Sure. This stuff can be analyzed much better today. But believe me there was a lot of hanky panky going on 30-40 years ago. It was wrong but still existed on a widespread level.
Those links I posted are R&R stories from that time.Sure. This stuff can be analyzed much better today. But believe me there was a lot of hanky panky going on 30-40 years ago. It was wrong but still existed on a widespread level.
Probably worth a quick note here that if WMCA was involved, this was pre-1970.A version of this existed in record retailers as well. I spent a few of my high school and college freshman years working at one of the Sam Goody stores on Long Island, back when Sam Goody (Godewitz) actually ran the company. Occasionally I worked the 45's department. While albums and tapes were purchased by and delivered to a central warehouse, and then redistributed by company truck to the various stores, 45's were different in that they were ordered by each individual store and directly delivered by the record companies. The guy who managed our 45's warned me that some companies offered goodies (pun intended) to report inflated numbers when we got calls from WMCA, WOR-FM and especially WABC. I was told never to do that, and occasionally someone in one of their other stores got nailed and fired for (what was, effectively) taking a bribe to juice a particular record. Like with radio play, you couldn't get away with that today, though I have little doubt someone's figured out other ways to corrupt the process.
I think the bottom line here is the 80’s and 90’s were the wild west of radio. There was little enforcement of regulations. Yes, a few followed the rules. Maybe more than a few, I’m not sure. But this was an era where everything goes.
No. That is somewhat nieve. Rules in my career were regularly broken. I guess we lived in non parallel universe’s. Radio, like any industry had some bad guys. If you were lucky enough to avoid them, good for you. But they existed for sure. This from a 40 year jock and Pd.
Daytime! And yep, it's probably 375 miles.That's actually more like 375 miles. You didn't mention---was this day or night?
No, it was not. I was involved in either programming, managing or monitoring of Top 40 and AC stations at different points in the 70's and 80's, and paper ads were rather uncommon. What did happen, but got found out or suspected quickly, were paid ads of songs that were really stiffs.Sure. This stuff can be analyzed much better today. But believe me there was a lot of hanky panky going on 30-40 years ago. It was wrong but still existed on a widespread level.
But a lot had to do with the cocaine "boom" in the mid-70's into the mid-80's.I don’t disagree with the existence of bad guys in both the radio and record business. It’s your specifics and your timeline I have trouble with.
What you’re describing is perfectly believable in the 70’s and early 80s.
Thank you for the excellent, very comprehensive reply. As a self-proclaimed "radio geek", I have wondered about that for years; and I really appreciate this information.KFWB and KRLA maxed out at 18 minutes per hour, including commercials within newscasts. That was pretty much the industry standard, and the one followed by more established stations like KFI, KNX and KMPC.
Beginning in 1965, KHJ under Bill Drake had a firm commercial policy: No more than 14 minutes per hour, no commercial break lasting longer than 70 seconds and no commercial break with more than three commercials in it. So, you could have a 60-second and a ten-second spot, or two 30s and a 10, but not a 60 and a 30, and not a 30 and four 10s.
If you take 60 minutes and subtract those 14 minutes of commercials, you're at 46 minutes. If your songs are three minutes long, on average, and you allow for a little wiggle room for jingles, weather and the like, that's 15 records in an hour.
Mornings were a different animal on KHJ, with eight-minute newscasts at :40 and Robert W. or Charlie Tuna's phone bits. They were probably playing ten records an hour. Lohman and Barkley at KFI, Dick Whittinghill at KMPC and Dick Whittington at KGIL were probably playing six.
In an hour that had the limit---14 minutes of spots at no more than 70 seconds per break (and not all hours were always sold out), that required 12 commercial breaks.
In 1971, Ted Atkins, KHJ's Program Director, with Drake's approval, went to two-minute commercial breaks. Again, no more than three commercials in the break, so you could do two 60s, a 60 and two 30s, but not four 30s. The hourly maximum remained 14 minutes, so the number of commercial breaks in an hour dropped to seven from 12.
That worked for a while, but ultimately the lower spotloads of stations like KLOS and KMET forced top 40s (including KHJ and KKDJ) into a phase where they touted "Up to 52 minutes of music an hour")---meaning they'd cut the spot load to eight minutes, in four two-minute clusters.
I first ran into this when we'd call the record stores in Puerto Rico for Moony's WUNO. One of the employees we'd call told us about how there were "rewards" for reporting to Mike Joseph consulted WKAQ . Since that did not yet affect us as we were dead last at the time, we decided to prevent the practice once we beat WKAQ (which we did) by having our own interns go to record stores on payday and the following Saturday when 80% of record sales occurred and watch sales as well as asking which songs on albums they liked. We gave each of several independent record stores in different parts of the market some free spots in exchange.Occasionally I worked the 45's department. While albums and tapes were purchased by and delivered to a central warehouse, and then redistributed by company truck to the various stores, 45's were different in that they were ordered by each individual store and directly delivered by the record companies. The guy who managed our 45's warned me that some companies offered goodies (pun intended) to report inflated numbers when we got calls from WMCA, WOR-FM and especially WABC.
We all knew who was taking stuff from the record companies because we saw stiffs reported to Gavin or Rudman or Hamilton or R&R. We also saw that the PDs at those stations seemed to turn over fast.No. That is somewhat nieve. Rules in my career were regularly broken. I guess we lived in non parallel universe’s. Radio, like any industry had some bad guys. If you were lucky enough to avoid them, good for you. But they existed for sure. This from a 40 year jock and Pd.
Hell, KGO was as clear as a bell in north Seattle in the mid 70’s. But not today. Also actually d’x’d WLS Chicago from Seattle around this same era. Magical.
I was just looking at an old Spot Radio Rates and Data from Oct. 1974 on David's website. I found the maximum hourly commercial minutes for these stations:KFWB and KRLA maxed out at 18 minutes per hour, including commercials within newscasts. That was pretty much the industry standard, and the one followed by more established stations like KFI, KNX and KMPC.
Beginning in 1965, KHJ under Bill Drake had a firm commercial policy: No more than 14 minutes per hour, no commercial break lasting longer than 70 seconds and no commercial break with more than three commercials in it. So, you could have a 60-second and a ten-second spot, or two 30s and a 10, but not a 60 and a 30, and not a 30 and four 10s.
If you take 60 minutes and subtract those 14 minutes of commercials, you're at 46 minutes. If your songs are three minutes long, on average, and you allow for a little wiggle room for jingles, weather and the like, that's 15 records in an hour.
Mornings were a different animal on KHJ, with eight-minute newscasts at :40 and Robert W. or Charlie Tuna's phone bits. They were probably playing ten records an hour. Lohman and Barkley at KFI, Dick Whittinghill at KMPC and Dick Whittington at KGIL were probably playing six.
In an hour that had the limit---14 minutes of spots at no more than 70 seconds per break (and not all hours were always sold out), that required 12 commercial breaks.
In 1971, Ted Atkins, KHJ's Program Director, with Drake's approval, went to two-minute commercial breaks. Again, no more than three commercials in the break, so you could do two 60s, a 60 and two 30s, but not four 30s. The hourly maximum remained 14 minutes, so the number of commercial breaks in an hour dropped to seven from 12.
That worked for a while, but ultimately the lower spotloads of stations like KLOS and KMET forced top 40s (including KHJ and KKDJ) into a phase where they touted "Up to 52 minutes of music an hour")---meaning they'd cut the spot load to eight minutes, in four two-
... The guy who managed our 45's warned me that some companies offered goodies (pun intended) to report inflated numbers when we got calls from WMCA, WOR-FM and especially WABC...
Yes, Michael, you're correct. The music died at WMCA in 1970, though I don't recall the exact month. That summer I finished my freshman year, worked mornings at WLIR and afternoons at Goody. (And I got fired at both places within a week of each other in July.) I'll be a gentleman and not mention the name of that PD (anyone who has been a Talk jock or PD would recognize it), but losing the retail gig after nearly three years was truly a blessing. Except for the employee discount, that I missed.Probably worth a quick note here that if WMCA was involved, this was pre-1970.
Thanks for this. This is after Bill Drake left RKO in May of 1973 and shows KHJ responding to competitive pressure, dropping from 14 minutes per hour to 12. KGFJ was just beginning its (mostly losing) battle against KDAY.I was just looking at an old Spot Radio Rates and Data from Oct. 1974 on David's website. I found the maximum hourly commercial minutes for these stations:
KHJ 12 min. max per hour
KGFJ 14 min.
KRLA 10 min.
KMET 8 units per hour
KRTH 4 commercial breaks per hour
KIQQ, KKDJ, and KEZY did not provide this information.
Pretty close---the towers are 25 miles north of Sac, so it's probably about 525 in a straight line.Daytime! And yep, it's probably 375 miles.
KFBK (1530): Can hear them sometimes in San Diego, but it has to be 1-2 hours before sunset. I'm guessing Sacramento is 550 miles from S.D.