Madmansam said:I am surprised that no one brought up the 25th Anniversary of the format switch of KFRC-610 from Top 40 to Big Band/Adult Standards "Magic 61". August 11, 1986
Madmansam said:I am surprised that no one brought up the 25th Anniversary of the format switch of KFRC-610 from Top 40 to Big Band/Adult Standards "Magic 61". August 11, 1986
RadioStarOne said:I remember times when KFRC played ten, twelve, fifteen or more in a row! Where were you? I believe that you're not the expert on 610 KFRC that you think you are!
calguy said:[....] and the central control over so many stations by one set of programmers thanks to companies who now possess hundreds of stations. Groups of the past were limited to 7 AM and 7 FM and in many instances they may not have controlled more than a few that had the same format.
RadioStarOne said:I don't need to go there because I've got thousands of hours of the big 610 recorded for myself that any serious collector would get lost listening to unscoped. Sure there were the busy hours when it was the way most any successful radio station did things. I always liked that because that was what made them the fast paced entertaining stations they were. I still believe nobody really minded that cause it was back to music in a short period of time and most of the spots were of interest to listener's. And if it did get boring we could always punch up KYA or any number of other stations to enjoy. Kind of just like today, isn't that interesting how thngs really haven't changed all that much, other than the stations that think it's cool to run eight minutes of spots together. Now that does get boring.
Lkeller said:Having said all that, remember that the KFRC of the late 70s and early 80s was hardly the KFRC of the Drake era, and if KFRC were around today as a Top 40 (CHR) station, it would likely resemble Wild or Now.
@David, If you read my original post, i didn't say celebrate. I had mean't "Observering The Anniversary Of The Loss Of The Original Big 610. A person can observe a passing of a radio station without exactly celebrating. Because there was no reason to celebrate the demise of The Big 610.DavidKaye said:Madmansam said:I am surprised that no one brought up the 25th Anniversary of the format switch of KFRC-610 from Top 40 to Big Band/Adult Standards "Magic 61". August 11, 1986
You're surprised that people aren't celebrating the demise of a radio station's format? Huh?
DavidKaye said:Lkeller said:Having said all that, remember that the KFRC of the late 70s and early 80s was hardly the KFRC of the Drake era, and if KFRC were around today as a Top 40 (CHR) station, it would likely resemble Wild or Now.
What people here are consistently failing to see is that Top 40 radio in the KFRC style continues to exist today. It's called Radio Disney and in the Bay Area it's on 1310. They have exactly the formatics KFRC used to have: personalities, contests, stingers, fast segues, and lots and lots of energy.
Lkeller said:DavidKaye said:Lkeller said:Having said all that, remember that the KFRC of the late 70s and early 80s was hardly the KFRC of the Drake era, and if KFRC were around today as a Top 40 (CHR) station, it would likely resemble Wild or Now.
What people here are consistently failing to see is that Top 40 radio in the KFRC style continues to exist today. It's called Radio Disney and in the Bay Area it's on 1310. They have exactly the formatics KFRC used to have: personalities, contests, stingers, fast segues, and lots and lots of energy.
Maybe people are "failing to see" this because Radio Disney is nothing like old Top 40 radio. Perhaps there's a superficial similarity (contests, fast segues, etc), but otherwise, it's just not the same. RD is not typical CHR - it concentrates on Disney artists, and exists for one purpose only - to promote and sell Disney products (CDs, downloads, concerts, movies, tchotchkes, etc.).
My daugher outgrew Radio Disney by about age 10, and moved on to Wild 94.9. Appeallng only to pre-teens is not a recipe for commercial success. KFRC and the other old Top 40 stations appealed to pre-teens and teens, but also to young adults.
It's stations like Wild and "997 Now" that are the analogs to the old KFRC. Yes - the 'bells-and-whistles' are gone, but these stations tend to be high energy (fast segues included), and some of the DJs even stand out as personalities,at least to the extent that your average Boss Jock (or 610 man) was, sometimes more so. Check out St. John some time.