MediaWorks hired Wallace after he left Air New Zealand in late 2020. He had worked for 19 years at the national airline and risen to the position of chief commerce and customer officer.
A similar incentive scheme at the company netted former board members and executives - including controversial chief executive Mark Weldon - $8.7m in 2015 when private equity firm OakTree Capital increased its stake in the company from 41 to 78 per cent.
Shorn of its television stations, MediaWorks is today a radio and outdoor advertising business and operates a suite of commercial stations including Today, The Rock and The Edge.
The accounts to December 2021 show narrowed losses over the period, with advertising revenue up to $195m from $165m the year prior. Deteriorating conditions in the outdoor advertising market, largely blamed on Covid, saw the company book a $12m impairment on that side of its business.
The company metamorphosed in recent years after it finally sold its television business in late 2020, a $23.5m deal that saw United States giant Discovery enter the New Zealand market.
That move ended more than a decade of financial flux at the company after heavy debt loading and choppy industry conditions saw channels Three and Four regularly act as a drain on earnings.
The deal was not costless, however, with the accounts showing restructuring costs at MediaWorks have totalled $11.4m over the past two years.
Debt issues, long a thorn in MediaWorks side, appear to now be on a more steady footing, with a new four-year, $140m syndication agreement struck with Westpac in December that has more than $30m in unused headroom.
MediaWorks and Discovery are now competitors, vividly illustrated by court action earlier this year that delayed the launch of MediaWorks' Today breakfast show over claims poached host Tova O'Brien - whose contract as Three political editor was inherited by Discovery - was subject to a restraint of trade.