I am curious to know if Sklar is the programmer at WABC that hired Chuck Leonard?
Yes. (However, Dan Ingram recommended to Rick that he consider Chuck when the shift opened up*.)I am curious to know if Sklar is the programmer at WABC that hired Chuck Leonard?
WMCA played, in general, more new music than WABC. The playlist was longer, they enjoyed breaking new records, and some of that was soul and R&B. WABC was more conservative in their music selection and had a tighter playlist.Back in the mid to late 1960s WMCA played more R&B and Soul music than WABC. WMCA attracted many African-American listeners. Did hiring Chuck Leonard change the demographics of WABC listeners? In 1969 WMCA hired Frankie Crocker.
WMCA played, in general, more new music than WABC. The playlist was longer, they enjoyed breaking new records, and some of that was soul and R&B. WABC was more conservative in their music selection and had a tighter playlist.
Absolutely agree about The Breakfast Club. It was already an anachronism on the day WABC launched in December 1960. (I remember hearing it as a kid on some snow day or school holiday and thinking, "What is this sh!t?") But Cosell was a little different. (a) Howard was entertaining, (b) it was a short - 3 or 4 minutes - feature, and (c) it aired during Ingram's show, and gave him a lot of fodder to play off of. It was hilarious stream-of-consciousness humor. Some of the outtakes that Dan used as drops are still classic.They also had fewer commercials than WABC, and they had no network obligations forced on them by corporate. For example, The Breakfast Club from Chicago or Speaking of Sports with Howard Cosell. Sklar hated those network shows and lobbied to get rid of them as his star rose in the company.