Re: memories of WBET/1460
Thanks for the kind comments of WBET, Peter. Growing up in Brockton, WBET was
THE station to listen to, due to their personalities. Arthur "Doc" Jones
had the morning show. Mid days belonged to Jack Ainslie. The afternoon
drive belonged to Gene Valencourt and his "South Shore Matinee.."
Evenings were hosted by the "Jazz Man"..Forest Adams. Peter, if memory
serves me right, hosted a 6-Midnight shift after Forest departed WBET.
Sad to see local radio's demise. Even now, WBET is "local" from 5:30am
to Noon with some fill in talk shows. It is sad that these shows will,
likely, depart. I hope that they keep the local Italian shows and,
particularly, Ed the Detective's show...and the Irish Program with Jim
Larkin.. After reading about the sale of WJDA/WESX and,now, WBET,
it makes one wonder how these stations serve the local interests with
syndicated programming. WBET-FM, which became WCAV, also, became a local
hot station. Sid Tufts, Skip Maloney, Rockin Rick Howe are some of the
local talent that I remember. My question for this board....will local
stations just become some Windows driven programmed stations that just
have a local hourly ID with no local content? What is the direction of
"local" radio.
> Speaking as one of the people who worked on "proofing"
> WBET's new (1990) antenna pattern in 1990, I can tell you
> that on the day pattern (5,000 w./non-DA), the signal is
> very respectable. It's pretty good. The night pattern, on
> the other hand, is directional (1,000 w., DA/N) toward the
> north-northeast protecting 1460 in Albany, NY. Due to the
> lower power and the strong skywave interference so prevalent
> on 1460, the "interference-free" coverage is somewhat
> limited to Brockton, Easton, Rockland, Whitman and the
> Bridgewaters. Hingham is kinda pushing it at night for
> WBET.
>
> I'm still hoping that 'BET still runs the Brockton Rox
> baseball games. Hey, the new owners would not lose a thing
> by running the games at night.
>
> I have nothing but fond memories of that station. If any
> station were to be "WKRP in Cincinnati in the flesh",
> WBET/WCAV-FM was it. Everybody liked each other and
> everybody was concerned about each other's health and
> welfare. Believe it or not, I had the pleasure of meeting
> Gary Sandy ("Andy Travis" of WKRP) while he was being
> interviewed on a show on WBET.
>
> I wish all the best to the remaining folks at WBET. I can
> tell you that WBET (and the late WCAV) were probably one of
> the best locally owned and operated radio stations in the
> country. In spite of the extreme tightwads in the newspaper
> (WBET's former owners), this station really sounded good.
> What a time!
>
>
> Peter Q. George (K1XRB)
> Alumni- WBET/WCAV (1982-1991)
> >
> > BTR is the major source of programming for WBNW 1120
> > Concord, which is simulcast on WPLM (AM) 1390 Plymouth.
> What
> > with an AM 1410 in Brockton and a directional pattern that
>
> > sends most of its signal to the southeast--away from
> > Brockton--WPLM probably doesn't do a very good job of
> > covering Brockton, so WBET might make a certain amount of
> > sense for BTR. OTOH, Brockton is a very blue-collar city,
> so
> > it's unclear that there is much of a market for financial
> > talk there. Maybe in Hingham. How is the 1460 signal in
> > Hingham?
> >
> > One would think that if BTR were serious about buying an
> AM
> > in the Boston market, they'd want WBIX, but presumably
> Alex
> > Langer wants more money than BTR could hope to raise. I
> > think BTR either owns or LMAs WLIE 540 Islip LI. WLIE has
> an
> > absolutely incredible daytime signal. (I've heard the
> > station clearly in the Berkshires and in most of New
> Jersey.
> > It's local near Trenton.) Moreover, WLIE holds a CP to
> > almost double its daytime power yet again. It's currently
> > 2500W--up from 1100W and before that 250W. The CP is for
> > 4600W, I believe.
> >
>