Thanks for your kind words, John. I really appreciate it! I did some looking around, and Skip Kelly is still in West Palm Beach. He does afternoon drive at the True Oldies simulcast (both translators) at 95.9 and 106.9. I can't get either station where I am in the south-central part of the county, but I often tune in when I go to the beach at Singer Island. Here's his page:
https://trueoldiesfla.com/on-air/wake-up-with-skip-kelly
Mike Perry was a staple at Kool 105.5 for many years. He was even a Premium Choice jock for AC formats across iHeart's network, and he used to be heard in several small markets across the country.
I do remember Skip Kelly hosting mornings at WQOL. If memory serves, he tracked mornings at WQOL while holding down afternoons at WOLL. This was probably in the early 2010s.
I'll be curious to see if iHeart Jax brings back Classic Hits. My guess is that it won't happen soon, however. Given the formats that they have in Jax, iHeart is probably more interested in complementing the CHR and Rhythmic stations they have, and a Classic Hits station would not accomplish that. I hope that I am wrong. A WQOL-type station would sound good in Jax. I am curious to see what you say about WQOL's evolution.
Good to hear Skip Kelly has found a gig and probably to his liking too. I'll check it out during the work week. Yes, I've long been familiar with Mike Perry having heard him during my many trips to and from South Florida. You probably know he voice tracked at the now defunct Classic Hits WJGH Magic 107.3 in Jax. That started in late 2010 and by the holiday season 2011 he was replaced.
As far as WQOL goes, I have no idea when I first found the station. But I suspect I liked what I heard from Day One. For more years than I can remember, 103.7 was a preset in my car. When I moved to the T.C. in February of 2018, WQOL was still branded as an oldies format. That would soon change. Music tweaks began to reflect the Classic Hits direction but it was all done in a slow and deliberate fashion. The station was in the right hands.
WQOL eventually became a fully programmed Premium Choice station. The old Magic in Jacksonville used Premium Choice programing part of the times, mainly at night, overnight and every other weekend. It was a bizarre arrangement and it made for programing inconsistencies. They probably had no choice in that they had to utilize the service. This was back in late 2010 to early 2012. Long story short, the programing wasn't as good as it is today. Certainly, the jocks have improved greatly as well.
WQOL's playlist that's 100% Premium Choice is vanilla but it's designed that way. No doubt, for all the stations utilizing this programing, there can't be obvious AC or Classic Rock leans as this can prove to negatively affect a sister station in a cluster anywhere across the country. WQOL's voice imaging has a subtle rock sound. As per your comments, the inclusion of rock titles does positively affect the money demo. IMO, there's a good balance with rock, pop, and even Motown/soul genre.
One type of music genre that was popular in the 80s is Freestyle. While there are markets with significant Hispanic population, airing these type songs makes sense. It wouldn't make sense in other markets.
In the market to the north, Orlando's Classic Hits Sunny 105.9 (WOCL-FM), Expose's "Come Go With Me," for example, is a frequently played song. It's the market for it. Then again, the morning show is like a radio version of Gutfeld! (Conservative Talk with jokes) I just don't get it. Orlando is an extremely blue city. While polling is showing Hispanics are leaving the Democratic Party in significant numbers, it's not the case for those who have migrated from Puerto Rico. So it's like you are shooting yourself in the foot. Maybe the music tests well among Hispanics but then the morning show will alienate a major part of your P1s who are of age.
But it's not the first time PD Rick Stacy has done off the wall things. Senior management at CBS Radio and now Audacy seem to give him a free reign. In all my trips up and down Florida, WQOL was always reliably consistent. As a listener, I liked that because I tuned in specifically to hear a certain mix of music and they delivered. On the other hand, on my usual 6-8 week junkets to S. Fla, there were times, I had to turn off Sunny off because I couldn't stand the music. There were significant changes. Their history shows many ups and downs in ratings.
WQOL has been a reliable station, always among top tier stations and deservedly so. Perhaps now, the readers will understand why I saw merits for Jacksonville to have incorporated WQOL's programing. Just like Sunny's frequent music tweaks, the same thing happened in Jax. Sometimes the station sounded like Eagle, sometimes AC WEJZ. From what I know, there was lots of interference in running the station and that never works. WQOL is the epitome of slow and steady and staying on course. Simply, they are a well-managed station and have always been.
I've talked about WQOL's midday host, Heath West, in the past. I continue to be impressed with his style, communication skills, and energy. He also hosts sister country station, Wave 92.7 (WAVW) in afternoon drive. I recently discovered he is a known radio quantity in these parts for 25 years. He was born in West Palm, grew up in Okeechobee County, and got his first radio gig at 16 years of age and never looked back. Today he lives in Vero Beach and certainly knows the territory here.
While WQOL doesn't have a dedicated PD, they have known quantities with Mo & Sally in mornings at Heath West in middays. I'd say they are doing their best with what they got.
As far as Jacksonville goes in bringing back the Classic Hits format, I've seen similar formats in the cluster in other markets. If they want to do it, they will. We can talk about selling this format along with that format, but I continue to be impressed with what iHeart has created with their Classic Hits format. While song overlap exists among many formats, I also see songs WQOL plays that Eagle certainly doesn't. The ball is in their court but I'm not holding my breath.