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106.1 KFRC-FM aircheck 1974

Jim Carson at some point, I believe, went to KGB (1360) and later to KRTH where he worked forever until he retired a few years ago.
Carson was at KBLA as Vic Gee from 1965 to 1967. He stayed when KBLA became country KBBQ, then went to KGB in San Diego later in ‘67. That's where he became Jim Carson. Started in overnights, wound up in afternoon drive.

He moved to KFRC in August of 1970, replacing Charlie Van Dyke in mornings.

In July of 1973, when Robert W. Morgan walked out of KHJ, RKO flew Jim down to L.A. to cover mornings for a week or two. While he was there, Don Barrett (later of LARadio.com) and Rich Brother Robbin (who Jim had worked with at KCBQ), then the GM and PD at KIQQ, offered Jim a permanent slot there (the station had just flipped from country as KFOX in February).

Jim took the chance to go back to Southern California and said yes. Paul Drew had already made it clear he was going after Charlie Van Dyke (then at WLS) to replace Morgan at KHJ.

When Drake-Chenault bought the programming rights to KIQQ later that year, Carson was the only survivor. Everyone else was out of a job. Jim was also the only one of that group still there when Drake-Chenault's contract expired in '77. Jim even stayed when KIQQ changed format and became K-Lite.

It was 16 years before Jim left KIQQ, when Westwood One bought it and made it Pirate Radio (KQLZ). And soon after, Jim was hired to do mornings as the only local voice for a revival of K-Lite on Gene Autry's KEDG, which changed call letters to KLIT (not a typo). It was five years there and then on to KRTH for 12 years before retiring in 2016.

Jim's the consummate pro. Even so, that's probably the most stable resume' in radio, considering it's a span of 51 years.
 
Carson was at KBLA as Vic Gee from 1965 to 1967. He stayed when KBLA became country KBBQ, then went to KGB in San Diego later in ‘67. That's where he became Jim Carson. Started in overnights, wound up in afternoon drive.

He moved to KFRC in August of 1970, replacing Charlie Van Dyke in mornings.

In July of 1973, when Robert W. Morgan walked out of KHJ, RKO flew Jim down to L.A. to cover mornings for a week or two. While he was there, Don Barrett (later of LARadio.com) and Rich Brother Robbin (who Jim had worked with at KCBQ), then the GM and PD at KIQQ, offered Jim a permanent slot there (the station had just flipped from country as KFOX in February).

Jim took the chance to go back to Southern California and said yes. Paul Drew had already made it clear he was going after Charlie Van Dyke (then at WLS) to replace Morgan at KHJ.

When Drake-Chenault bought the programming rights to KIQQ later that year, Carson was the only survivor. Everyone else was out of a job. Jim was also the only one of that group still there when Drake-Chenault's contract expired in '77. Jim even stayed when KIQQ changed format and became K-Lite.

It was 16 years before Jim left KIQQ, when Westwood One bought it and made it Pirate Radio (KQLZ). And soon after, Jim was hired to do mornings as the only local voice for a revival of K-Lite on Gene Autry's KEDG, which changed call letters to KLIT (not a typo). It was five years there and then on to KRTH for 12 years before retiring in 2016.

Jim's the consummate pro. Even so, that's probably the most stable resume' in radio, considering it's a span of 51 years.
Error in paragraph 3----Jim had worked with Rich Brother Robbin at KGB. Brain cramp and no coffee when I wrote it.
 
Carson was at KBLA as Vic Gee from 1965 to 1967. He stayed when KBLA became country KBBQ, then went to KGB in San Diego later in ‘67. That's where he became Jim Carson. Started in overnights, wound up in afternoon drive.

He moved to KFRC in August of 1970, replacing Charlie Van Dyke in mornings.

In July of 1973, when Robert W. Morgan walked out of KHJ, RKO flew Jim down to L.A. to cover mornings for a week or two. While he was there, Don Barrett (later of LARadio.com) and Rich Brother Robbin (who Jim had worked with at KCBQ), then the GM and PD at KIQQ, offered Jim a permanent slot there (the station had just flipped from country as KFOX in February).

Jim took the chance to go back to Southern California and said yes. Paul Drew had already made it clear he was going after Charlie Van Dyke (then at WLS) to replace Morgan at KHJ.

When Drake-Chenault bought the programming rights to KIQQ later that year, Carson was the only survivor. Everyone else was out of a job. Jim was also the only one of that group still there when Drake-Chenault's contract expired in '77. Jim even stayed when KIQQ changed format and became K-Lite.

It was 16 years before Jim left KIQQ, when Westwood One bought it and made it Pirate Radio (KQLZ). And soon after, Jim was hired to do mornings as the only local voice for a revival of K-Lite on Gene Autry's KEDG, which changed call letters to KLIT (not a typo). It was five years there and then on to KRTH for 12 years before retiring in 2016.

Jim's the consummate pro. Even so, that's probably the most stable resume' in radio, considering it's a span of 51 years.
I think Jim's name (Vic Gee) was Victor Gracen, am I right?
 
I never heard him use Victor Grayson on the air but I heard one of his fellow personalities joking about his name way back during his KBLA 1490 days (250 W!) Yes, KBLA was the other Valley station. KBLA was Top 40, KGIL was MOR!
...thinking back on it, it was "Vic Grayson", not Victor---a play off "Dick Grayson", Robin's alter ego in the then-hot BATMAN TV series. It didn't last long. KGB wanted him to be Jim Carson. Same thing happened to Bobby Ocean. He used his middle name of Raymond and was "Radio Ray Farrell" early on, then became "Johnny Scott" at KYNO. He told the story of getting a phone call from Bill Drake himself telling him he was going to KGB...."and your name will be Bobby Ocean."
 
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I never heard him use Victor Grayson on the air but I heard one of his fellow personalities joking about his name way back during his KBLA 1490 days (250 W!) Yes, KBLA was the other Valley station. KBLA was Top 40, KGIL was MOR!
Confirmed via Don Barrett's database. Vic Gee on KBLA became Vic Grayson on KBLA before moving to KGB. Carson moved from afternoon drive to morning drive at KGB and was in that slot when he went to KFRC for mornings.

And his fill-in at KHJ was one week.
 
...and there was KVFM, which was a standalone FM until KGIL bought it in 1976.
KBLA was still on 1490 until the mid 60s when they moved to 1500. At that time, even though I had a couple of FM radios I don't remember KVFM's format in the early 60s. I don't think they went on the air until about 1960 even though they apparently were licensed a couple of years before that...I think...Just wondering if you or anyone knows what the format was way back then.
 
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KBLA was still on 1490 until the mid 60s when they moved to 1500. At that time, even though I had a couple of FM radios I don't remember KVFM's format in the early 60s. I don't think they went on the air until about 1960 even though they apparently were licensed a couple of years before that...I think...Just wondering if you or anyone knows what the format was way back then.
There is an aircheck of the Del Moore Show from KVFM dated 1960. His guest is Bob Crane. There's really nothing to tell when in 1960 it was:


We had a small thread on KVFM here five years ago..."Hot Hits" posted what appears to be a 1960 story on Jerry Lewis' investment in the station:


And someone who worked at KVFM in its last days before becoming KGIL-FM started a Facebook group. Not much in there, and apparently I can't link directly to it, but if you put "KVFM" in the Facebook search box, it pops up.
 
There is an aircheck of the Del Moore Show from KVFM dated 1960. His guest is Bob Crane. There's really nothing to tell when in 1960 it was:


We had a small thread on KVFM here five years ago..."Hot Hits" posted what appears to be a 1960 story on Jerry Lewis' investment in the station:


And someone who worked at KVFM in its last days before becoming KGIL-FM started a Facebook group. Not much in there, and apparently I can't link directly to it, but if you put "KVFM" in the Facebook search box, it pops up.
i know that Keri Tombazian of KTWV worked at KVFM in the early 70s.
 
But back to the original question. Indeed the SF market fought multipath problems in those days, as did other hilly cities. This definitely retarded signals in markets like this, (Seattle for example) but ways around it were coming into play.
 
But I failed to mention KFRC was one of the best sounding top 40’s of all time. Mid-70’s was incredible. Fantastic jocks, wanna say, Marvelous Mark, Dave Sholin, Beau Weaver, Chuck Buell all had that “crunchy” sound like they were constipated but it worked on air. Add great jingles and it was wonderful.
 
But I failed to mention KFRC was one of the best sounding top 40’s of all time. Mid-70’s was incredible. Fantastic jocks, wanna say, Marvelous Mark, Dave Sholin, Beau Weaver, Chuck Buell all had that “crunchy” sound like they were constipated but it worked on air. Add great jingles and it was wonderful.
Mornings: Dr. Don Rose (1973-1986)
9-Noon: John Mack Flanagan (1973-1976), Big Tom Parker (1976-1978)
Noon-3: Bobby Ocean (1972-1975), Rick Shaw (1975-1978)
3-6: Eric Chase (1972-1974), Chuck Buell (1974-1976), John Mack Flanagan (1976-1979)
6-10: Kevin McCarthy (1972-1973), Marvelous Mark McKay (1974-1978), Robin Bailey (1978-1979)
10-2: Beau Weaver (1973), Ed O'Brien (1974), Don Sainte-Johnn (1974-1979)
2-6: Shana (1974-1976)
Weekends/relief/music director: Dave Sholin (1974-1979)
 
Mornings: Dr. Don Rose (1973-1986)
9-Noon: John Mack Flanagan (1973-1976), Big Tom Parker (1976-1978)
Noon-3: Bobby Ocean (1972-1975), Rick Shaw (1975-1978)
3-6: Eric Chase (1972-1974), Chuck Buell (1974-1976), John Mack Flanagan (1976-1979)
6-10: Kevin McCarthy (1972-1973), Marvelous Mark McKay (1974-1978), Robin Bailey (1978-1979)
10-2: Beau Weaver (1973), Ed O'Brien (1974), Don Sainte-Johnn (1974-1979)
2-6: Shana (1974-1976)
Weekends/relief/music director: Dave Sholin (1974-1979)
Woah everyone on this list has either retired or are gone except for Beau Weaver who is currently a VO for Movie Trailers + TV Promos for Cable, Movie Apps and Local OTA. In Beau Weavers case his time at KFRC is forgotten due to his accomplishments on movie and TV promos.

His recent ones were with CBS Network for Mornings and with Paramount owned stations in Sacramento like KOVR and KMAX.



Here is Beau Weavers time in radio for KFRC and KULF.

 
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Everyone talks about “The Golden Age” of radio. Used to be the 1920’s. But this is a moving target. For me it is the 70’s, for 30-somethings it might be the 90’s or early 00’s. But one thing is for certain. Radio won’t ever be the same as we remember it in our own version of the golden age.
 
Woah everyone on this list has either retired or are gone except for Beau Weaver...
Not entirely correct. Well, okay, not at all correct.

Dave Sholin is doing a daily radio show on KSJJ in Bend, Oregon.

Eric Chase has been working under his real name, Paul Christy, for 30 or so years. He was on air in Dallas until a few years ago and appears to be voice tracking mornings for a station in Elko, Nevada in addition to doing V/O work.

Mark McKay is doing V/O, too.

Chuck Buell took part in Rewound Radio's WLS reunion Labor Day weekend and does V/O and audiobook narration.

Kevin McCarthy is co-host of the nationally syndicated CarPro radio show.

Robin Bailey went back to his pre-KFRC air name of Rob Harder, and until the same January, 2020 nationwide layoff that caught me, he and Mark Holman (as Harder & Holman) had been doing mornings in Spokane for more than 25 years.

And Bobby Ocean calls himself retired, but if you approached him with something fun, he'd be up for it (he's been doing some nice promotional stuff for the events that the restored KFRC mobile studio, "The Sturgeon" is making around Northern California this year.

As for Beau's KFRCs work being "forgotten", that depends on your perspective. You're very into V/O work...you said essentially the same about Charlie Van Dyke and Mark Elliott. Others, who are game show freaks, see Jim Lange, Bob Eubanks, Wink Martindale, Geoff Edwards and others that way.

But there are a lot of us (of course, we're of a certain age....) who absolutely remember. Every one of these guys had significant radio careers.

Beau had a great radio one---KAKC Tulsa, KNUS Dallas, KFRC San Francisco, KILT Houston, KHJ Los Angeles, KULF Houston, the Transtar Radio Network and his last on-air gig---30-ish years ago---weekends and fill-ins at KRTH:

 
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Mornings: Dr. Don Rose (1973-1986)
9-Noon: John Mack Flanagan (1973-1976), Big Tom Parker (1976-1978)
Noon-3: Bobby Ocean (1972-1975), Rick Shaw (1975-1978)
3-6: Eric Chase (1972-1974), Chuck Buell (1974-1976), John Mack Flanagan (1976-1979)
6-10: Kevin McCarthy (1972-1973), Marvelous Mark McKay (1974-1978), Robin Bailey (1978-1979)
10-2: Beau Weaver (1973), Ed O'Brien (1974), Don Sainte-Johnn (1974-1979)
2-6: Shana (1974-1976)
Weekends/relief/music director: Dave Sholin (1974-1979)
Ed O'Brien took a trip to the east coast and did nights at 99X for a brief time. He referred to himself as "Ed O on the stereo." I remember he had a very deep, raspy voice that sounded like Broderick Crawford from the old "Highway Patrol" tv show.
 
Ed O'Brien took a trip to the east coast and did nights at 99X for a brief time. He referred to himself as "Ed O on the stereo." I remember he had a very deep, raspy voice that sounded like Broderick Crawford from the old "Highway Patrol" TV show.
His trail's gone cold. Johnny Williams' 440int site has him in Denver since 1980 (KHOW and then on to VO work), but nothing new in decades.
 
Ed O'Brien took a trip to the east coast and did nights at 99X for a brief time. He referred to himself as "Ed O on the stereo." I remember he had a very deep, raspy voice that sounded like Broderick Crawford from the old "Highway Patrol" TV show.
One more note on Ed O'Brien---he left KFRC in spring of '74 to replace Machine Gun Kelly at KSTP, Minneapolis/St. Paul (Gunner had gone to KHJ). O'Brien was there at least until sometime in '75:


It appears he went from KSTP to 99X in the Summer of 1977. Then back to Minneapolis at KDWB. Audio exists of him there in 1979 and 1980.

Johnny Williams is the only one who has anything on him after...to Denver at KHOW in 1980 and VO work after that.
 
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