              $4.88    $7.06   $8.31    $18.56    $15.25    $38.00    $19.31    $30.05   $37.36    $34.21    $26.93





                                       22





                       PROPOSAL 1 - ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
                       ----------------------------------

     At the annual meeting,  holders of Common Stock,  voting alone,  will elect
the  independent  Class III  directors  and holders of Common  Stock and Class B
Stock, voting together, will elect the other Class III directors, for three-year
terms, until their successors are elected and qualified.  The Board of Directors
has nominated Gerald Greenberg  (independent  director),  Steven A. Lerman, Joel
Hollander and Robert K. Herdman (independent director) to serve three-year terms
ending in 2008.  All  nominees  currently  serve as Class III  directors  of the
Company.  Unless  otherwise  indicated on any proxy,  the persons named as proxy
voters on the enclosed  proxy card intend to vote the stock  represented by each
proxy to elect these  nominees.  The nominees are willing to serve as directors,
but should any or all refuse to or be unable to serve,  the named proxy  holders
will vote for one or more other persons nominated by the Board of Directors.

     The  election of Messrs.  Greenberg,  Lerman,  Hollander  and Herdman  will
require the affirmative  vote of a majority of the votes entitled to be cast and
represented  in person or by proxy at the meeting.  With respect to the election
of Messrs.  Lerman and  Hollander,  the Common  Stock and the Class B Stock vote
together  as a class.  With  respect to the  election of Mr.  Greenberg  and Mr.
Herdman, the Common Stock votes separately as a class and the Class B Stock is
not entitled to vote.

     THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS THAT  SHAREHOLDERS VOTE FOR THE ELECTION
OF GERALD GREENBERG,  STEVEN A. LERMAN,  JOEL HOLLANDER AND ROBERT K. HERDMAN AS
CLASS III DIRECTORS.

                PROPOSAL 2 - SELECTION OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
                -------------------------------------------------

     Action  will be taken at the  annual  meeting to ratify  the  selection  of
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP as  independent  accountants  of the Company for the
fiscal year ending  December 31, 2004.  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP has been the
independent  accountants  of the  Company  since 1984.  The Company  knows of no
direct or material indirect financial interest of PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP in
the Company or of any  connection  of that firm with the Company in the capacity
of promoter, underwriter, voting trustee, officer or employee.

Representation of Independent Accountants at Annual Meeting

     A  representative  of  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP will be  present  at the
annual  meeting,  will have an opportunity to make a statement if they so desire
and will be available to respond to appropriate questions.

     The  affirmative  vote of a majority of the Common Stock and Class B Stock,
voting  together  as a single  class,  represented  in person or by proxy at the
annual  meeting is required to ratify the  selection  of  PricewaterhouseCoopers
LLP.

     THE BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS  THAT  SHAREHOLDERS  VOTE TO RATIFY THE
SELECTION OF PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS LLP.

  PROPOSAL 3 - APPROVAL OF THE WESTWOOD ONE, INC. 2005 EQUITY COMPENSATION PLAN
  -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
     The Board of  Directors  of the Company  unanimously  has  approved  and is
submitting  for  shareholder   approval  the  Westwood  One,  Inc.  2005  Equity
Compensation  Plan (the "2005  Plan").  The text of the 2005 Plan appears at the
end of this proxy  statement as Annex A. The following  description  of the 2005
Plan should be read in  conjunction  with,  and is  qualified in its entirety by
reference to, the full text of the 2005 Plan.

     On March 15, 2005, the Board of Directors  approved the 2005 Plan,  subject
to shareholder approval. The following description of the 2005 Plan is a summary
of its material  provisions and is qualified in its entirety by reference to the
2005 Plan.

     Under this  proposal,  the Company is seeking  shareholder  approval of the
2005 Plan because the 1999 Plan,  while not expiring  until March 31, 2009,  has
only  limited  shares  available  under it. As a result,  the Board of Directors
approved the 2005 Plan to replace the 1999 Plan,  subject to the approval of our
shareholders.  Upon approval of the 2005 Plan, no additional grants will be made
under the 1999 Plan other than shares that become  available  for issuance if an
award granted thereunder  expires,  is canceled or otherwise  terminates without
being exercised.

                                       23



     The  purpose  of the 2005 Plan is to enable  Westwood  to offer  employees,
consultants,  officers and non-employee  directors equity based and cash awards.
We  believe  this  will  help us  attract,  retain  and  reward  our  employees,
consultants,  officers and non-employee directors,  and strengthen the mutuality
of interests between such individuals and Westwood's shareholders.

Administration

     The 2005 Plan will be administered by the  Compensation  Committee (or such
other  committee  or  subcommittee  to  which  the  Compensation  Committee  has
delegated any authority),  which consists of two or more non-employee directors,
each of whom is intended to be a  non-employee  director  under Rule 16b-3 under
the Exchange Act, an outside  director  under Section  162(m) of the Code and an
independent  director  for  purposes of the NYSE rules (the  "Committee").  With
respect  to the  application  of the 2005 Plan to  non-employee  directors,  the
Committee is the Board of Directors.

     The Committee  has the  authority to establish the terms and  conditions of
individual awards, which will be set forth in written agreements consistent with
the 2005 Plan. Awards under the 2005 Plan may not be made on or after the 10year
anniversary  of the date the 2005 Plan is approved by  shareholders,  but awards
granted prior to such date may extend beyond that date.

Eligibility and Types of Awards

     Under the 2005 Plan,  employees,  consultants,  officers  and  non-employee
directors of Westwood and its  affiliates  are eligible to receive the following
types of  discretionary  awards:  stock options  (incentive and  non-qualified),
stock   appreciation   rights,   restricted   stock,   restricted  stock  units,
performance-based  awards and any other rights or interests relating to Westwood
common stock (including  deferred stock units and dividend  equivalent  rights).
Eligibility  for awards under the 2005 Plan is determined by the  Committee,  in
its sole discretion.

Available Shares

     A maximum  of  9,200,000  shares of Common  Stock may be issued or used for
reference  purposes under the 2005 Plan. For purposes of this limit,  each share
of  Common   Stock   issued   pursuant   to  an  award  of   restricted   stock,
performance-based  awards,  restricted  stock units or deferred stock units will
count as three shares.

     The maximum number of shares subject to an option, stock appreciation right
or  any   equity-based   award  that  is  intended   to  be   "performance-based
compensation"  within  the  meaning  of  Section  162(m) of the Code that may be
granted to an individual  during any three year period cannot exceed  1,500,000,
of which up to 500,000 may be used for restricted stock,  restricted stock units
and equity-based  performance awards that are intended to be  "performance-based
compensation."  With respect to non-equity based  performance  awards settled in
cash that are  intended  to be  "performance-based  compensation,"  the  maximum
amount that may be paid to a participant during each fiscal year with respect to
such awards is $5,000,000.

     The  Committee  may, in  accordance  with the terms of the 2005 Plan,  make
appropriate  adjustments  to the  number  of shares  available  for the grant of
awards   and  the  terms  of   outstanding   awards  to  reflect   any   merger,
reorganization,  consolidation,  recapitalization,  stock dividend, stock split,
reverse  stock  split,  spin-off  or  similar  transaction  or other  change  in
corporate structure.

Awards under the 2005 Plan

     Stock  Options.  Options  may be in the  form of  incentive  stock  options
("ISOs") or  non-qualified  stock options,  but options  granted to non-employee
directors and employees of its subsidiaries that do not qualify as a "subsidiary
corporation"  (within  the  meaning  of  Section  424 of the  Code)  may only be
non-qualified  stock options.  The Committee will determine the number of shares
subject to each option,  the term of each option (which may not exceed 10 years,
or five years in the case of an ISO granted to a 10% shareholder),  the exercise
price,  and the other  material  terms of each  option.  No  option  may have an
exercise  price less than the fair market  value of Common  Stock at the time of
grant  (or,  in the case of an ISO  granted to a 10%  shareholder,  110% of fair
market value).

                                       24


     Unless  otherwise  determined at grant,  options  granted to an employee or
consultant  are  subject  to the  following  terms:  (i)  the  options  vest  in
accordance with the vesting schedule  determined by the Committee;  and (ii) all
then vested  options  remain  exercisable  as follows,  subject to the  original
stated term of the option:  (1) three years in the event of retirement;  (2) one
year in the  event of death  (in which  case the  participant's  estate or legal
representative  may  exercise  such  option);  or (3) three months for any other
termination (other than for cause).

     Unless  otherwise  determined at grant,  options  granted to a non-employee
director are subject to the following  terms: (i) options vest one-third on each
anniversary  of the grant date if the  participant  remains a  director  on each
applicable  vesting date; (ii) all  outstanding  options  immediately  vest upon
retirement, failure to be re-elected or death; and (iii) all then vested options
remain  exercisable  as  follows,  subject to the  original  stated  term of the
option: (1) five years in the event of retirement;  or (2) one year in the event
of death (in which case the  participant's  estate or legal  representative  may
exercise such option),  voluntary  resignation that is not considered retirement
or failure to be re-elected.

     Upon  a  participant's  termination  for  cause,  all  outstanding  options
(whether vested or unvested) terminate.

     Upon the exercise of an option,  the optionholder  must make payment of the
full exercise price, either: (i) in cash, check, bank draft or money order; (ii)
to the extent  permitted  by law and the  Committee,  through  the  delivery  of
irrevocable  instructions  to a broker  reasonably  acceptable  to  Westwood  to
deliver  promptly an amount equal to the aggregate  purchase  price; or (iii) on
such other terms and conditions as may be acceptable to the Committee (including
the  relinquishment  of options or payment in shares of Westwood stock that have
been  owned by the  optionholder  for a  period  of time as may be  required  by
applicable accounting standards to avoid a charge to Westwood's earnings).

     Stock Appreciation  Rights ("SARs").  A SAR is a right to receive a payment
either in cash,  Common Stock and/or other property equal in value to the excess
of the fair  market  value of one share of Common  Stock on the date of exercise
over the exercise  price per share of the SAR. The Committee  will determine the
terms and conditions of SARs at the time of grant, but, generally,  SARs will be
subject to the same terms and conditions as stock options (as described above).

     Restricted Stock. Restricted stock may vest over time, based on performance
criteria or other factors (including, without limitation, performance goals that
are intended to comply with the performance-based  compensation  exception under
Section 162(m) of the Code), as determined by the Committee at grant. Restricted
stock may also be  granted  based  upon the  attainment  of  performance  goals.
Restricted  stock may be granted for no cash  consideration  or for such minimum
consideration as may be required by applicable law. Unless otherwise  determined
by the  Committee  at  grant,  upon a  participant's  termination  all  unvested
restricted stock will be forfeited.

     Restricted  Stock Units.  A restricted  stock unit is a unit of measurement
equivalent  to one  share of  Common  Stock  that  becomes  nonforfeitable  upon
satisfying  certain terms and  conditions,  as determined  by the  Committee.  A
restricted  stock  unit  does  not  have  any  of  the  attendant  rights  of  a
shareholder,  except it may have  certain  dividend  rights as  specified in the
grant. A restricted  stock unit may be distributed in Common Stock,  cash and/or
other property as determined by the Committee.  Restricted  stock units may vest
over time, based on performance  criteria or other factors  (including,  without
limitation,   performance   goals  that  are   intended   to  comply   with  the
performance-based  compensation  exception under Section 162(m) of the Code), as
determined by the Committee at grant. Restricted stock units may also be granted
based upon the  attainment of  performance  goals and may be granted for no cash
consideration or for such minimum consideration as may be required by applicable
law. Unless  otherwise  determined by the Committee at grant,  restricted  stock
units will have a vesting period of not less than one year.

     To the extent permitted by the Committee,  a participant may elect to defer
the payment of  restricted  stock units in a manner that  complies  with Section
409A of the Code.

     Performance Awards. A performance award is a right to receive Common Stock,
cash and/or  other  property  based upon the  attainment  of  performance  goals
(including,  without  limitation,  performance goals that are intended to comply
with the  performance-based  compensation  exception under Section 162(m) of the
Code), as determined by the Committee.

     Unless  otherwise  determined by the Committee,  the grant,  vesting and/or
exercisablity of performance  awards is subject to the attainment of performance
goals.  The  Committee may adjust the  performance  goals as a result of certain
corporate events or changes in accounting standards.

                                       25



     Other Awards.  The 2005 Plan authorizes the Committee to grant other rights
or interests relating to shares of Common Stock (including, deferred stock units
and dividend equivalent rights).

     Deferrals.  The Committee may permit any participant under the 2005 Plan to
defer the  payment or vesting of any award  subject to the terms and  conditions
imposed by the Committee.  The Committee may also permit non-employee  directors
to defer all or a portion of their  compensation  in the form of deferred shares
under  the 2005  Plan.  To the  extent  applicable,  any such  deferral  will be
structured in a manner to comply with Section 409A of the Code.

Performance Goals

     As noted above,  performance-based  awards granted under the 2005 Plan that
are  intended  to satisfy the  performance-based  compensation  exception  under
Section  162(m) of the Code  will be  granted  or vest  based on  attainment  of
specified  performance  goals  established by the Committee.  These  performance
goals will be based on one or more of the  following  criteria  selected  by the
Committee: (i) enterprise value or value creation targets; (ii) operating income
before  depreciation and amortization;  (iii) operating  income;  (iv) free cash
flow; (v) net income; (vi) net income per share; (vii) revenues; (viii) earnings
per  share;  (ix) total  shareholder  return;  (x) return on equity;  (xi) share
price;  (xii)  return in excess of cost of capital;  (xiii)  profit in excess of
cost of capital;  (xiv) return on assets;  (xv) return on invested  capital;  or
(xvi) operating  margin,  or any combination  thereof,  or in reference to other
companies or indices.

Change in Control

     Unless otherwise  determined by the Committee at grant,  upon a termination
of employment or consultancy  without "cause" within 24 months after a change in
control of Westwood  (as defined in the 2005 Plan),  all vesting and  forfeiture
conditions,   restrictions  and  limitations  in  effect  with  respect  to  any
outstanding   award  will  immediately   lapse  and  any  unvested  awards  will
automatically become fully vested and immediately exercisable in their entirety.
Unless otherwise  determined by the Committee at grant,  any outstanding  awards
granted  to a  non-employee  director  will  immediately  vest  upon a change in
control without regard to a termination of directorship.

     In its sole  discretion,  the Committee may provide that each option or SAR
will,  upon the change in control,  be  cancelled in exchange for a cash payment
equal  to the  amount  by  which  the per  share  price  paid in the  applicable
transaction for Westwood common stock exceeds the purchase price per award.

     In the  event of a merger or  consolidation  in which  Westwood  is not the
surviving  corporation  or in the event of a  transaction  that  results  in the
acquisition  of  substantially  all of  Westwood's  common stock or assets,  the
Committee  may  elect to  terminate  all  outstanding  and  unexercised  awards;
provided,  that during the period from  notification of such  termination to the
date of  consummation  of the  relevant  transaction  (which must be at least 20
days) each such  participant  will have the right to exercise  all of his or her
awards in full (without regard to any restrictions on exercisability).


Amendment and Termination

     The  Committee  may amend,  suspend or terminate the 2005 Plan at any time,
provided  that  no such  action  will be  made  in  certain  circumstances  when
shareholder approval or participant consent is required as provided in the Plan.

Nontransferability

     Awards  granted under the 2005 Plan are not  transferable  by a participant
other than by will or by the laws of descent and  distribution,  except that the
Committee may permit transferability on a general or specific basis.

Material U.S. Federal Income Tax Consequences

     The  following   discussion  of  the  principal  U.S.  federal  income  tax
consequences  with respect to options  under the 2005 Plan is based on statutory
authority and judicial and administrative interpretations as of the date of this
proxy  statement,  which  are  subject  to  change  at any time  (possibly  with
retroactive effect) and may vary in individual circumstances. Therefore, the

                                       26

following is designed to provide a general  understanding  of the federal income
tax  consequences  (state,  local and other tax  consequences  are not addressed
below).  This discussion is limited to the U.S.  federal income tax consequences
to  individuals  who are  citizens or  residents  of the U.S.,  other than those
individuals who are taxed on a residence basis in a foreign country.

     THE FOLLOWING  SUMMARY IS INCLUDED HEREIN FOR GENERAL  INFORMATION ONLY AND
DOES NOT PURPORT TO ADDRESS  ALL THE TAX  CONSIDERATIONS  THAT MAY BE  RELEVANT.
EACH  RECIPIENT  OF A GRANT IS URGED TO CONSULT HIS OR HER OWN TAX ADVISOR AS TO
THE SPECIFIC TAX CONSEQUENCES TO SUCH RECIPIENT OF THE GRANT AND THE DISPOSITION
OF COMMON STOCK.

     Incentive  Stock Options.  Under current federal income tax laws, the grant
or exercise of an ISO generally has no income tax  consequences for the optionee
or  Westwood.  However,  the amount by which the fair market value of the common
stock acquired  pursuant to the exercise of an ISO exceeds the exercise price is
an adjustment item for purposes of alternative minimum tax.

     The aggregate fair market value of common stock  (determined at the time of
grant) with  respect to which ISOs can be  exercisable  for the first time by an
optionee  during any calendar  year cannot exceed  $100,000.  Any excess will be
treated as a non-qualified stock option.

     The sale of common  stock  received  pursuant to the  exercise of an option
that  satisfied  all of the ISO  requirements,  as well  as the  holding  period
requirement  described  below,  will result in a long-term  capital gain or loss
equal to the difference between the amount realized on the sale and the exercise
price. To receive ISO treatment, an optionee must be an employee of Westwood (or
certain  affiliates) at all times during the period beginning on the date of the
grant of the ISO and ending on the day three months before the date of exercise,
and the optionee must not dispose of the common stock purchased  pursuant to the
exercise  of an option  either (i) within two years after the option is granted,
or (ii) within one year after the date of exercise. Any gain or loss realized on
a subsequent disposition of the shares will be treated as long-term capital gain
or loss  (depending  on the  applicable  holding  period).  Westwood will not be
entitled to a tax  deduction  upon the exercise of an ISO, nor upon a subsequent
disposition of the shares, unless the disposition occurs prior to the expiration
of the holding period described above.

     In  general,  if  the  optionee  does  not  satisfy  these  holding  period
requirements,  any gain equal to the  difference  between the exercise price and
the fair market value of the common stock at exercise  (or, if a lesser  amount,
the amount  realized on  disposition  over the exercise  price) will  constitute
ordinary  income.  In the event of such a disposition  before the  expiration of
either holding period described above,  Westwood will be entitled to a deduction
at that time equal to the amount of ordinary income  recognized by the optionee.
Any gain in excess of the amount  recognized by the optionee as ordinary  income
would  be  taxed  to the  optionee  as  short-term  or  long-term  capital  gain
(depending on the applicable holding period).

     Non-Qualified  Stock  Options.  In general,  an optionee will  recognize no
taxable income upon the grant of a non-qualified  stock option and Westwood will
not  receive  a  deduction  at the  time  of  such  grant.  Upon  exercise  of a
non-qualified stock option, an optionee generally will recognize ordinary income
in an amount equal to the excess of the fair market value of the common stock on
the date of exercise  over the exercise  price.  Upon a  subsequent  sale of the
common  stock  by the  optionee,  the  optionee  will  recognize  short-term  or
long-term capital gain or loss, depending upon his holding period for the common
stock.  Westwood  will  generally  be  allowed a  deduction  equal to the amount
recognized by the optionee as ordinary income.

     Section  162(m) of the Code.  Section 162(m) of the Code denies a deduction
to any publicly  held  corporation  for  compensation  paid to certain  "covered
employees"  in its  taxable  year to the extent that such  compensation  exceeds
$1,000,000.  "Covered  employees" are a company's chief executive officer on the
last day of the taxable  year and any other  individual  whose  compensation  is
required  to be  reported  to  shareholders  in its  proxy  statement  under the
Exchange  Act.  Compensation  paid  under  certain  qualified  performance-based
compensation  arrangements,  which (among other things) provide for compensation
based  on  preestablished   performance  goals  established  by  a  compensation
committee that is comprised  solely of two or more "outside  directors",  is not
considered in determining whether a "covered  employee's"  compensation  exceeds
$l,000,000.  It is intended that certain awards under the 2005 Plan will satisfy
these  requirements so that the income recognized in connection with awards will
not be  included  in a  "covered  employee's"  compensation  for the  purpose of
determining whether such individual's compensation exceeds $1,000,000.

                                       27


     Parachute  Payments.  In the event that the  payment of any award under the
2005 Plan is  accelerated  because of a change in ownership  (as defined in Code
Section  280G(b)(2)) and such payment of an award, either alone or together with
any other payments made to certain  participants,  constitute parachute payments
under Section 280G of the Code, then subject to certain exceptions, a portion of
such payments would be  nondeductible  to Westwood and the participant  would be
subject to a 20% excise tax on such portion of the payment.

Future Plan Awards

     Because  future  awards under the 2005 Plan will be based upon  prospective
factors  including  the nature of  services  to be  rendered  and a  recipient's
potential  contributions  to the success of Westwood,  actual  awards  cannot be
determined at this time.

     The last  reported  sales price for Common Stock as reported on the NYSE on
April 19, 2005 was $19.71 per share.

Vote Required

The affirmative vote of a majority of the votes cast by Westwood's  shareholders
in person or  represented  by proxy and entitled to vote on the 2005 Plan at the
Westwood annual meeting is required to approve this Proposal.

     THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS THAT  SHAREHOLDERS VOTE FOR THE APPROVAL
OF THE 2005 EQUITY COMPENSATION PLAN.

                                  OTHER MATTERS

The Board of Directors does not intend to bring other matters before the meeting
except items required to conduct the meeting.  In addition,  the Company has not
received  notice from any  shareholder of an intent to present a proposal at the
meeting.  On any matter  properly  brought before the meeting by the Board or by
others,  the  persons  named as  proxies  in the  accompanying  proxy,  or their
substitutes will vote in accordance with their best judgment.

                                       28



                                  SOLICITATION

     The  cost  of  preparing,  assembling,  printing  and  mailing  this  proxy
statement  and the  accompanying  proxy card will be borne by the  Company.  The
Company has  requested  banks and  brokers to solicit  their  customers  who are
beneficial owners of Common Stock listed of record in the names of the banks and
brokers,  and  will  reimburse  these  banks  and  brokers  for  the  reasonable
out-of-pocket  expenses of their  solicitations.  The original  solicitation  of
proxies  by  mail  may be  supplemented  by  telephone,  telegram  and  personal
solicitation  by officers and other  regular  employees  of the Company,  but no
additional  compensation will be paid on account of these additional activities.
MacKenzie  Partners  may  solicit  proxies  by mail,  telephone,  telegraph  and
personal  solicitation,  and will  request  banks,  brokers and other  nominees,
fiduciaries and custodians nominally holding shares of Common Stock of record to
forward proxy soliciting  material to the beneficial owners of such shares.  For
these services,  the Company will pay MacKenzie  Partners a fee estimated not to
exceed $3,500, plus reimbursement for expenses.

                         SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS FOR 2006

     Under the rules of the SEC, any shareholder proposal intended for inclusion
in the proxy material for the Annual Meeting of  Shareholders to be held in 2006
must be  received  by the  Company  by  December  31,  2005 to be  eligible  for
inclusion in such proxy material. Proposals should be addressed to Andrew Zaref,
Executive Vice  President and Chief  Financial  Officer,  Westwood One, Inc., 40
West 57th Street, 5th Floor, New York, NY 10019.  Proposals must comply with the
proxy rules of the SEC relating to shareholder proposals in order to be included
in the proxy  materials.  Additionally,  the  Company's  proxy  holders  for the
Company's 2006 Annual Meeting of Shareholders will have discretionary  authority
to vote on any shareholder proposal that is presented at such annual meeting but
that is not included in the  Company's  proxy  materials,  unless notice of such
proposal  is  received by the  Secretary  of the Company on or before  March 30,
2006.


                                              By Order of the Board of Directors



                                              /S/ DAVID HILLMAN
                                              -----------------
                                              David Hillman
                                              Assistant Secretary


New York, New York
April 29, 2005
                Westwood One, Inc. 2005 Equity Compensation Plan

SECTION  1.  PURPOSE  The  purpose  of  the  Westwood   One,  Inc.  2005  Equity
Compensation Plan (the "Plan") is to furnish a material  incentive to Employees,
officers, Consultants and Directors of the Company or an Affiliate and by making
available to them the benefits of common stock  ownership in the Company through
stock options and other awards.  It is believed that these increased  incentives
stimulate the efforts and continued  success of the Company and its  affiliates,
as well as assist in the  recruitment of Employees,  Consultants,  Directors and
officers of the Company or an Affiliate.

SECTION 2.  DEFINITIONS As used in the Plan, the following  terms shall have the
meanings set forth below:

(a)  "Affiliate" shall mean each of the following:  (a) any Subsidiary;  (b) any
     Parent;  (c)  any  corporation,   trade  or  business  (including,  without
     limitation,  a partnership or limited liability  company) which is directly
     or indirectly controlled 50% or more (whether by ownership of stock, assets
     or an equivalent  ownership  interest or voting interest) by the Company or
     one of its Affiliates; and (d) any other entity in which the Company or any
     of its Affiliates has a material equity interest and which is designated as
     an "Affiliate" by resolution of the Committee.
(b)  "Award" shall mean any Option,  Stock Appreciation Right,  Restricted Stock
     Award,  Performance  Award,  Restricted  Stock  Unit,  or any other  right,
     interest  or option  relating  to Shares  (including,  without  limitation,
     deferred stock units and dividend  equivalent rights), as determined by the
     Committee.  The Committee may, in its  discretion,  permit a Participant to
     defer the payment or vesting of any Award solely to the extent permitted by
     Section 409A of the Code.
(c)  "Award  Agreement"  shall mean any  written  agreement,  contract  or other
     instrument  or  document  evidencing  any Award  granted  by the  Committee
     hereunder,  which in the sole and absolute discretion of the Committee may,
     but need not, be signed or acknowledged by the Company and the Participant.
(d)  "Board" shall mean the Board of Directors of the Company.
(e)  "Cause"  shall  mean  with  respect  to  a  Participant's   Termination  of
     Employment or Termination of  Consultancy,  the following:  (a) in the case
     where there is no employment  agreement,  consulting  agreement,  change in
     control  agreement or similar agreement in effect between the Company or an
     Affiliate  and the  Participant  at the time of the  grant of the Award (or
     where there is such an agreement  but it does not define  "cause" (or words
     of like import)),  termination  due to a Participant's  dishonesty,  fraud,
     moral  turpitude or willful  misconduct,  as determined by the Committee in
     its sole  discretion;  or (b) in the  case  where  there  is an  employment
     agreement,  consulting  agreement,  change in control  agreement or similar
     agreement in effect between the Company or an Affiliate and the Participant
     at the time of the grant of the Award  that  defines  "cause"  (or words of
     like import), "cause" as defined under such agreement;  provided,  however,
     that with regard to any  agreement  under which the  definition  of "cause"
     only  applies on  occurrence  of a change in control,  such  definition  of
     "cause" shall not apply until a change in control  actually takes place and
     then only with  regard  to a  termination  thereafter.  With  respect  to a
     Participant's Termination of Directorship,  "cause" means an act or failure
     to act that  constitutes  cause for removal of a director under  applicable
     Delaware law.
(f)  "Change in Control" shall mean the  occurrence of any of the  following:(i)
     the  acquisition by any Person (as  hereinafter  defined) of 35% or more of
     the  outstanding  Shares (the  "Outstanding  Company Stock") (other than an
     acquisition by the Company or any employee  benefit plan (or related trust)
     sponsored  or  maintained  by the Company or any Person that  controls,  is
     controlled by or is under common control within the Company or other than a
     Non-Qualifying  Business Combination (as defined below));  (ii) individuals
     who, as of the Effective Date constitute the Board (the "Incumbent Board"),
     cease  for any  reason  to  constitute  at least a  majority  of the  Board
     provided that,  for purposes of this Section,  any individual who becomes a
     director subsequent to the Effective Date whose election, or nomination for
     election by the Company's stockholders,  was approved by a vote of at least
     a majority of the directors then  comprising  the Incumbent  Board shall be
     considered  as though such  individual  who initially  assumes  office as a
     result of an actual or  threatened  election  contest  with  respect to the
     election or removal of directors or other actual or threatened solicitation
     of proxies or  consents  by or on behalf of a Person  other than the Board;
     (iii) consummation of a reorganization,  merger or consolidation or sale or
     other  disposition of all or substantially all of the assets of the Company
     or the  acquisition of assets or stock of another  corporation (a "Business
     Combination"),  in each case, unless,  following such Business Combination,
     the  Persons  who  had  Beneficial  Ownership  (as  defined  below)  of the
     Outstanding  Company Stock immediately  prior to such Business  Combination
     have Beneficial  Ownership  immediately  following the consummation of such
     Business  Combination,  directly  or  indirectly,  of more  than 50% of the
     combined voting power of the then outstanding  securities  entitled to vote
     generally  in the election of  directors  of the  corporation  resulting or
     surviving from such Business Combination,  including, without limitation, a
     corporation  which as a result of such  transaction owns the Company or all
     or substantially all of the Company's assets either directly or through one
     or more  subsidiaries (the "Surviving  Entity"),  in substantially the same
     proportions  as  their  ownership   immediately   prior  to  such  Business
     Combination of the Outstanding  Company Stock (a Business  Combination that
     satisfies this exception shall be a "Non-Qualifying Business Combination");
     (iv) approval by the stockholders of the Company of a complete  liquidation
     or  dissolution  of the  Company;  or (v)  the  consummation  of any  other
     transaction involving a significant issuance of the Company's securities, a
     change in the  composition  of the Board or other  material  event that the
     Board determines to be a Change in Control for purposes of this Section.
                                      A-1

     Notwithstanding  the  foregoing  provisions  of  this  definition,   unless
     otherwise  determined by the Board, no Change in Control shall be deemed to
     have  occurred  if (1) a  Participant  is a member  of a group  that  first
     announces a proposal  which,  if  successful,  would  result in a Change in
     Control  and  which  proposal  (including  any  modifications  thereof)  is
     ultimately  successful,  (2) the Participant acquires a two percent (2%) or
     more equity  interest in the entity which  ultimately  acquires the Company
     pursuant to the  transaction  described in clause (1) above;  or (3) to the
     extent Section 409A of the Code is applicable, such event is not considered
     to be a "Change in Control Event" for purposes of Section 409A of the Code.

     For purposes of this  definition  of Change in Control,  "Person"  means an
     individual,  partnership, joint venture corporation,  trust, unincorporated
     organization, government or agency or political subdivision thereof), group
     (within the meaning of Section 13(d)(3) or 14(d)(2) of the Exchange Act) or
     any other entity,  and "Beneficial  Ownership" means  beneficial  ownership
     within the meaning of Rule 13d-3 promulgated under the Exchange Act.
(g)  "Code" shall mean the Internal  Revenue Code of 1986,  as amended from time
     to time, and any successor thereto.
(h)  "Committee"  shall  mean the  Compensation  Committee  of the Board or such
     other persons or committee (or  subcommittee) to which it has delegated any
     authority  under this Plan,  as may be  appropriate.  The  Committee  shall
     consist  of two or more  directors  each of whom  shall  qualify  as: (i) a
     "non-employee  director" for purposes of Rule 16b-3 under the Exchange Act;
     (ii) an "outside  director" for purposes of Section 162(m) of the Code; and
     (iii) an  "independent  director"  for  purposes of Section 303A of the New
     York Stock Exchange  Listed Company Manual or such other  applicable  stock
     exchange rules. Notwithstanding anything herein, the Board shall act as the
     Committee  under  this  Plan  with  respect  to any  grants  of  Awards  to
     Directors.
(i)  "Consultant"  means any natural person who provides bona fide consulting or
     advisory  services  to  the  Company  or an  Affiliate,  which  are  not in
     connection  with the  offer  and sale of  securities  in a  capital-raising
     transaction.
(j)  "Company" shall mean Westwood One, Inc., a Delaware corporation.
(k)  "Covered  Employee" shall mean a "covered  employee"  within the meaning of
     Section 162(m)(3) of the Code, or any successor provision thereto.
(l)  "Director"  shall  mean a member of the Board of the  Company or any of its
     Affiliates who is not an employee of the Company or any Affiliate.
(m)  "Effective  Date" shall mean the date the Plan is approved by the Company's
     stockholders in accordance  with applicable law. (n) "Employee"  shall mean
     any  employee of the  Company or any  Affiliate.  For any and all  purposes
     under this Plan, the term "Employee" shall not include a person hired as an
     independent contractor,  leased employee,  consultant or a person otherwise
     designated  by the  Committee,  at the  time  of hire  as not  eligible  to
     participate  in or receive  benefits  under the Plan or not on the payroll,
     even if such ineligible  person is  subsequently  determined to be a common
     law employee of the Company.
(o)  "Exchange Act" shall mean the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.
(p)  "Fair Market Value" shall mean, with respect to Shares, as of any date, the
     last sales price reported for the Shares on the applicable date as reported
     on the New York Stock  Exchange for that date or, if no prices are reported
     for that date,  the last sales  price  reported  on the next date for which
     such prices were reported,  unless  otherwise  determined by the Committee.
     For purposes of the exercise of any Stock Appreciation Right the applicable
     date shall be the date a notice of exercise  is  received by the  Committee
     or, if not a day on which the New York  Stock  Exchange  is open,  the last
     sales price reported on the next date for which such prices were reported.
(q)  "Incentive  Stock Option" shall mean an Option granted under Section 6 that
     is  intended  to meet the  requirements  of Section  422 of the Code or any
     successor provision thereto.
(r)  "Nonqualified  Stock  Option"  shall mean  either an Option  granted  under
     Section  6 that is not  intended  to be an  Incentive  Stock  Option  or an
     Incentive Stock Option that has been disqualified.
(s)  "Option"  shall  mean any right  granted  to a  Participant  under the Plan
     allowing such  Participant  to purchase  Shares at such price or prices and
     during such period or periods as the Committee shall determine.
(t)  "Parent"  shall  mean any  parent  corporation  of the  Company  within the
     meaning  of Section  424(e) of the Code.  (u)  "Participant"  shall mean an
     Employee, an officer of the Company or an Affiliate, Consultant or Director
     who is selected by the Committee from time to time in their sole discretion
     to receive an Award under the Plan.
(v)  "Performance  Award"  shall mean any Award of  Performance  Shares  granted
     under the Plan which has performance criteria. (w) "Performance Goal" shall
     have the meaning set forth in Section 11.
(x)  "Performance Period" shall mean that period established by the Committee at
     the time any Performance  Award is granted or at any time thereafter during
     which any Performance Goals specified by the Committee with respect to such
     Award are to be measured.
(y)  "Performance  Share" shall mean any grant  pursuant to Section 11 of a unit
     valued by reference to a  designated  number of Shares,  which value may be
     paid to the Participant by delivery of such property as the Committee shall
     determine,  including, without limitation, cash, Shares, other property, or
     any combination thereof,  upon achievement of such Performance Goals during
     the Performance Period as the Committee shall establish at the time of such
     grant or thereafter.
(z)  "Person" shall mean any individual, corporation,  partnership, association,
     limited  liability  company,  joint-stock  company,  trust,  unincorporated
     organization or government or political subdivision thereof.
                                      A-2

(aa) "Retirement"  shall mean:  (i) with respect to an Employee or an officer of
     the Company or an Affiliate,  any combination of an Employee's or officer's
     age and years of continuous  service with the Company or an Affiliate  that
     is greater than 70 or such other date as approved by the Committee; or (ii)
     with  respect to a  Director,  the failure to stand for  reelection  or the
     failure to be reelected  after a Director has attained age 75 or five years
     of continuous service or such other date as approved by the Committee.
(bb) "Restricted  Stock" shall mean any Share issued with the  restriction  that
     the holder  may not sell,  transfer,  pledge or assign  such Share and with
     such other  restrictions  as the  Committee,  in its sole  discretion,  may
     impose (including, without limitation, any restriction on the right to vote
     such Share,  and the right to receive  any cash  dividends  or  performance
     restriction),  which restrictions may lapse separately or in combination at
     such time or times, in installments or otherwise, as the Committee may deem
     appropriate.
(cc) "Restricted  Stock  Award"  shall mean an award of  Restricted  Stock under
     Section 7. (dd)  "Restricted  Stock Unit" shall mean an award under Section
     9. (ee) "Section 162(m) Performance Goals" shall have the meaning set forth
     in Section 11. (ff)  "Shares"  shall mean the shares of common stock of the
     Company.
(dd) "Restricted Stock Unit" shall mean an award under Section 9.
(ee) "Section  162(m)  Performance  Goals"  shall have the  meaning set forth in
     Section 11.
(ff) "Shares" shall mean the shares of common stock of the Company.
(gg) "Stock  Appreciation  Right" shall mean any right  granted to a Participant
     pursuant to Section 8 to receive,  upon  exercise by the  Participant,  the
     excess of (i) the Fair  Market  Value of one Share on the date of  exercise
     or, if the Committee shall so determine in the case of any such right other
     than one  related  to any  Incentive  Stock  Option,  at any time  during a
     specified  period  before the date of exercise over (ii) the grant price of
     the  right  on the date of  grant,  or if  granted  in  connection  with an
     outstanding Option on the date of grant of the related Option, as specified
     by the Committee in its sole discretion,  which,  except in connection with
     an adjustment provided in Section 4, shall not be less than the Fair Market
     Value of one  Share  on such  date of  grant  of the  right or the  related
     Option,  as the case may be. Any  payment by the Company in respect of such
     right  may be made in cash,  Shares,  other  property,  or any  combination
     thereof, as the Committee, in its sole discretion, shall determine.
(hh) "Subsidiary"  shall mean any  subsidiary  corporation of the Company within
     the meaning of Section 424(f) of the Code.  
(ii) "Ten Percent  Stockholder" shall mean a person owning stock possessing more
     than 10% of the total combined  voting power of all classes of stock of the
     Company or its Subsidiaries or its Parent.
(jj) "Termination"  shall mean a  Termination  of  Consultancy,  Termination  of
     Directorship or Termination of Employment,  as applicable.  Notwithstanding
     the foregoing,  the Committee may otherwise define Termination in the Award
     Agreement  or, if no rights of a  Participant  are reduced,  may  otherwise
     define Termination thereafter.
(kk) "Termination  of  Consultancy"  shall mean that the Consultant is no longer
     acting as a consultant to the Company or an  Affiliate,  except that if the
     Consultant becomes an Employee,  a Director or officer of the Company or an
     Affiliate upon the termination of his or her consultancy,  unless otherwise
     determined by the Committee,  no Termination of Consultancy shall be deemed
     to occur until such time as such  Consultant is no longer a Consultant,  an
     Employee, a Director or officer of the Company or an Affiliate.
(ll) "Termination  of  Directorship"  shall mean that the  Director is no longer
     acting as a director  of the  Company or an  Affiliate;  except that if the
     Director  becomes an Employee,  officer of the Company or an Affiliate or a
     Consultant  upon  the  termination  of  his  or  her  directorship,  unless
     otherwise determined by the Committee, no Termination of Directorship shall
     be  deemed  to occur  until  such  time as such  Consultant  is no longer a
     Consultant,  an  Employee,  officer  of the  Company or an  Affiliate  or a
     Director.
(mm) "Termination  of Employment"  shall mean a termination  of employment  (for
     reasons other than a military or personal  leave of absence  granted by the
     Company) of a Participant from the Company and its Affiliates,  except that
     if the  Employee  becomes a  Consultant,  an officer  of the  Company or an
     Affiliate  or a Director  upon the  termination  of his or her  employment,
     unless otherwise determined by the Committee,  no Termination of Employment
     shall be deemed to occur until such time as Eligible  Employee is no longer
     an Employee,  officer of the Company or an  Affiliate,  a  Consultant  or a
     Director.

SECTION 3. ADMINISTRATION

The Committee shall administer the Plan. The Committee shall have full power and
authority,  subject to such  orders or  resolutions  not  inconsistent  with the
provisions of the Plan as may from time to time be adopted by the Board,  to (a)
select the Employees,  officers of the Company or an Affiliate,  Consultants and
Directors  to whom  Awards  may  from  time to time be  granted  hereunder;  (b)
determine  the  type or  types  of  Award  to be  granted  to  each  Participant
hereunder;  (c)  determine  the number of Shares to be covered by or relating to
each Award  granted  hereunder;  (d)  determine  the terms and  conditions,  not
inconsistent  with the  provisions of the Plan, of any Award granted  hereunder;
(e) determine whether, to what extent and under what circumstances Awards may be
                                      A-3

settled  in cash,  Shares  or other  property  or  canceled  or  suspended;  (f)
determine whether, to what extent, and under what circumstances payment of cash,
Shares,  other property and other amounts  payable with respect to an Award made
under the Plan shall be deferred either  automatically or at the election of the
Participant  in accordance  with Code Section 409A; (g) interpret and administer
the Plan and any  instrument  or  agreement  entered  into  under the Plan;  (h)
establish  such rules and  regulations  and appoint such agents as it shall deem
appropriate  for the proper  administration  of the Plan; and (i) make any other
determination  and take any other action that the Committee  deems  necessary or
desirable for  administration  of the Plan.  The Committee  may, in its sole and
absolute  discretion,  and subject to the  provisions of the Plan,  from time to
time delegate any or all of its  authority to  administer  the Plan to any other
persons  or  committee  as it deems  necessary  or  appropriate  for the  proper
administration  of the Plan, except that no such delegation shall be made in the
case of Awards  intended to be  qualified  under  Section  162(m) of the Code or
Awards  granted to  Participants  who are subject to Section 16 of the  Exchange
Act. The decisions of the Committee shall be final,  conclusive and binding with
respect to the  interpretation and administration of the Plan and any grant made
under it. The Committee shall make, in its sole discretion,  all  determinations
arising in the  administration,  construction or  interpretation of the Plan and
Awards under the Plan, including the right to construe disputed or doubtful Plan
or Award terms and provisions,  and any such  determination  shall be conclusive
and binding on all persons,  except as otherwise  provided by law. A majority of
the  members of the  Committee  may  determine  its actions and fix the time and
place of its meetings.

The Committee  shall be authorized to make  adjustments in Awards in recognition
of  unusual or  nonrecurring  events  affecting  the  Company  or its  financial
statements or changes in applicable laws,  regulations or accounting principles.
Except as provided  in Section 11, the  Committee  shall be  authorized  to make
adjustments  in  Performance  Award  criteria or in the terms and  conditions of
other Awards in  recognition  of unusual or  nonrecurring  events  affecting the
Company or its financial  statements or changes in applicable laws,  regulations
or  accounting  principles.  The  Committee  may correct any defect,  supply any
omission or reconcile any  inconsistency  in the Plan or any Award in the manner
and to the extent it shall deem desirable to carry it into effect.  In the event
that the Company shall assume  outstanding  employee benefit awards or the right
or obligation to make future such awards in connection  with the  acquisition of
or combination with another  corporation or business entity,  the Committee may,
in its discretion,  make such  adjustments in the terms of Awards under the Plan
as it shall deem appropriate.

To the extent  applicable,  this Plan is intended to comply with the  applicable
requirements  of Rule 16b-3 of the Exchange Act and Sections  162(m) and 409A of
the Code and, and this Plan shall be limited,  construed  and  interpreted  in a
manner so as to comply therewith.

The Committee may include in any Award  Agreement  restrictions  and  conditions
that provide for the  forfeiture  of any Award or permits the Company to recover
amounts from Participants who engage in detrimental  activity (as defined in the
Award Agreement).

SECTION 4. SHARES SUBJECT TO THE PLAN

Subject to  adjustment,  9,200,000  Shares shall be  authorized  for issuance of
Awards  granted under the Plan.  For purposes of  determining  the Share reserve
under this  Section  4, each Share  issued  pursuant  to an Award of  Restricted
Stock, Performance Awards,  Restricted Stock Units or deferred stock units shall
count as three Shares.

Any Shares issued hereunder may consist,  in whole or in part, of authorized and
unissued  Shares,  treasury  Shares or Shares  purchased  in the open  market or
otherwise.

The maximum number of Shares subject to any Option,  Stock Appreciation Right or
any equity-based Award that is intended to be  "performance-based  compensation"
within the  meaning of Section  162(m)(4)(C)  of the Code that may be granted to
each  Participant  shall not exceed  1,500,000  Shares (subject to adjustment as
provided below) during any three year period, of which up to 500,000 (subject to
adjustment as provided below) may be used for Restricted Stock, Restricted Stock
Units,  deferred  stock  units  and  equity-based  Performance  Awards  that are
intended to be  "performance-based  compensation"  within the meaning of Section
162(m)(4)(C) of the Code. With respect to non-equity  based  Performance  Awards
settled in cash that are intended to be "performance-based  compensation" within
the meaning of Section  162(m)(4)(C) of the Code, the maximum amount that may be
paid to each Participant  during each fiscal year of the Company with respect to
such Awards is $5,000,000.

In the event of any  merger,  reorganization,  consolidation,  recapitalization,
stock  dividend,   stock  split,  reverse  stock  split,   spin-off  or  similar
transaction or other change in corporate  structure  affecting the Shares,  such
adjustments and other  substitutions  shall be made to the Plan and to Awards as
the  Committee,  in  its  sole  discretion,   deems  equitable  or  appropriate,
including,  without limitation,  such adjustments in the aggregate number, class
and kind of securities that may be delivered under the Plan, in the aggregate or
to any one Participant,  in the number, class, kind and option or exercise price
of securities  subject to outstanding  Awards granted under the Plan (including,
if the Committee  deems  appropriate,  the  substitution  of similar  options to
purchase the shares of, or other awards  denominated  in the shares of,  another
company)  as  the  Committee  may  determine  to  be  appropriate  in  its  sole
discretion;  provided,  however,  that the number of Shares subject to any Award
shall  always be a whole  number and further  provided  that in no event may any
change  be  made  to  an  Incentive  Stock  Option  which  would   constitute  a
modification within the meaning of Section 424(h)(3) of the Code.

If an Award should  expire,  become  forfeited or become  unexercisable  for any
reason without having been exercised or  nonforfeitable in full, the unpurchased
shares  that are  subject  thereto  shall,  unless  the  Plan  shall  have  been
terminated, become available for future grant under the Plan.
                                      A-4

SECTION 5. ELIGIBILITY

Awards may be granted  to  eligible  Employees,  officers  of the  Company or an
Affiliate, Consultants and Directors, as determined by the Committee in its sole
discretion. Incentive Stock Options may be granted only to Employees or officers
of the Company, the Parent or a Subsidiary.

Each Option shall be designated in the Award Agreement either an Incentive Stock
Option  or  a  Nonqualified   Stock  Option.   However,   notwithstanding   such
designations,  to the extent that the aggregate Fair Market Value (determined as
of the time of grant) of Shares  with  respect to which  Options  designated  as
Incentive  Stock  Options are  exercisable  for the first time by a  Participant
during any calendar year (under all plans of the Company) exceeds $100,000, such
excess shall be treated as a separate Nonqualified Stock Option.

The Plan  shall not  confer  upon any  Participant  any right  with  respect  to
continuation  of employment,  consulting or directorship  relationship  with the
Company,  nor shall it interfere in any way with such Participant's right or the
Company's  right to  terminate  his or her  employment,  consulting  or director
relationship at any time, with or without cause.

Awards  shall not be granted in a manner  which would be  considered a repricing
without stockholder approval.

SECTION 6.  STOCK OPTIONS

Options may be granted hereunder to any Participant, either alone or in addition
to other  Awards  granted  under the Plan and shall be subject to the  following
terms and conditions:

The Option price per Share shall be  determined  by the Committee on the date of
grant, but shall not be not less than the Fair Market Value of the Shares on the
date the Option is granted;  provided,  however, if an Incentive Stock Option is
granted to a Ten  Percent  Stockholder,  the Option  price per Share shall be no
less than 110% of the Fair Market  Value of the Shares on the date the Option is
granted.  The Award  Agreement  shall state the number of Shares  subject to the
Option and the vesting term, as determined by the Committee.  The exercisability
period for  Incentive  Stock  Options  shall not exceed ten years from the grant
date, provided,  however, the term of an Incentive Stock Option granted to a Ten
Percent  Stockholder may not exceed five years. A Nonqualified  Stock Option may
be  exercisable  for a period of up to ten years.  Subject  to  Section  11, the
Committee may in its discretion make any Options exercisable.

All Options shall terminate upon their expiration,  their surrender, upon breach
by the  Participant of any provisions of the Option,  or in accordance  with any
other rules and procedures  incorporated into the terms and conditions governing
the Options as the Committee  shall deem  advisable or  appropriate.  The Option
shall contain a provision that all the  applicable  terms and conditions of this
Plan are incorporated by reference therein.

Options  shall be  exercisable  only to the  extent  the  Participant  is vested
therein,  subject to any  restriction  that the Committee shall determine and be
specified in the Award Agreement.  Unless otherwise determined by the Committee,
an Option will be deemed exercised by the Participant, or in the event of death,
an option shall be deemed  exercised by the estate of the  Participant,  or by a
person who acquired the right to exercise such option by bequest or inheritance,
upon  delivery  of (i) a  written  notice  of  exercise  to the  Company  or its
representative,  or by using  other  methods  of notice as the  Committee  shall
adopt, and (ii) accompanying payment of the Option price as follows: (1) in cash
or by check, bank draft or money order payable to the order of the Company;  (2)
solely to the extent  permitted by applicable law, if the Common Stock is traded
on the New York Stock  Exchange,  any other national  securities  exchange,  the
Nasdaq Stock Market or quoted on a national  quotation  system  sponsored by the
National  Association  of  Securities  Dealers,  and the  Committee  authorizes,
through a procedure whereby the Participant delivers irrevocable instructions to
a broker  reasonably  acceptable  to the  Committee  to deliver  promptly to the
Company an amount  equal to the purchase  price;  or (3) on such other terms and
conditions as may be acceptable to the Committee (including, without limitation,
the  relinquishment  of  Options or by payment in full or in part in the form of
Shares  owned by the  Participant  for a period of at least  six  months or such
other period necessary to avoid a charge, for accounting  purposes,  against the
Company's  earnings as reported in the Company's  financial  statements (and for
which  the  Participant  has  good  title  free  and  clear  of  any  liens  and
encumbrances)  based on the Fair Market  Value of the Shares on the payment date
as  determined  by the  Committee).  No  Shares  shall be issued  until  payment
therefor,  as provided herein,  has been made or provided for in accordance with
any  restrictions  as the Committee  shall adopt.  The notice of exercise,  once
delivered, shall be irrevocable.

Except  as  otherwise  provided  herein or unless  otherwise  determined  by the
Committee  at  grant,  Options  that  are  not  vested  as  of  the  date  of  a
                                      A-5

Participant's  Termination  for any reason shall  terminate and expire as of the
date of such  Termination.  The Option shall also be subject to such other terms
and conditions, as the Committee shall deem advisable or appropriate, consistent
with the  provisions  of the Plan as herein set forth.  In  addition,  Incentive
Stock Options  shall  contain such other  provisions as may be necessary to meet
the requirements of the Code and the Treasury Department rulings and regulations
issued hereunder with respect to Incentive Stock Options.

Unless otherwise  determined by the Committee at grant, all Options granted to a
Participant  (other than a Director)  will vest in  accordance  with the vesting
schedule  provided  in  the  Award  Agreement,   and  upon  such   Participant's
Termination, all then vested Options will remain exercisable as follows, subject
to the  original  stated  term of the  Option  (i)  three  years in the event of
Retirement; (ii) one year in the event of the Participant's death (in which case
the Participant's  estate or legal  representative may exercise such Option); or
(iii) three months for any other Termination (other than for Cause).

Unless otherwise  determined by the Committee at grant, all Options granted to a
Director shall vest as follows:  (i) one-third on each  anniversary of the grant
date,  provided  that the  Participant  remains a  Director  on each  applicable
vesting  date;  and (ii) all  outstanding  Options shall  immediately  vest upon
Retirement, failure to be re-elected or death.

Unless  otherwise  determined  by the  Committee  at  grant,  upon a  Director's
Termination all then vested Options shall remain exercisable as follows, subject
to the  original  stated term of the Option:  (i) five years in the event of the
Retirement  of a  Director;  or (ii) one year in the event of the  Participant's
death (in  which  case the  Participant's  estate  or legal  representative  may
exercise such Option),  voluntary  resignation that is not considered Retirement
or failure to be re-elected.

To the extent that the  Participant  was not  entitled to exercise the Option at
the date of such Termination, or if Participant does not exercise such Option to
the  extent so  entitled  within the time  specified  herein,  the Option  shall
terminate.

Unless  otherwise  determined  by the  Committee  at  grant,  in the  event of a
Termination  for Cause,  all  outstanding  Options  (whether vested or unvested)
shall immediately terminate upon such Termination.

SECTION 7. RESTRICTED STOCK

A Restricted  Stock Award shall be subject to  restrictions  (if any) imposed by
the  Committee  at the  time of  grant  for a period  of time  specified  by the
Committee  (the  "Restriction  Period").  Restricted  Stock Awards may be issued
hereunder  to  Participants  for  no  cash  consideration  or for  such  minimum
consideration  as may be required by applicable law, either alone or in addition
to other Awards granted under the Plan. Any Restricted Stock grant shall also be
subject  to such  other  terms  and  conditions,  as the  Committee  shall  deem
advisable or  appropriate,  consistent with the provisions of the Plan as herein
set forth.

Any Restricted  Stock issued  hereunder may be evidenced in such manner,  as the
Committee, in its sole discretion,  shall deem appropriate,  including,  without
limitation,  book entry  registration  or  issuance  of a stock  certificate  or
certificates.  In the event any stock  certificates  are  issued in  respect  of
Shares of Restricted  Stock awarded under the Plan, such  certificates  shall be
registered in the name of the Participant  and shall bear an appropriate  legend
referring to the terms, conditions and restrictions applicable to such Award.

Except as  otherwise  provided  in an Award  Agreement,  the  Participant  shall
possess all incidents of ownership  with respect to Shares of  Restricted  Stock
during the  Restriction  Period,  including  the right to  receive  or  reinvest
dividends  with  respect  to such  Shares  (which  may be  subject  to the  same
restrictions as the Restricted Stock) and to vote such Shares.  Certificates for
unrestricted  Shares shall be delivered to the Participant  promptly after,  and
only after, the Restriction Period shall expire without forfeiture in respect of
such Awards of Restricted Stock except as the Committee, in its sole discretion,
shall otherwise determine to use another system, such as book entries by the
transfer agent, as evidencing ownership of shares of Restricted Stock.

During  the  Restriction  Period,  the  recipient  of such  Award  shall  not be
permitted to sell, transfer,  pledge, hypothecate or assign shares of Restricted
Stock  awarded  under  the  Plan  except  by will or the  laws  of  descent  and
distribution. Any attempt to dispose of any Restricted Stock in contravention of
any such restrictions shall be null and void and without effect.

The Restricted Stock Award Agreement shall contain such other terms,  provisions
and  conditions,  not  inconsistent  with the Plan as may be  determined  by the
Committee in its sole  discretion.  In addition,  the  provisions  of Restricted
Stock Award Agreement need not be the same with respect to each purchaser

The  Committee  shall  establish  the vesting  schedule (if any)  applicable  to
Restricted  Stock granted  hereunder,  which vesting  schedule shall specify the
                                      A-6

period  of  time,  the  increments  in  which a  Participant  shall  vest in the
Restricted  Stock and/or any applicable  Performance Goal (as defined in Section
11) requirements, subject to any restrictions that the Committee shall determine
and specify in the applicable Award Agreement.  The Committee may also condition
the grant of Restricted  Stock upon the  attainment of  Performance  Goals.  Any
Restricted  Stock Award that is  intended to comply with the  "performance-based
compensation" within the meaning of Section 162(m)(4)(C) of the Code shall vest,
or be granted, subject to the attainment of Section 162(m) Performance Goals and
Sections 11 and 13 hereof.

Unless  otherwise  determined  by the Committee at grant,  upon a  Participant's
Termination  for  any  reason  during  the  Restriction   Period,  all  unvested
Restricted Stock shall be forfeited.

SECTION 8. STOCK APPRECIATION RIGHTS

Stock  Appreciation  Rights may be granted hereunder to any Participant,  either
alone ("freestanding") or in addition to other Awards granted under the Plan and
may, but need not,  relate to a specific  Option  granted  under  Section 6. The
provisions  of Stock  Appreciation  Rights need not be the same with  respect to
each recipient.  Any Stock  Appreciation  Right related to a Nonqualified  Stock
Option  may be  granted  at the same time such  Option is granted or at any time
thereafter before exercise or expiration of such Option.  Any Stock Appreciation
Right related to an Incentive Stock Option must be granted at the same time such
Option is granted.  In the case of any Stock  Appreciation  Right related to any
Option,  the Stock  Appreciation  Right or applicable  portion  thereof shall be
exercisable  only at such time and to the extent of the related Option and shall
terminate and no longer be exercisable  upon the  Termination or exercise of the
related Option,  except that a Stock  Appreciation Right granted with respect to
less than the full  number of Shares  covered by a related  Option  shall not be
reduced  until and then only to the extent the  exercise or  termination  of the
related   Option  exceeds  the  number  of  Shares  not  covered  by  the  Stock
Appreciation  Right.  The  Committee  may impose  such terms and  conditions  or
restrictions  on the grant of any Stock  Appreciation  Right,  as it shall  deem
advisable or appropriate;  provided that a freestanding Stock Appreciation Right
shall not have an exercise  price less than Fair Market  Value of a Share on the
date of grant or a term of greater than ten years. Any Stock Appreciation Right
that is settled in any form other than Shares shall comply with Section 409A of
the Code.

SECTION 9.  RESTRICTED STOCK UNITS

Restricted  Stock Units may be issued either alone, in addition to, or in tandem
with other Awards  granted under the Plan and/or cash awards made outside of the
Plan.  After the Committee  determines that it will grant Restricted Stock Units
under the Plan, it shall  determine the conditions and  restrictions  related to
the Award, including the Restricted Unit Period (as defined below) applicable to
the  Award,  the  imposition,  if  any,  of  any  performance--based   condition
(including  attainment of Performance  Goals) or other restriction on the Award,
the  number of  Restricted  Stock  Units,  which  shall be set forth in an Award
Agreement.

With respect to an Award of Restricted Stock Units, which becomes nonforfeitable
due to the lapse of time, the Committee shall prescribe in the Award  Agreement,
the  period in which such  Restricted  Stock Unit  becomes  nonforfeitable  (the
"Restricted Unit Period").  Notwithstanding  any provision to the contrary,  the
Restricted Stock Unit, which becomes  nonforfeitable  due to the satisfaction of
certain  pre-established  performance-based  objectives or any other  conditions
imposed by the Committee, the measurement date of whether such performance-based
objectives or other  conditions  have been satisfied  shall be a date no earlier
than the first anniversary of the date of the award.

The  Committee may also  condition the grant of Restricted  Stock Units upon the
attainment  of  Performance  Goals.  Any  Restricted  Stock  Unit  Award that is
intended to comply with the "performance-based  compensation" within the meaning
of Section  162(m)(4)(C)  of the Code shall vest, or be granted,  subject to the
attainment of Section 162(m) Performance Goals and Sections 11 and 13 hereof.

A Participant who is awarded  Restricted  Stock Units shall possess no incidents
of ownership with respect to such Awards  provided that the Award  Agreement may
provide for payments in lieu of dividends to such Participant.

Awards that are valued by reference to, or are otherwise based on, Shares may be
granted  hereunder to Participants,  either alone or in addition to other Awards
granted under the Plan, and Restricted  Stock Units shall also be available as a
form of  payment  in the  settlement  of other  Awards  granted  under the Plan.
Restricted  Stock  Units  may be  paid in  Shares,  cash  or any  other  form of
property,  as the Committee  shall  determine.  Subject to the provisions of the
Plan,  the  Committee  shall have sole and complete  authority to determine  the
                                      A-7

Employees, officers of the Company or an Affiliate,  Directors or Consultants to
whom and the time or times at which  such  Awards  shall be made,  the number of
Shares to be granted  pursuant to such Awards,  and all other  conditions of the
Awards.  Any  Restricted  Stock Unit Awards shall be subject to such other terms
and conditions as the Committee shall deem advisable or appropriate,  consistent
with the  provisions  of the Plan as herein  set  forth.  Unless  the  Committee
determines otherwise to address specific  considerations,  Restricted Stock Unit
Awards  granted under the Plan shall have a vesting  period of not less than one
year.

Solely to the extent  permitted by the Committee and pursuant to Section 409A of
the Code, a Participant may elect to defer the payment of Restricted Stock Units
in a manner that  complies  with Section 409A of the Code,  as determined by the
Committee in its sole discretion.

Shares  subject to Awards granted under this Section 9 may be issued for no cash
consideration or for such minimum consideration as may be required by applicable
law. To the extent applicable,  Restricted Stock Units shall comply with Section
409A of the Code.

SECTION 10.  FURTHER ELECTIONS

Each  Director  may  elect  to  have  all  or  any  portion  of  their  director
compensation  (as  determined  by the  Committee)  to be received in the form of
deferred  Shares at the discretion of the Committee.  Such election must be made
in writing subject to the rules prescribed by the Committee,  which shall comply
with  Section  409A of the Code.  If a  Participant  elects to receive  deferred
Shares, the Company on account will hold such Shares for the Participant and the
deferred  Shares will be maintained on behalf of the Director until  Termination
or such other period the Participant may have elected in accordance with Section
409A of the Code.  The  period of  deferral  will be for a minimum  of one year.
During the deferral  period,  the Participant will have no right to transfer any
rights  under  his or her  deferred  Shares  and will  have no other  rights  of
ownership  therein.  Any election  that does not comply with Section 409A of the
Code shall be deemed to be amended to comply  with  Section  409A of the Code as
determined by the Committee and to the extent such  provision  cannot be amended
to comply therewith, such provision shall be null and void.

SECTION 11. PERFORMANCE AWARDS

Performance  Awards  may  be  paid  in  cash,  Shares,  other  property,  or any
combination  thereof,  and may be subject to such other terms and  conditions as
the  Committee  shall  deem  advisable  or  appropriate,   consistent  with  the
provisions of the Plan as set forth,  in the sole discretion of the Committee at
the time of payment.  The performance levels to be achieved for each Performance
Period  and the  amount of the  Award to be  distributed  shall be  conclusively
determined by the Committee.  Performance Awards may be paid in a lump sum or in
installments  following  the close of the  Performance  Period or, in accordance
with procedures established by the Committee, on a deferred basis. The Committee
may  designate  whether any  Performance  Award,  either alone or in addition to
other Awards granted under the Plan, being granted to any Employee or officer of
the Company or an Affiliate is intended to be  "performance-based  compensation"
as that term is used in Section 162(m) of the Code.  Any such awards  designated
to be  "performance-based  compensation" shall be conditioned on the achievement
of one or more  performance  measures,  to the extent  required by Code  Section
162(m), and shall be issued in accordance with Section 13.

Unless  otherwise  determined  by  the  Committee,  the  grant,  vesting  and/or
exercisability of Performance Awards shall be conditioned,  in whole or in part,
on the attainment of performance targets, in whole or in part, related to one or
more  performance  goals over a  Performance  Period.  For any such  Performance
Awards that are intended to qualify as  "performance-based  compensation" within
the meaning of Section  162(m)(4)(C)  of the Code,  the  performance  targets on
which the grant, vesting and/or exercisability are conditioned shall be selected
by the Committee from among the following goals (the "Section 162(m) Performance
Goals"):  enterprise value or value creation  targets of the Company,  Operating
Income before  Depreciation and Amortization,  Operating Income, Free Cash Flow,
Net  Income,  Net  Income  Per  Share,  Revenues,   earnings  per  share,  total
shareholder return,  return on equity,  share price, return in excess of cost of
capital,  profit in  excess of cost of  capital,  return  on  assets,  return on
invested capital,  operating margin, or any combination thereof, or in reference
to other  companies  or indices.  In  addition,  for any Awards not  intended to
qualify  as  "performance-based  compensation"  within  the  meaning  of Section
162(m)(4)(C) of the Code, the Committee may establish  performance targets based
on other performance  goals as it deems  appropriate  (together with the Section
162(m) Performance Goals, the "Performance Goals"). The Performance Goals may be
described in terms of objectives that are related to the individual  Participant
or objectives that are Company-wide  measured on an absolute or cumulative basis
or on the basis of percentage of improvement over time, or measured  relative to
selected peer companies or a market index.

The  Committee  retains the right to reduce any Award  below the maximum  amount
that could be paid based on the degree to which the Performance Goals related to
such Award were  attained.  The Committee may not increase any Award intended to
qualify  as  "performance-based  compensation"  within  the  meaning  of Section
162(m)(4)(C) of the Code in any manner that would adversely affect the treatment
of such Award.

In  the  event  that,  during  any  Performance  Period,  any  recapitalization,
reorganization,  merger,  acquisition,  divestiture,   consolidation,  spin-off,
combination, liquidation, dissolution, sale of assets or other similar corporate
transaction or event, or any other  extraordinary  event or circumstance  occurs
which has the effect,  as determined by the Committee,  in its sole and absolute
discretion,  of distorting the  applicable  performance  criteria  involving the
Company,  including,  without limitation,  changes in accounting standards,  the
                                      A-8

Committee may adjust or modify, as determined by the Committee,  in its sole and
absolute  discretion,  the calculation of the  Performance  Goals, to the extent
necessary to prevent reduction or enlargement of the Participant's  Awards under
the  Plan  for  such  Performance  Period   attributable  to  such  transaction,
circumstance or event. All  determinations  that the Committee makes pursuant to
this Section shall be conclusive and binding on all persons for all purposes.

SECTION 12. CHANGE IN CONTROL PROVISIONS

Unless the Committee shall determine otherwise at the time of grant with respect
to a particular  Award, and  notwithstanding  any other provision of the Plan to
the  contrary,  upon a  Termination  of a  Participant  (other  than a Director)
without Cause during the 24-month period  following a Change in Control and upon
a Change in Control with respect to a Participant who is a Director:

(i)  any Options and Stock Appreciation  Rights  outstanding,  and which are not
     then  exercisable  and vested,  shall become  immediately  fully vested and
     exercisable;
(ii) the  restrictions  and deferral  limitations  applicable to any  Restricted
     Stock shall lapse, and such Restricted Stock shall immediately  become free
     of  all   restrictions   and   limitations  and  become  fully  vested  and
     transferable to the full extent of the original grant;
(iii)all  Performance  Awards  shall be  considered  to be earned and payable in
     full, based on the applicable performance criteria or, if not determinable,
     at the target level and any deferral or other  restriction  shall lapse and
     such Performance Awards shall be immediately settled or distributed; and
(iv) the restrictions and deferral  limitations and other conditions  applicable
     to any Restricted Stock Units or other Awards shall immediately  lapse, and
     any such  Restricted  Stock Units or other  Awards shall become free of all
     restrictions,  limitations  or  conditions  and  become  fully  vested  and
     transferable to the full extent of the original grant.

Notwithstanding  any other  provision  of the Plan,  in the event of a Change in
Control, the Committee may, in its discretion, provide that each Option or Stock
Appreciation  Right  shall,  upon the  occurrence  of a Change  in  Control,  be
cancelled in exchange for a cash payment to be made within 60 days of the Change
in Control in an amount equal to the amount by which the per share price paid in
the applicable transaction for the Shares exceeds the purchase price per Award.

Notwithstanding  any other  provision  of the Plan,  in the event of a merger or
consolidation  in which the Company is not the surviving  entity or in the event
of any transaction that results in the acquisition of  substantially  all of the
Company's  outstanding  Shares  by a single  person  or  entity or by a group of
persons  and/or  entities  acting  in  concert,  or in the  event of the sale or
transfer  of  all or  substantially  all of the  Company's  assets  (all  of the
foregoing being referred to as an "Acquisition  Event"), then the Committee may,
in its  sole  discretion,  terminate  all  outstanding  and  unexercised  Awards
effective  as of the date of the  Acquisition  Event,  by  delivering  notice of
termination  to  each  Participant  at  least  20  days  prior  to the  date  of
consummation of the Acquisition  Event, in which case during the period from the
date on which such notice of termination is delivered to the consummation of the
Acquisition  Event,  each such  Participant  shall have the right to exercise in
full all of his or her Awards that are then  outstanding  (without regard to any
limitations on exercisability otherwise contained in the Award Agreements),  but
any such  exercise  shall be contingent  on the  occurrence  of the  Acquisition
Event, and, provided that, if the Acquisition Event does not take place within a
specified period after giving such notice for any reason whatsoever,  the notice
and exercise  pursuant  thereto shall be null and void. If an Acquisition  Event
occurs but the Committee does not terminate the  outstanding  Awards pursuant to
this  paragraph,  then the other  provisions of this Section 12 shall apply,  as
determined by the Committee.

SECTION 13. CODE SECTION 162(m) PROVISIONS

Notwithstanding any other provision of the Plan, if the Committee  determines at
the time, a Performance Award is granted to a Participant who is then an officer
that  such  Participant  is, or is likely to be as of the end of the tax year in
which the Company would ordinarily claim a tax deduction in connection with such
Award, a Covered  Employee,  then the Committee may provide that this Section 13
is applicable to such Award.

If a  Performance  Award is  subject to this  Section  13,  then the  lapsing of
restrictions  thereon and the  distribution  of cash,  Shares or other  property
pursuant thereto,  as applicable,  shall be subject to the achievement of one or
more Section 162(m) Performance Goals.

The Committee  shall have the power to impose such other  restrictions on Awards
subject to this Section 13, as it may deem  necessary or  appropriate  to ensure
that such Awards qualify as "performance-based  compensation" within the meaning
of Section 162(m)(4)(C) of the Code

Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  if any Award is  intended  to comply  with the
"performance  based"  compensation  exception under Section  162(m)(4)(C) of the
Code and if the grant of such Award or the lapse of restrictions is based on the
                                      A-9

attainment of Section 162(m)  Performance  Goals,  the Committee shall establish
such goals and the  applicable  number of Awards to be granted or the applicable
vesting  percentage  of the Award  applicable  to each  Participant  or class of
Participants in writing prior to the beginning of the applicable  fiscal year or
at such  later  date as  otherwise  determined  by the  Committee  and while the
outcome of the Section  162(m)Performance  Goals are substantially  uncertain in
accordance with Section 162(m) of the Code.

SECTION 14. AMENDMENTS AND TERMINATION

The Board or the Committee may amend, alter,  suspend,  discontinue or terminate
the Plan or any portion  thereof at any time;  provided,  however,  that no such
amendment, alteration, suspension,  discontinuation or termination shall be made
without (a) stockholder approval if such approval is necessary to qualify for or
comply  with  applicable  law  or  stock  exchange  rules   (including   without
limitation,  Section 162(m) of the Code, Section 422 of the Code with respect to
Incentive Stock Options and New York Stock Exchange  Rules),  (b) the consent of
the affected  Participant,  if such action would materially impair the rights of
such Participant  under any outstanding  Award or (c) approval of the holders of
at least a majority of the outstanding  Shares with respect to any alteration or
amendment to the Plan which  increases the maximum number of Shares which may be
issued  under the Plan or the  number  of Shares  which may be issued to any one
Participant,  extends  the  term of the  Plan or of  Awards  granted  hereunder,
changes  the  eligibility  criteria  in Section 5, or reduces  the  exercise  or
purchase  price  of  Awards  below  that  is  now  provided  for  in  the  Plan.
Notwithstanding  the foregoing,  the Committee may amend this Plan and any Award
Agreement to comply with applicable law, including, without limitation,  Section
409A of the Code and may  amend  any  Award  Agreement  at any  time  without  a
Participant's consent.

The Committee may delegate to another  committee  (or  subcommittee),  as it may
appoint, the authority to take any action consistent with the terms of the Plan,
either before or after an Award has been granted, which such other committee (or
subcommittee) deems necessary or advisable to comply with any government laws or
regulatory  requirements  of a foreign  country,  including  but not limited to,
granting  Awards,  modifying or amending the terms and conditions  governing any
Awards,  or  establishing  any local country plans as sub-plans to this Plan. In
addition,  under  all  circumstances,  the  Committee  may make  non-substantive
administrative  changes  to the Plan as to  conform  with or take  advantage  of
governmental requirements, statutes or regulations.

SECTION 15. DIVIDENDS

Subject to the provisions of the Plan and any Award Agreement,  the recipient of
an  Award  (including,  without  limitation,  any  deferred  Award)  may,  if so
determined by the Committee, be entitled to receive,  currently or on a deferred
basis, cash or stock dividends,  or cash payments in amounts  equivalent to cash
or stock dividends on Shares ("dividend equivalents") with respect to the number
of Shares  covered by the Award,  as  determined by the  Committee,  in its sole
discretion,  and the  Committee  may provide that such amounts (if any) shall be
deemed to have been reinvested in additional Shares or otherwise reinvested.

SECTION 16. GENERAL PROVISIONS

(a)  The Committee shall determine and set forth in an Award Agreement the terms
     and  conditions of each Award.  Each  Agreement (i) shall state the date of
     grant and the name of the Participant,  (ii) shall specify the terms of the
     Award,  (iii) shall be signed by a person  designated by the Committee and,
     if so required by the Committee, by the Participant, (iv) shall incorporate
     the  Plan by  reference  and (v)  shall  be  delivered  or  otherwise  made
     available to the Participant.  The Agreement shall contain such other terms
     and  conditions  as are required by the Plan and, in  addition,  such other
     terms not  inconsistent  with the Plan as the Committee may deem advisable.
     The  Committee  shall have the  authority  to adjust the terms of the Award
     Agreements  relating  to an Award in a  jurisdiction  outside of the United
     States (i) to comply with the laws or such  jurisdiction  or (ii) to obtain
     more  favorable  tax treatment for the Company  and/or any  Subsidiary,  as
     applicable,  and/or  for  the  Participants  in  such  jurisdiction.   Such
     authority shall be  notwithstanding  the fact that the  requirements of the
     local jurisdiction may be more restrictive than the terms set forth in the
     Plan.
(b)  An Award may not be sold, pledged, assigned, hypothecated,  transferred, or
     disposed  of in any manner  other than by will or by the laws of descent or
     distribution and may be exercised,  during the lifetime of the Participant,
     only  by  the  Participant;  provided  that  the  Committee,  in  its  sole
     discretion,  may permit the donative  transfer of any award under the Plan,
     other than an Incentive Stock Option,  by the  Participant  subject to such
     terms and conditions as the Committee may establish.
(c)  No Participant  shall have the right to be selected to receive an Option or
     other Award under this Plan or, having been so selected,  to be selected to
     receive a future Award grant or Option.  The Awards under this Plan are not
     intended  to be treated as  compensation  for any  purpose  under any other
     Company plan.
(d)  No Participant shall have any claim to be granted any Award under the Plan,
     and there is no  obligation  for  uniformity  of  treatment of Employees or
     Participants under the Plan.
(e)  The  prospective  recipient  of any Award  under the Plan shall  not,  with
     respect to such Award,  be deemed to have become a Participant,  or to have
     any rights  with  respect to such Award,  until and unless  such  recipient
     shall have accepted any Award Agreement or other instrument  evidencing the
     Award.
(f)  Nothing in the Plan or any Award  granted under the Plan shall be deemed to
     constitute  an  employment  or service  contract  or confer or be deemed to
                                      A-10

     confer on any  Participant  any right to  continue in the employ or service
     of,  or to  continue  any  other  relationship  with,  the  Company  or any
     Affiliate or limit in any way the right of the Company or any  Affiliate to
     terminate a Participant's service at any time, with or without cause.
(g)  All  certificates for Shares delivered under the Plan pursuant to any Award
     shall be subject to such  stock-transfer  orders and other  restrictions as
     the Committee may deem  advisable  under the rules,  regulations  and other
     requirements of the Securities and Exchange Commission,  any stock exchange
     upon which the Shares are then listed,  and any applicable federal or state
     securities  law, and the  Committee may cause a legend or legends to be put
     on  any  such   certificates   to  make   appropriate   reference  to  such
     restrictions.
(h)  No  Award  granted  hereunder  shall  be  construed  as an  offer  to  sell
     securities of the Company,  and no such offer shall be outstanding,  unless
     and until the Committee in its sole discretion has determined that any such
     offer, if made,  would comply with all applicable  requirements of the U.S.
     federal  securities  laws and any other laws to which such offer,  if made,
     would be subject.
(i)  This  Plan is  intended  to  constitute  an  "unfunded"  plan  and  nothing
     contained  herein  shall  give any such  Participant  any  rights  that are
     greater than those of a general unsecured creditor of the Company.
(j)  The  Company  shall be  authorized  to withhold  from any Award  granted or
     payment due under the Plan the amount of  withholding  taxes due in respect
     of an Award or payment  hereunder  and to take such other  action as may be
     necessary  in the  opinion of the  Company  or  Affiliate  to  satisfy  all
     obligations  for  the  payment  of  such  taxes.  The  Committee  shall  be
     authorized to establish  procedures for election by Participants to satisfy
     such obligation for the payment of such taxes by delivery of or transfer of
     Shares  to the  Company  (to the  extent  the  Participant  has  owned  the
     surrendered  shares  for  more  than six  months  if such a  limitation  is
     necessary  to  avoid  a  charge  to the  Company  for  financial  reporting
     purposes),  or by  directing  the  Company  to  retain  Shares  (up  to the
     employee's minimum required tax withholding rate) otherwise  deliverable in
     connection with the Award.
(k)  Nothing contained in the Plan shall prevent the Committee or the Board from
     adopting  other  or  additional  compensation   arrangements,   subject  to
     stockholder  approval if such approval is required;  and such  arrangements
     may be either generally applicable or applicable only in specific cases.
(l)  Any Award shall contain a provision  that it may not be exercised at a time
     when the  exercise  thereof  or the  issuance  of shares  thereunder  would
     constitute a violation of any federal or state law or listing  requirements
     of the New York  Stock  Exchange  for such  shares  or a  violation  of any
     foreign  jurisdiction  where Awards are or will be granted  under the Plan.
     The provisions of the Plan shall be construed,  regulated and  administered
     according  to the laws of the State of New York  without  giving  effect to
     principles  of conflicts  of law,  except to the extent  superseded  by any
     controlling Federal statute.
(m)  If any provision of the Plan is or becomes or is deemed invalid, illegal or
     unenforceable  in any  jurisdiction,  or would  disqualify  the Plan or any
     Award under any law deemed  applicable  by the  Committee,  such  provision
     shall be construed or deemed amended to conform to applicable laws or if it
     cannot be construed or deemed amended without,  in the determination of the
     Committee, materially altering the intent of the Plan, it shall be stricken
     and the remainder of the Plan shall remain in full force and effect.
(n)  Awards may be granted to Participants who are foreign nationals or employed
     outside the United States, or both, on such terms and conditions  different
     from those  applicable to Awards to Employees or officers of the Company or
     an Affiliate  employed in the United  States as may, in the judgment of the
     Committee,  be necessary or desirable in order to recognize  differences in
     local law or tax policy.  The Committee  also may impose  conditions on the
     exercise or vesting of Awards in order to minimize the Company's obligation
     with respect to tax  equalization  for Employees or officers of the Company
     or an Affiliate on assignments outside their home country.
(o)  If approved by the Committee in its sole discretion, an absence or leave of
     an Employee (or officer of the Company or an Affiliate) because of military
     or governmental service, disability or other reason shall not be considered
     an interruption of service for any purpose under the Plan.

SECTION 17. TERM OF PLAN

The Plan shall terminate on the tenth  anniversary of the Effective Date, unless
sooner  terminated  by the Board  pursuant to Section 14,  provided  that Awards
granted prior to such anniversary may extend beyond such date.

SECTION 18. COMPLIANCE WITH SECTION 16

With  respect  to  Participants  subject  to  Section  16 of  the  Exchange  Act
("Members"),  transactions  under  the  Plan are  intended  to  comply  with all
applicable conditions of Rule 16b-3 or its successors under the Exchange Act. To
the extent that  compliance  with any Plan provision  applicable  solely to such
Members that is included solely for purposes of complying with Rule 16b-3 is not
required in order to bring a transaction by such Member in compliance  with Rule
16b-3,  it shall be deemed null and void as to such  transaction,  to the extent
permitted  by law and  deemed  advisable  by the  Committee.  To the  extent any
provision  in the Plan or action by the  Committee  involving  such  Members  is
deemed not to comply with an  applicable  condition  of Rule 16b-3,  it shall be
deemed  null and void as to such  Members,  to the extent  permitted  by law and
deemed advisable by the Committee.
                                      A-11


                                     PROXY

                               WESTWOOD ONE, INC.

    Proxy for 2005 Annual Meeting of Shareholders for Holders of Common Stock
         THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF
                               WESTWOOD ONE, INC.

     The undersigned  shareholder of Westwood One, Inc., a Delaware  corporation
(the  "Company"),  hereby  appoints  Andrew  Zaref  and  David  Hillman  as  the
undersigned's   attorneys,   agents  and  proxies,   each  with  full  power  of
substitution to attend and act for the undersigned at the 2005 Annual Meeting of
Shareholders  of the Company to be held on May 19,  2005 at 10:00 a.m.,  Pacific
Time,  in The Salon Royal II Meeting Room of the Wyndham Bel Age, 1020 North San
Vicente  Boulevard,  West  Hollywood,  California  90069  and  any  adjournments
thereof,  and to represent and vote as designated on the reverse side all of the
shares of Common Stock of the Company that the undersigned  would be entitled to
vote if personally present at the 2005 Annual Meeting.

If no choice is specified on the reverse side, the proxy will be voted as to all
shares of the  undersigned  FOR the election of all  nominees  for  directorship
listed on the reverse side and FOR proposals 2 and 3.

     The  proxies,  and  each of  them,  shall  have  all the  powers  that  the
undersigned would have if acting in person.  The undersigned  hereby revokes any
other proxy to vote at the Annual  Meeting and hereby  ratifies and confirms all
that the  proxies,  and each of them,  may  lawfully do by virtue  hereof.  With
respect to matters not known at the time of the  solicitation of this proxy, the
proxies are authorized to vote in accordance with their discretion.

SEE REVERSE         CONTINUED AND TO BE SIGNED ON REVERSE SIDE      SEE REVERSE
-----------                                                         -----------
  SIDE                                                                SIDE


                                      




          X       Please mark votes as in this example.
        -----

The proxies present at the Annual Meeting, either in person or by substitute (or
if only one shall be  present  and act,  then that  one),  shall vote the shares
represented by this proxy in the manner indicated below by the  shareholder.  IF
NO  INSTRUCTIONS  TO THE CONTRARY ARE INDICATED ON THIS PROXY,  IT WILL BE VOTED
FOR ITEMS 1, 2 and 3 SHOWN BELOW.  The Board of Directors  recommends a vote FOR
all nominees in Item 1, FOR Item 2 AND FOR Item 3.

1.   Election of Class III  Directors.  Nominees:  (01) Gerald  Greenberg,  (02)
     Steven A. Lerman, (03) Joel Hollander and (04) Robert K. Herdman


          -----  FOR ALL NOMINEES            -----    WITHHELD FROM ALL NOMINEES

          -----  FOR ALL NOMINEES EXCEPT AS NOTED ABOVE 


2.   Ratification  of  the  selection  of  PricewaterhouseCoopers   LLP  as  the
     independent  accountants of the Company for the fiscal year ending December
     31, 2005.

                  FOR               AGAINST          ABSTAIN

                 -----               -----            -----   

3.  Approval of the 2005 Equity Compensation Plan.

                  FOR               AGAINST          ABSTAIN

                 -----               -----            -----   



               MARK HERE FOR ADDRESS CHANGE AND NOTE AT LEFT
                                                             -----

               PLEASE  MARK,  SIGN,  DATE AND RETURN YOUR PROXY  PROMPTLY IN THE
               POSTAGE-PAID ENVELOPE PROVIDED.

               IMPORTANT:  In signing this proxy, please sign your name or names
               on the signature line in the same way as indicated on this proxy.
               When signing as an attorney, executor, administrator,  trustee or
               guardian,  please give your full title as such.  EACH JOINT OWNER
               MUST SIG

Signature:              Date:             Signature:              Date:
          -------------      -------                -------------      ------- 

                                     


                                      PROXY

                               WESTWOOD ONE, INC.

   Proxy for 2005 Annual Meeting of Shareholders for Holders of Class B Stock
         THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF
                               WESTWOOD ONE, INC.

     The undersigned  shareholder of Westwood One, Inc., a Delaware  corporation
(the  "Company"),  hereby  appoints  Andrew  Zaref  and  David  Hillman  as  the
undersigned's   attorneys,   agents  and  proxies,   each  with  full  power  of
substitution to attend and act for the undersigned at the 2005 Annual Meeting of
Shareholders  of the Company to be held on May 19,  2005 at 10:00 a.m.,  Pacific
Time,  in The Salon Royal II Meeting Room of the Wyndham Bel Age, 1020 North San
Vicente  Boulevard,  West  Hollywood,  California  90069  and  any  adjournments
thereof,  and to represent and vote as designated on the reverse side all of the
shares of Class B Stock of the Company that the undersigned would be entitled to
vote if personally present at the 2005 Annual Meeting.
     
If no choice is specified on the reverse side, the proxy will be voted as to all
shares of the  undersigned  FOR the election of all  nominees  for  directorship
listed on the reverse side and FOR proposals 2 and 3.

     The  proxies,  and  each of  them,  shall  have  all the  powers  that  the
undersigned would have if acting in person.  The undersigned  hereby revokes any
other proxy to vote at the Annual  Meeting and hereby  ratifies and confirms all
that the  proxies,  and each of them,  may  lawfully do by virtue  hereof.  With
respect to matters not known at the time of the  solicitation of this proxy, the
proxies are authorized to vote in accordance with their discretion. 

SEE REVERSE         CONTINUED AND TO BE SIGNED ON REVERSE SIDE      SEE REVERSE
-----------                                                         -----------
  SIDE                                                                SIDE


                                      




          X       Please mark votes as in this example.
        -----

The proxies present at the Annual Meeting, either in person or by substitute (or
if only one shall be  present  and act,  then that  one),  shall vote the shares
represented by this proxy in the manner indicated below by the  shareholder.  IF
NO  INSTRUCTIONS  TO THE CONTRARY ARE INDICATED ON THIS PROXY,  IT WILL BE VOTED
FOR ITEMS 1, 2 AND 3 SHOWN BELOW.  The Board of Directors  recommends a vote FOR
all nominees in Item 1, FOR Item 2 AND FOR Item 3.

1.   Election of Class III Directors. 
     Nominee: (01) Steven A. Lerman and (02) Joel Hollander


          -----  FOR THE NOMINEE           -----    WITHHELD FROM THE NOMINEE

          
2.   Ratification  of  the  selection  of  PricewaterhouseCoopers   LLP  as  the
     independent  accountants of the Company for the fiscal year ending December
     31, 2005.

                  FOR               AGAINST          ABSTAIN

                 -----               -----            -----

3.  Approval of the 2005 Equity Compensation Plan.

                  FOR               AGAINST          ABSTAIN

                 -----               -----            -----


               MARK HERE FOR ADDRESS CHANGE AND NOTE AT LEFT 
                                                             -----

               PLEASE  MARK,  SIGN,  DATE AND RETURN YOUR PROXY  PROMPTLY IN THE
               POSTAGE-PAID ENVELOPE PROVIDED.

               IMPORTANT:  In signing this proxy, please sign your name or names
               on the signature line in the same way as indicated on this proxy.
               When signing as an attorney, executor, administrator,  trustee or
               guardian,  please give your full title as such.  EACH JOINT OWNER
               MUST SIGN.

Signature:              Date:             Signature:              Date:
          -------------      -------                -------------      -------