John C said:Also, didn't 92.5 become "Rocket 92" on April Fools day before flipping to WBEE? I'm not sure about that one.
You have a good memory Phil (Meaning the KB stunt.) I was talking to Dan Neaverth a few weeks ago about stuff like this. The station that traded jocks with KB was 1410 WPOP Hartford (Reynolds stop before he came to KB, IIRC.) You'd have thought it would be WPRO, since KB and PRO were owned by Cap-Cities at the time. DN recalled walking through the Hartford airport, handcuffed to another one of the KB jocks (probably Klestine since he and Dan pulled some great off the air stunts) as if DN had been taken into custody as a fugitive from justice, returning to Hartford. Somebody stops to talk to Dan and his 'handler' says, "Ma'am, if you knew what this man does for a living, you wouldn't be talking to him." Scowls and howls aplenty.Philip_Airtime said:As a kid, I remember listening to KB. It had to be 1967, and they switched jocks with another Cap Cities station in Providence I think it was. The on-air explanation was that the KB jocks had gone on strike, and these were the replacements. Perhaps someone who was working there at the time can flesh this out more. But as a 12-year-old kid, I bought it.
While he was at WBFO, Bill Raffel, now the host of Saturday Rounds on WNED-FM (as Pastrick says, no promotional fee received), always came up with a creative Aprils Fools feature. My personal favorite aired at the time Buffalo was celebrating its public arts project with the artistically decorated buffaloes. Bill reported giant butter lambs were appearing all over Buffalo. He got some folks at the Broadway Market to play along. Pretty funny stuff.
Mike Sheridan said:The best April Fools day put on I was ever involved with was in Fort Lauderdale. There is a small tunnel on US-1 called the New River Tunnel.
Paul_Warren said:I don't remember the year, but it was during that brief pi$$ing match between 'KB and WGR over who was "first in AM stereo" in Buffalo, and I think it was Stan and Danny on mornings. So...late 70s?
'KB was first, but for some reason was holding off promoting it. WGR was running the pilot to light up the stereo indicator and open the wideband on receivers, but running only mono programming (which was also not legal).
Anyway, IIRC, someone out at the shared transmitter site patched each station onto the other's right channel during the morning show for a bit. The memory is hazy, but I don't recall either host embracing the joke, and few listeners probably knew what was going on.