I've heard somewhere that KDKA stopped playing music in April of '92? When was this? Does anyone have an aircheck?
That sounds about right. It was when the station picked up Rush Limbaugh.
I have mentioned on this board and even got into a mini-argument with Rick Starr (not venomous, I hope, just a disagreement) that KDKA waited WAAAAAAAY too long to give up music and go all talk.
I just wish that the "talk show" in its form from those days could somehow find a resurgence. Now they have to be entirely political and one-sided, or if they are on FM, bad imitations of Howard Stern. Bring back some entertainment for grown-ups.....
There has never been a talk talent in this market that was on that level. I wonder how hard any local station ever looked for one.
I used to stay up late just to listen to Jack Wheeler when he did overnights. I thought him edgy at the time.
See, when I've discussed this you've always said how talk was catering to older demos. I realize that's conventional wisdom, as most talk demos are older. In fact, when I was trying to originally get a job as a sports talk show host in my 20s, I was often told by program directors I was too young (we try to cater to the 35-45 crowd, kid).
But when I was 13, I listened to KDKA. A lot. And it wasn't for the music which seemed to be trying to cater to 45-year-old housewives. It was for the Pirates, the Pens, and even talk show hosts like Doug Hoerth and Chris Cross and even Perry Marshall (who knew baseball). KDKA wasn't on my dial until 90-to-Six at the earliest so I could hear Lanny (not Goose- Lanny) give the sports headlines.
But if you start spinning "Send in the Clowns," which was on the playlist at the time, I'd rather be doing my homework.
Now, I don't know what your programmers and marketers said. But I'm just telling you as a member of the younger crowd in those days what I liked and what I listened to.
And I don't think I was the only one. I was reading Alby Oxenrider's bio online recently, and he spoke of how he learned to love broadcasting by calling up Perry Marshall. I was in an arguement with someone about Chris Cross' role in keeping the Pirates in town during that era, and when he said Cross couldn't of been influential because KDKA's audience is too old to matter, I wasn't the only one who refuted that arguement by stating I was less than 30 and listened to the station at the time.
What did KDKA give up by waiting? Well, IMO:
A- Pittsburgh lost something that only a full time 50KW AM talk station could have at the time to advance the city and region's culture
B- The opportunity to build around the sports contracts the station had at the time, which WTAE had all over KDKA and always made, in my opinion, KDKA sports coverage seem second rate.
C- The opportunity to be more contemporary. Everyone knew music on AM was doomed. Playing it, and especially that soft rock playlist at the time, started the rep the station has today of being your father's Oldsmobile.
If you felt that talk wouldn't have made the station more contemporary, might I suggest that had something to do with the talk show hosts. Levine made Bob Louge look hip.
Now it is true that KDKA had the Pirates (and some other inconsequential sports) and WTAE had the Steelers. Without Myron it's doubtful they could have maintained that relationship over time. So as great as Myron was (both ratings and sales) I might posit that they might have been better off without the Myron/Steelers franchise entirely.
Now it is true that KDKA had the Pirates (and some other inconsequential sports) and WTAE had the Steelers. Without Myron it's doubtful they could have maintained that relationship over time. So as great as Myron was (both ratings and sales) I might posit that they might have been better off without the Myron/Steelers franchise entirely. (I use the example of WHDH which creamed WBZ with a WTAE-like approach sans sports. Female audience flow piles up hour by hour, whereas male audience waxes and wanes to a far greater extent. (Jobs and all that.) Again I'm aware you will disagree - and vehemently - but I chalk that up to your propensity to evaluate in light of your personal predilections, in this case "sports." (Had I been running WTAE, I will say, I likely would have let it be, too, as Ted Atkins did.)