Really the same with me. I got unexpectedly blown out of an independently owned 100,000 watt with a wife who was 8 months pregnant, and we were 400 miles away from home. No eeee-vil corporate broadcaster there. I did not find that Utopia some have claimed.
If you went to work at CKLW for Paul Drew in the 1970s, you had a very good chance of being blown out. Some seem to remember a broadcast industry that was the equivalent of working for General Motors in the 1950s...I'm not sure where that was.
KHJ went through 33 jocks in 8 years. They fired two of Drake's hand-picked original Boss Jocks (Roger Christian and Dave Diamond) in the first six months. Gene Autry's KMPC had a reputation as a "gig for life", but while you had Dick Whittinghill making 30 years, that was in spite of efforts to replace him from year 13 on, and there are a lot of guys few remember now who were dumped along the way. It's radio. You're always one bad book, bad quarter or station sale away from the door, no matter where you are.
I've worked for one of the smallest mom and pop radio stations in the country (KIBS, Bishop---population 3,000) as well as for a single owner who made his fortune selling for Gordon McLendon (KSLY, San Luis Obispo), a small regional chain run by another former McClendon guy (KUKI, Ukiah), a larger regional chain (KOLO, Reno), and for majors like Bonneville, Nationwide, Hearst-Argyle, Emmis, the old Clear Channel and now iHeart (and in TV, Journal, Belo and Scripps). They all have their strengths and weaknesses. And it's not easy being any of them, big or small.