The company began operations in Pennsylvania as "Colonial Media Group." It first invested in the Twin Tiersradio market in 2008. The company strategy was to take rimshot signals in farther-flung boroughs such as Kane and Coudersport and move them to towns adjacent to the area's largest city in Olean, hoping to gain market share from the two main broadcasters in the area, Backyard Broadcasting and Pembrook Pines Media Group. From 2011 to 2013, Colonial operated a local television station in Olean. In 2018, Andrulonis announced the sale of the last of those stations to Rick Freeman, a Scranton-based businessman previously in the newspaper industry. Andrulonis and agreed to sell the stations to Freeman in a transaction consisting of 10% cash and 90% cryptocurrency, the first time cryptocurrency has ever been used in a broadcast license transaction; he stated that "it was time" for him to give up the stations to someone else more interested in building them. The terms of the sale required Freeman to cover any shortfall in cash if the cryptocurrency lost value, and he was unable to do so after cryptocurrencies entered a bear market in 2018. Colonial then sold one of the stations to Family Life Network, a regional Christian broadcaster, in December, and another to upstart broadcaster Bob Lowe in November 2019. In 2016, CEO Jeff Androulonis called East Carolina University's national anthem protest a "shameful" disrespect of the U.S. military and, in counterprotest and in concurrence with the company's advertisers, dropped a planned broadcast of the team's game against the University of South Florida from WFAY. In March 2019, Colonial Media and Entertainment changed its name to Andrulonis Media. With the change, the company shuttered its New York operations and, with the FCC eliminating its Main Studio Rule, began operating its remaining station there via automation and voice-tracking from the Carolinas until spinning the station off a year later. Colonial also previously invested in stations in Williamsport, Pennsylvania. Andrulonis's partners in the Williamsport stations bought him out in 2010, continuing to identify as "Colonial Radio Group of Williamsport;" eventually coming under the ownership of Todd Bartley in 2013. Bartley went bankrupt and, in 2020, sold Colonial Radio Group of Williamsport to Seven Mountains Media, a regional broadcaster.