I’ve seen L.A. ratings back to fall of 1966. KFI was never number one, and in the late 60s and early 70s, they often weren’t even top ten.
There were a lot of problems. When NBC network radio programming wound down, KFI essentially went to block programming. MOR in the morning, on a show called “Hit The Road” with interchangeable announcers while KMPC had a name personality in Dick Whittinghill. Chuck Cecil in afternoons was playing big band and swing, which was at the time just 15-20 year old music. They gave hours a week to Dick Sinclair for Polka music.
Oh, and a one-hour farm report at 5:00 a.m. That was the lead-in to morning drive. Plus a five-minute “frost report” every evening.
In 1961, Earle C. Anthony, who founded KFI in 1922 and had been the station’s sole owner, died. His family continued to run it as they thought he’d want.
Even when they streamlined to a pure MOR around 1966, they still came off as stodgier than KMPC and KGIL.
In 1968-69, they remade the station—-contemporary MOR with personalities (Lohman and Barkley, Jerry Bishop, Jack Angel, Jay Lawrence, Dave Hull and Scott Ellsworth). It was actually hipper and funnier than KMPC. And it scared the existing KFI audience. The ratings took a big dip.
So in 1970, the station over-corrected. Back to very conservative MOR music. Dave Garroway, who had hosted the Today show on NBC in the 50s, replaced Jay Lawrence in afternoons. Chuck Cecil was brought back from weekends to evenings to play swing and big bands, replacing Dave Hull.
It helped, but not enough. So in 1972, they went back to block programming…MOR 6 am to 6 pm, Chuck and the big bands 6-9, country music with Bob Kingsley from 9-midnight and talk with Hilly Rose overnight.
Finally, Anthony’s heirs sold to Cox Broadcasting in 1973. By 1974, the station was morphing back to Adult Contemporary (which, in the 1970s, was really Top 40 minus the five or six hardest records and a little deeper oldies library). That’s what they were doing at the time of the ratings posted here.
So why were they doing so poorly? Basically, too many stations playing the same music…there wasn’t much space between KFI, KMPC and KHJ. But, as in the late 60s, the new music was a tune-out for the old audience—-and a lot of KFI and KMPC’s traditional long-time listeners, by then 50 or older, went to FM beautiful music stations like KJOI and KOST. KFI got hurt less than KMPC because Cox also owned KOST. KMPC at the time was a stand-alone AM.
It wouldn’t be until Cox hired John Rook as PD and he took KFI Top 40 in 1977 that KFI would be truly competitive. Until then, Lohman and Barkley basically carried the station. The joke at the time…and very close to the truth…was that you could turn off the transmitter 20 hours a day, just air Lohman and Barkley, and KFI’s rating wouldn’t change that much.