I'd like to thank Ed DeHart for taking a chance with the R&B Oldies format, which I thought would find an audience, and indeed it has.
FYI, taking a cheap shot at one of the best bands in history is not funny in my book, oh!!! but why would you support them, your one-sided format has no room for great music, just yelling and screaming sounds is your bag. For the record, you have no ratings and no listeners, I give this rat trap another few months polluting the dial with that ir·ri·tat·ing sound. If you and your staff would program great oldies, as; Teen Idols, British Invasion, Surf, Country, Garage and other non-R&B talent oldies, you might get some interest
To the earlier critic who clearly cannot take a joke, may I suggest you actually turn on AM 1590
FYI, taking a cheap shot at one of the best bands in history is not funny in my book, oh!!! but why would you support them, your one-sided format has no room for great music, just yelling and screaming sounds is your bag. For the record, you have no ratings and no listeners.
I was sorry to hear that WJAS went talk. Well until this morning when I received a couple of calls from people looking for a WJAS replacement and found WZUM. One of the callers found WZUM late last night. Never underestimate what a 4 watt signal can do.
Although the music is different, the demographics are right. I'm also sorry to see WJAS give up playing music, but I have no doubt that some of those people will find, and enjoy, WZUM.
C.
DoctorJamie... Nice of you to hide behind your apparent doctor of music credentials. Perhaps 40s on 4 might be more to your liking? Too bad, I think Clarke and everyone at WZUM do one heck of a job.
the comment about "the demographics are right" comes across as very disrespectful of the audience, especially people whose taste leans towards genres other than the only one that WZUM plays.
t should be noted that the original WZUM's coverage in Pittsburgh's principal black neighborhoods of the time was somewhat compromised. Much of WZUM's audience for the 1960s R&B format was in mostly white suburbs. As was a substantial part of WAMO's.