cd637299 said:
Can somebody tell me what a typical announcement was (verbatim, if possible), right before each station swapped frequencies?
cd
On the air you would have heard "This is WFAA/820 Dallas this is WBAP 820 Fort Worth". Same thing but backwards if you were listening to 570.
If you were in the studio: "This is WFAA 820 Dallas this is WFAA 570 Dallas."
Due to the wiring setup it was possible for BOTH stations to be on the same frequency at the same time during change over. There was a little game played by announcers when the other station was running late. You could start your ID early, switch then start a record with a long instrumental intro under the other guy. If it were done correctly the switch was seamless on the station you were going to but left a little dead air on the one you had just left. It also resulted in the other guy having to move real fast when he would hear it. The guy with the dead air always got the blame since listeners couldn't know the exact time. This was especially true when the WBAP Farm Report would run over in the mornings at 6:30.
After Amon Carter moved KGKO (?) 570 to DFW the transmitter was located on the west side of New York Avenue in Arlington which was in the middle of nowhere back then. Therefore 570 was licensed to Fort Worth. One old timer told me their ID was "This is WFAA 570 Fort Worth with transmitter in Arlington, a broadcast service of the Dallas Morning News ." In Dallas WFAA had studios for each frequency. One studio was in the lobby of the Baker Hotel while the other was across Commerce Street on the second floor mezzanine of the Adolphus. At change time the announcer would sign off one frequency then haul it across Commerce to the second floor of the Adolphus to sign onto the other. There is no record of any announcer having been run over on Commerce although the old timer said there were a few close calls.
The reason Mr. Carter brought 570 to the area was radio had blossomed to the point of making money and both stations wanted to be on the air
all the time. Before that when there was only one frequency each station would broadcast only a few hours each day and everyone was happy..
It wasn't as bad as it sounds except the ratings services rated the frequency instead of the station. You had two sets of jingles and 820 was NBC with news on the hour while 570 was ABC Entertainment News on the half hour.
The switch during the NBC World Series also went flawlessly. Since the 10 second hourly ID from NBC was fairly exact in timing you would hear "This is WBAP 820 Fort Worth this is WFAA 820 Dallas". Before you switched you would punch up NBC and fade up the crown noise as you switched. One station would go from music to the world series and the other would do the opposite. The listeners didn't seem to mind, especially if you attempted to explain it to them.
For many years the problem was that both properties wanted 820 and neither wanted 570. Nothing was going to happen since 820 was the favorite of Mr. Ted Dealy who originally brought it on the air. It was his baby and he would have never let go of it. During the close of the 60's all parties involved, except Mr. Dealy, realized 570 had a great signal and cost less to operate. The planning of DFW Airport also was an influence since the Grapevine plant would have to be moved and a 5,000 watt transmitter would cost a lot less than a 50k. The seller of 820 could also make a lot of money from the sale of their half. Nixon was president and, along with Newton Minnow of the FCC, was giving broadcasters misery, especially conglomerates (Newspaper owned AM/FM/TV properties). This was the era when The Star Telegram lost WBAP-TV/AM/FM, The Times Herald lost KRLD-TV/AM/FM and the Dallas News operated WFAA-TV/AM/FM on 90 day telegrams of authorization from the FCC until circa 1978.
Mr. Dealy died in October 1969 which drove the final nail in the coffin of WFAA 820 (no pun intended). The deal was done and James Moroney, chairman of the DMN radio division, returned from Fort Worth with a check for 3 1/2 million dollars and clear title to 570. Rumor had it that WBAP 820 was such an unexpected success that they paid off their note in a very short time. Shortly afterward whatever has been on 570 has not been a major player in the market.
There was a little known ploy which was said to have been used by the "Belo Boys" after Mr. Dealy died to push the deal on the Carter people of Fort Worth to buy out 820.
WBAP-TV was NBC television as was 820 radio. WFAA-TV was ABC television as was 570 radio. KTVT-TV (once KFJZ-TV) was an independent and owned by Farmer-Stockman. KTVT badly wanted a network and was rumored to have had a lot of political sway with some FCC people at a time when the government was trying to bust up conglomerates. It has been said that someone in Dallas :

managed to convinced the Carter folks in Fort Worth that if they sold their half of 820 (NBC) and kept 570 (ABC) then NBC might see it as a slight to them which could result in NBC-TV moving from WBAP to KTVT-TV channel 11.