Mike Jorgenson finally got the keys to KOY-FM and was preparing to launch one of the worst radio stations in this market's history.
How colossal was this screw-up? Let's review what happened:
- Mike hires Larry Snyder, who had programmed KLPX in Tucson. He brings on his right-hand guy Craig from Tucson as well as market AOR vet Mark Mauer.
- Mike, who already has Lee Abrams on retainer for KZON, hires Guy Zapoleon to consult.
- Then we wait 6 months to close while the FCC fights with itself over what the proper punishment for an EEO violation is supposed to be
During that time, some of us at KZON caught glimpses of what Larry was hoping to do as they created faux airchecks to present to Jorgenson. I'd best describe what I heard coming out of the prod room as Rock Hits. It would have been an easy sell alongside KZON.
Meanwhile, Mike, enjoying the Suns tickets that came with acquiring KOY from Gary Edens gets the infamous brainstorm. Everyone in the arena was dancing to rock and Motown, so yes, that needs to become a format. But Mike can't be "too radio" so the jocks that he's already hired for The Coyote (the calls had been stashed on 1230 months before the sale became a thing) now would become vignette producers and writers for bits voiced by actors such as the man who was Mr. Haney on Green Acres. Also, since it's Mike, songs that we should have played were banished and songs we should have banished were played.
So let's pour some out for the guys hired and fired for KYOT who came to town to launch a radio station and then had to launch something else that sounded like it was created on an Adderall bender. They never had a chance.
But KYOT was not a stunt. Mike really thought he had a format. It wasn't until the 1.9 radio station he acquired dropped to a 0.9 and the only advertiser we could sell it to was The Castle that he gave up on being a programmer and paid for the music test when Broadcast Architecture told him be needed to get one.
We were ahead of our time with the automation and snarky sweeper formatics, but the music was terrible. With focus and a music test we could have been Jack FM, but we lacked both.
How colossal was this screw-up? Let's review what happened:
- Mike hires Larry Snyder, who had programmed KLPX in Tucson. He brings on his right-hand guy Craig from Tucson as well as market AOR vet Mark Mauer.
- Mike, who already has Lee Abrams on retainer for KZON, hires Guy Zapoleon to consult.
- Then we wait 6 months to close while the FCC fights with itself over what the proper punishment for an EEO violation is supposed to be
During that time, some of us at KZON caught glimpses of what Larry was hoping to do as they created faux airchecks to present to Jorgenson. I'd best describe what I heard coming out of the prod room as Rock Hits. It would have been an easy sell alongside KZON.
Meanwhile, Mike, enjoying the Suns tickets that came with acquiring KOY from Gary Edens gets the infamous brainstorm. Everyone in the arena was dancing to rock and Motown, so yes, that needs to become a format. But Mike can't be "too radio" so the jocks that he's already hired for The Coyote (the calls had been stashed on 1230 months before the sale became a thing) now would become vignette producers and writers for bits voiced by actors such as the man who was Mr. Haney on Green Acres. Also, since it's Mike, songs that we should have played were banished and songs we should have banished were played.
So let's pour some out for the guys hired and fired for KYOT who came to town to launch a radio station and then had to launch something else that sounded like it was created on an Adderall bender. They never had a chance.
But KYOT was not a stunt. Mike really thought he had a format. It wasn't until the 1.9 radio station he acquired dropped to a 0.9 and the only advertiser we could sell it to was The Castle that he gave up on being a programmer and paid for the music test when Broadcast Architecture told him be needed to get one.
We were ahead of our time with the automation and snarky sweeper formatics, but the music was terrible. With focus and a music test we could have been Jack FM, but we lacked both.