I was listening to Talk 650 the other day, and something occurred to me: What was 650's history before this format?
Chuck Tiller said:KRCT 650 was originally licensed to Baytown.
Please go to this link and scroll down concerning the history of KIKK.
http://houstonradiohistory.blogspot.com/2009/10/1960s-kikk-talk-radio-koda-kenr.html
As far as 610 is concerned, it came on the air originally as KLEE, sold to Gordon McLendon who changed it to KLBS, which was going to be the flagship of his Liberty broadcasting network. However there were some money problems which caused a change of plans and he sold it. He bought back around 1957 and took the KILT call letters from a TV station he had a license for in El Paso. KLBS then became KILT and the rest is history.
The website I just posted gives a tremendous amount of history concerning the history of Houston radio. Its a very good read. you will learn a lot of things you didn't know. It certainly cleared some of my own misinformation about the history of some of the stations.
willdav713 said:Chuck Tiller said:KRCT 650 was originally licensed to Baytown.
Please go to this link and scroll down concerning the history of KIKK.
http://houstonradiohistory.blogspot.com/2009/10/1960s-kikk-talk-radio-koda-kenr.html
As far as 610 is concerned, it came on the air originally as KLEE, sold to Gordon McLendon who changed it to KLBS, which was going to be the flagship of his Liberty broadcasting network. However there were some money problems which caused a change of plans and he sold it. He bought back around 1957 and took the KILT call letters from a TV station he had a license for in El Paso. KLBS then became KILT and the rest is history.
The website I just posted gives a tremendous amount of history concerning the history of Houston radio. Its a very good read. you will learn a lot of things you didn't know. It certainly cleared some of my own misinformation about the history of some of the stations.
The KLBS calls were once used for TV 5 out in San Antonio, Texas until the Express News became involved with TV5 hence the letters KENS K Express newS, McLendon was involved with KTSA Top 55AM if memory serves me right.
FilioScotia said:I think the most interesting fact about KIKK's history is that it was in the vanguard of "C&W" stations that moved away from what was known then as "hayseed" radio. Chet Atkins got that ball rolling at RCA in Nashville around 1960 with what was called "Country-politan" music -- country songs with strings and brass instead of guitars and banjos.
Leroy Gloger wanted to get rid of the drawling DJ's and that whole small town country sound. So he hired Bill Bailey away from KTHT Demand Radio 790 to be his PD, and Bailey hired other pop and MOR DJ's. His goal was to play country music, but make KIKK sound the way the MOR stations sounded. More "uptown". More professional. He even had the infamous Richard Dobbyn bring his 20/20 news and his style of reporting it to KIKK. That's a whole 'nother story.
Gloger and KIKK 650 were so successful with this format that he was able to buy an FM and the rest is history. The FM simulcasted the AM until he was able to hire a second staff of jocks for it. And to think it all started with a 300 watt daytimer in Pasadena.
OldChicago said:FilioScotia said:I think the most interesting fact about KIKK's history is that it was in the vanguard of "C&W" stations that moved away from what was known then as "hayseed" radio. Chet Atkins got that ball rolling at RCA in Nashville around 1960 with what was called "Country-politan" music -- country songs with strings and brass instead of guitars and banjos.
Leroy Gloger wanted to get rid of the drawling DJ's and that whole small town country sound. So he hired Bill Bailey away from KTHT Demand Radio 790 to be his PD, and Bailey hired other pop and MOR DJ's. His goal was to play country music, but make KIKK sound the way the MOR stations sounded. More "uptown". More professional. He even had the infamous Richard Dobbyn bring his 20/20 news and his style of reporting it to KIKK. That's a whole 'nother story.
Gloger and KIKK 650 were so successful with this format that he was able to buy an FM and the rest is history. The FM simulcasted the AM until he was able to hire a second staff of jocks for it. And to think it all started with a 300 watt daytimer in Pasadena.
Interesting. Did a guy named Egmont Sonderling ever own KIKK for awhile or was that another Houston station.
Old Chicago