I never knew until this morning that 660 WNBC was ever Simulcast on 97.1 FM
I never knew until this morning that 660 WNBC was ever Simulcast on 97.1 FM
Thanx so much for the info. I watch & listened to the videos on YouTube this morningHmmm. Perhaps for a short period of time. 97.1 was owned by NBC from appx 1947 to 1988. It had several formats including classical and all news. For some brief periods it might have simulcast the AM, but all simulcasts ended in the mid-60s by order of the FCC. So they did a light rock format for a while before switching to news, then back to light rock, and finally country. In 1988, the country format on 97.1 moved to 103.5, and the Hot format replaced it.
Thanx so much for the info. I watch & listened to the videos on YouTube this morning
Yes October 11 1973 & Imus was on the AirDid the videos give a year? Because I'm not aware that Imus, for example, was ever simulcast on 97.1 FM.
Yes October 11 1973 & Imus was on the Air
Yes October 11 1973 Imus was on air
Oct 9, 2007
In New York, I remember a theme on automated WNBC-FM around 1973 called, The Rock Pile. WNBC-FM did simulcast Imus In The Morning and, I think the Midnight to 6 AM show, which was Murray The K. The rest of the day was automated.
Just an aside: "Rambling with Gambling" ran continuously on WOR from 1925 through 2000 featuring three generations of John Gambling; The son took over in 1959 and his son, in 1991, after being brought in as co-host in 1985. The show was canceled in 2000 and shortly thereafter John III moved to WABC but WOR owned the name. In 2008, he moved back to WOR but didn't return to "Rambling with Gambling" and retired in 2013.I found an old post from RadioDiscussions on this subject.
There was some selective simulcasting that was done during that time. Rambling With Gambling was simulcast for a time on WOR-FM. WNEW simulcast it's AM top of the hour newscasts on the FM. It happened from time to time. I imagine the Imus simulcast ended when the format of the FM changed in 1974.
But if you go back to the post-WW II 40's, many FMs offered programming that the AMs did not provide. When there was little commercial success, some tried things like "buscasting" which was a format designed for bus passengers that was piped into all city busses in some markets.In the earliest days of FM, with so relatively little in the way of reception equipment by the public (the earliest adopters tended to be audiophiles) it was very common for co-owned FMs to simulcast their AMs 24/7 (or at least in morning drive). In fact, until the FCC edict to stop simulcasting, the only separately-programmed FMs in most markets were the ones without existing AMs.
There was John B. first, followed by John A., and finally John R. There was never a John Gambling II/Jr. or John Gambling III.Just an aside: "Rambling with Gambling" ran continuously on WOR from 1925 through 2000 featuring three generations of John Gambling; The son took over in 1959 and his son, in 1991, after being brought in as co-host in 1985. The show was canceled in 2000 and shortly thereafter John III moved to WABC but WOR owned the name. In 2008, he moved back to WOR but didn't return to "Rambling with Gambling" and retired in 2013.
The article said they would be running Bonneville's "Soft Rock" so apparently they still had the WNBC-FM automation.
On WYNY, the FM half of WNBC radio, a woman disk jockey named Bree Bushaw has been working the morning shift since January.
I know. I was just trying to keep it brief. That's why I called him John III and didn't go into his return when he unretired. The fact that one of three men with the same first and last names held down morning drive for 88 years strikes me as more than a little interesting!There was John B. first, followed by John A., and finally John R. There was never a John Gambling II/Jr. or John Gambling III.
And John R. didn't fully retire. WNYM coaxed him back to do a midday show from 2014 until 2016, when he finally decided to pot down his mic once and for all.