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What was the first radio station you grew up listening as a kid?

Growing up in Tulsa OK in the late 60's, my mom always had the radio tuned to KAKC, the Drake-consulted top 40 station. I still remember Scooter B Seagraves in the afternoon and the Million Dollar Weekends. My dad listened to MOR music and St Louis Cardinals baseball on KVOO. When they switched to country music in the early 70's, he stayed with KVOO.

By the time I was 14 or so, I'd switched over to FM and progressive rock from local KTBA. My first car had an AM-only radio and I was driving around at night listening to the clear signal from WLS.
 
Growing up in Lexington Ky in the 60s, our kitchen radio was always on the "Mighty 590 WVLK".
It was full service/Top 40 back then, plus they carried all the University of Kentucky football and basketball and it is alleged that they were the first station in Kentucky to play rock n roll.

When I was 7, I got my own radio for Christmas. An AM radio/phono combo from Grants.
It was then I discovered the "Super 79 WAKY" in Louisville. Their day signal was like a local and almost all the kids in Lexington listened to WAKY.

I was hooked until the mid 70s when FM took over, so then it was WLAP FM with TM Stereo Rock, and WKQQ with a more mature AOR format.
 
My parents always and only had 610 WIP Philadelphia on the AM-only radio that sat atop the fridge, and played Ken Garland every morning. It was also the primary setting in the car radio. And I tended to listen even on my own little transistor radio when I was a kid. Even helped keep track of the cash call jackpot amount on the little chalkboard in our kitchen. However, the giant stereo console gizmo in our living room with that fancy “FM” tuner was often on Easy 101. Sometimes they’d put WIP on there as well, and we had wired speakers in a small “den” in another room.

As I branched out to my own tastes as I got into the pre-teen and teen years, and got a boom box 🤣, I did listen some to Philly’s 98 WCAU, like seemingly everyone under 21, but gravitated more to the approach WZGO/Z-106 took, and also really enjoyed the hot AC-ish WSNI.

I didn’t totally give up on the music on WIP. They did, of course, but I would occasionally tune in for the music until the bitter end, down to the last music shift on Saturday mornings for a bit.

When Z106 gave way to Electric 106/WTRK, that was more of a laughingstock, a joke that wore thin quickly. I bounced between 98 and 104.5 most of that time, and pretty much locked back on 106 when WEGX came along, and once they departed, on to WPLY until they went alternative.
 
My parents always and only had 610 WIP Philadelphia on the AM-only radio that sat atop the fridge, and played Ken Garland every morning. It was also the primary setting in the car radio. And I tended to listen even on my own little transistor radio when I was a kid. Even helped keep track of the cash call jackpot amount on the little chalkboard in our kitchen. However, the giant stereo console gizmo in our living room with that fancy “FM” tuner was often on Easy 101. Sometimes they’d put WIP on there as well, and we had wired speakers in a small “den” in another room.

As I branched out to my own tastes as I got into the pre-teen and teen years, and got a boom box 🤣, I did listen some to Philly’s 98 WCAU, like seemingly everyone under 21, but gravitated more to the approach WZGO/Z-106 took, and also really enjoyed the hot AC-ish WSNI.

I didn’t totally give up on the music on WIP. They did, of course, but I would occasionally tune in for the music until the bitter end, down to the last music shift on Saturday mornings for a bit.

When Z106 gave way to Electric 106/WTRK, that was more of a laughingstock, a joke that wore thin quickly. I bounced between 98 and 104.5 most of that time, and pretty much locked back on 106 when WEGX came along, and once they departed, on to WPLY until they went alternative.
Did you ever listen to WIFI-FM?
 
I just remembered another one I heard fairly often growing up: Classical KDFC when it was a commercial station at 102.1 FM.

I was reminded while I was listening to an aircheck of KUSC I made last October while I was visiting the area.

c
 
Newsradio 1080, KRLD Dallas-Fort Worth (I lived in North Dallas)
KBOX 1480 Dallas
WBAP 820 Fort Worth
WRR 1310 Dallas (later KAAM)
KXOL 1360 Fort Worth
I heard a lot of these on a crystal radio set I built from Radio Shack. Later my dad and I built one based on designs in the World Book Encyclopedia.
That one, oddly enough, kept picking up some kind of Canadian radio broadcast at night.
I also got a nice headset radio from Radio Shack.
 
98 WGRD (Top 40), Grand Rapids, MI, in the late 1980s.

Bubba the Love Sponge once worked there, but he was fired maybe a year before I started listening to the radio. Frosty Stilwell and Kevin Gossett are two on-air DJs of that era of the station who went on to bigger & better things in major markets.

I was quite upset when the station dumped CHR for a milquetoast sounding Hot AC format in 1992. CHR made a brief return about 18 to 24 months later but that didn't last long. Rimshooter WSNX is now the heritage CHR station in the market; they've programmed CHR or CHR/Rhythmic for 38 years now, and their main studio was relocated to the Grand Rapids area about 28 years ago.
 
Grew up with 98.9 KWJZ in Seattle. That was our smooth jazz station. I grew up with the Kenny G songs, the Sade songs, Richard Elliott, Chris Botti, Earth Wind and Fire, Dave Koz, David Sanborn (RIP - I'm pretty sure his cover of 'Spooky' was the first song I ever heard from Sanborn, and I was probably 4 years old), Pieces of a Dream, Peter White, Grover Washington Jr., Boney James, George Benson...
To this day I still love the 'Linus & Lucy' cover from David Benoit.

During the holidays, KRWM "Warm 106.9" was THE Christmas station and still is, in Seattle. They were the flagship station for Delilah for many, many years. I remember one Christmas night she did the show live from a family gathering or something. Or was it Thanksgiving?
 
Newsradio 1080, KRLD Dallas-Fort Worth (I lived in North Dallas)
KBOX 1480 Dallas
WBAP 820 Fort Worth
WRR 1310 Dallas (later KAAM)
KXOL 1360 Fort Worth
I heard a lot of these on a crystal radio set I built from Radio Shack. Later my dad and I built one based on designs in the World Book Encyclopedia.
That one, oddly enough, kept picking up some kind of Canadian radio broadcast at night.
I also got a nice headset radio from Radio Shack.

Do you remember when KRLD got rid of their MOR format? I believe Phil Adler was the last of the music DJs and stayed for the News format that had to be like '76 , '77?
The last voice on KBOX before the KMEZ format came to AM was Len Mohnkern (RIP)
KXOL was full of historical/hysterical jocks, more than I could mention.
KBUY 1540

My dad bought me a radio station kit when I was 7 and have always had a Part 15 station since then. Even when I had a job on the radio.

Thanks for bringing those good memories back.
 
As a military brat, I was all over the place.

[edit]

1973-1975: OXNARD CA (KACY 1520) and a little bit of L.A. (KHJ 930 - at the time, I didn't have FM capability...)

Obviously, a Navy brat, since the only two military bases in my home market were (and are) the Naval Construction Battalion at Port Hueneme -- which was KACY's COL -- and Point Mugu Naval Air Station.

I also worked at KACY briefly in 1977-78 before becoming PD at KAAP-AM/FM, also in that market.
 
Sixty-Four KFI in the 70's... Lohman & Barkley in the mornings and John Rook programming the music during the day.

It wasn't exactly "when I grew up" but I did discover L&B at some point post-teen years, and still think "Light Of My Life" was silly enough that it could have also aired on Gary Owens' afternoon KMPC show without being out of place.
 
It wasn't exactly "when I grew up" but I did discover L&B at some point post-teen years, and still think "Light Of My Life" was silly enough that it could have also aired on Gary Owens' afternoon KMPC show without being out of place.
Long live Dr. Duncan, Bigfoot The Beast, Farmer Brown, Maid...In Japan, Bobert Bowsersocks, Mrs. Heuser, T Howard Pines Jr. and all the characters in the typically small Midwestern community of Pine City.
 
WABC in the 70s, when I was a teenager. Liked WFIL 560 Philadelphia, PA. They only ran 5 kW, but still had a presence to be reckond with. I loved their "Boss Jock" format, where the music came first. Didn't listen to the radio much before then, as I was too young. Do remember a little from 1969, when I was 8. I can remember the hits from that summer. "Grazing in the grass" lol!
 
Growing up in the Cleveland area in the 70's , my first and all time favorite to this day was 1220 WGAR. I have yet to discover a station which had the local on air talent 24/7 and music which 1220 WGAR had at the time.
 
Growing up in the Cleveland area in the 70's , my first and all time favorite to this day was 1220 WGAR. I have yet to discover a station which had the local on air talent 24/7 and music which 1220 WGAR had at the time.

As should be obvious from many discussions in many threads here, you're never going to. The business has changed so much -- driven by a very different audience mindset today -- that a 70's-style presentation, air talent-wise, would drive listeners away (at least in the demos that are needed to generate enough ad sales to continue paying the bills) and the music from that decade is also quickly becoming a liability.

And there's not much you or I, or anyone in the business, can do to change that.

(But I am thinking you know that already and are just being nostalgic.)
 


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