cd637299 said:That means, no more "bee-doop." Oh well.TheBigA said:To the best of my knowledge, the Mutual brand has been phased out. It's not on the WW1 website.
Isn't there at least one WW1 sat channel that still "bee-doops"?
cd637299 said:That means, no more "bee-doop." Oh well.TheBigA said:To the best of my knowledge, the Mutual brand has been phased out. It's not on the WW1 website.
KNX was so good because it was run by one of the last of the old-time CBS execs, George Nicholaw (the General Manager). As long as he was at the helm, the traditional CBS Radio could be heard in Los Angeles even up to 2002 when new CBS Radio big wigs in NYC canned him.Lkeller said:cd637299 said:Things change over time.....as I'm a little over 50, as a child I remember our CBS radio station (according to radio listings) running audio of the TV series "House Party." Of course even earlier, they ran regular programs that TV eventually usurped, like soap operas, dramas/comedy/variety at night.
When TV took over, radio had to change, including the radio networks. I think radio did well responding to the changes, giving news on the hour, some features that would include music (like NBC Monitor), etc. But in the 70s & 80s it seemed like only news reports, and now, people don't even want *that* on the radio.
CBS Radio was pretty decent as I was growing up. I used to listen to Mystery Theater, a daring attempt by CBS to go back to those days of yesteryear. That, in addition to the news, and sports scores/features ("all sports" radio was only a dream then).
But, yes, things have changed, and we can't go back.
cd
I'm 58, and remember House Party on the radio, too - also Arthur Godfrey and a few other programs. My mother's favorite radio station was KNX - their O&O in Los Angeles. Even in the 60s, KNX was a mix of local and CBS programming. The most notable local show was probably Bob Crane's morning show, which featured his comedy, and MOR music. He quit when he got Hogan's Heroes.
KNX had a lot of other local shows (talk, cooking shows, etc), but also ran all of CBS's programming, which was news intensive. On weekends, KNX ran only MOR music, with the exceptions of top-of-the hour network news, and somebody reading local headlines.
What happened, in my opinion, is that the old model of "full service" radio stations faded away. KNX started to feel serious competition in 1968 when KFWB became "All News, All the Time", and by the mid 70s, had moved closer to that model.
MattParker said:The most obvious example is the World News Roundup, which has become like the Holy Roman Empire - neither World News nor a Roundup. It's another hourly newscast with cut-aways and fillers - lots of fillers since stations, including Newsradio 880, are cutting out at :04 and they have to get all the good stuff in before then.
radiophiler said:Now CBS has loosened that policy, probably because they had to due to the competition.
radiophiler said:I wonder if only having one or two (in the days of RadioRadio) networks compared to ABC's 5 (Info, Entertainment, Direction, Contemporary and FM) hurt them.
MattParker said:KYW was not a CBS affiliate before Westinghouse took control of CBS, Inc.
ercjncpr said:KNX was so good because it was run by one of the last of the old-time CBS execs, George Nicholaw (the General Manager). As long as he was at the helm, the traditional CBS Radio could be heard in Los Angeles even up to 2002 when new CBS Radio big wigs in NYC canned him.Lkeller said:cd637299 said:Things change over time.....as I'm a little over 50, as a child I remember our CBS radio station (according to radio listings) running audio of the TV series "House Party." Of course even earlier, they ran regular programs that TV eventually usurped, like soap operas, dramas/comedy/variety at night.
When TV took over, radio had to change, including the radio networks. I think radio did well responding to the changes, giving news on the hour, some features that would include music (like NBC Monitor), etc. But in the 70s & 80s it seemed like only news reports, and now, people don't even want *that* on the radio.
CBS Radio was pretty decent as I was growing up. I used to listen to Mystery Theater, a daring attempt by CBS to go back to those days of yesteryear. That, in addition to the news, and sports scores/features ("all sports" radio was only a dream then).
But, yes, things have changed, and we can't go back.
cd
I'm 58, and remember House Party on the radio, too - also Arthur Godfrey and a few other programs. My mother's favorite radio station was KNX - their O&O in Los Angeles. Even in the 60s, KNX was a mix of local and CBS programming. The most notable local show was probably Bob Crane's morning show, which featured his comedy, and MOR music. He quit when he got Hogan's Heroes.
KNX had a lot of other local shows (talk, cooking shows, etc), but also ran all of CBS's programming, which was news intensive. On weekends, KNX ran only MOR music, with the exceptions of top-of-the hour network news, and somebody reading local headlines.
What happened, in my opinion, is that the old model of "full service" radio stations faded away. KNX started to feel serious competition in 1968 when KFWB became "All News, All the Time", and by the mid 70s, had moved closer to that model.
TheBigA said:Back to my previous thought:
With CBS Radio being the last of the original radio networks, what is the future of these kinds of things? Scrapheap? Museum?
With TV so dependent on national platforms, with the popoularity of cable and the World Wide Web, is the time ripe for a return to the old radio network model of the 30s and 40s?
MattParker said:And ABC radio, as one of NBC's two radio networks, pre-dates CBS.
radiorob2.0 said:Speaking of CBS and Westinghouse, Pittsburgh comes to mind. When I visited in 2000 KQV was utilizing the Westinghouse news format and elements along with CBS news at the top of the hour.
MattParker said:The station was not doing well with a top 40 format against WMCA and WABC, so Westinghouse decided to go with the somewhat novel at the time all news format, with which Gordon McClendon had had some success in Chicago and Southern California. When KYW returned to Philly in 1964 NBC's inept management had pretty much run the station into the ground; it was being beaten the ratings by three FM stations at a time when hardly anybody listened to FM. Westinghouse opted to use the all news format in Philly, as well (and to drop NBC radio). KYW, with no network affiliation beyond reports from Group W correspondents, proved to extremely successful with all news.
radiorob2.0 said:WSM then became a CBS affiliate that it still has today.
...WMAQ was strictly a CNN Radio affiliate during the Westinghouse all-news period. ABC in Chicago during that time was split between WLS (the O&O) and WGN (the Entertainment/Paul Harvey affiliate, having taken that affiliation away from WJJD sometime in the early '80s). The closest WMAQ ever came to being an ABC affiliate was when it carried material in the 1930s from ABC's predecessor, the Blue Network of NBC, after said material was rejected by all three Blue affiliates there (time-sharing WLS and O&O WENR, and secondary affiliate WCFL). Glenn Miller's Sunset Serenade was one such Blue offering that the other three passed on...Scott Fybush said:I'm pretty sure WMAQ qualifies, too. It was a CBS affiliate very early on (late 1920s into the early 30s), then an NBC O&O for many decades, and I'm pretty sure it used some ABC content during its time as a Westinghouse all-newser.
TheBigA said:radiorob2.0 said:WSM then became a CBS affiliate that it still has today.
Didn't WSM make a brief switch from CBS to Fox? Then back to CBS?