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No, probably WXYZ (now WXYT) in Detroit. Top 40 from 1955 to 1967, the first ABC station to go top 40.
trusty said:However, he was still a nighttime DJ - on a station with no signal at night, so when WQXI/790 made the switch to full-time Top 40, Paul Drew made the switch to WQXI, a station that is said to be the inspiration for "WKRP in Cincinnati" (and that is true!).
RADIO TRUTH said:You have to understand the purpose behind the Drake Format. Circa 1966, there were about 1000 personality top forty stations which meant about 5000 fulltime djs. The personality formats of stations like WABC, WCFL, WQAM and WKNR required djs who had quick minds and much talent and humor. Unfortunately, of the 5000 djs, maybe 20 to 50 had the ability to pull the format off. The other 4950 to 4980 tried to do it without the talent and offended the audience while they were stroking their own egos.
The Drake Format made radio like McDonalds, limited choices on the menu. The Drake format limited what the djs could say because they could only talk over the intros up to the vocal.
This did two things. It made really bad djs sound mediocre but, it made really good djs sound mediocre too.
In the case of Detroit, CKLW did well mostly based on the signal. If WKNR and CKLW had switched signals, WKNR would have been the dominant station.
In New York City, while WABC was pulling a 23 share, the Drake station, WOR-FM was pulling a 2 share and was fourth among the top forty stations in New York in 1972.
WPIX-FM and WWDJ were also beating Drake in New York. If there had been 5000 Dan Ingrams, Barney Pips and Jack Armstrongs, Drake never would have existed.
RADIO TRUTH said:I owned a radio station and knowing that I could not get the talent that I needed, I used the Drake Format and we sounded great because it was easy to teach and didn't require alot of talent to execute it. Another advantage of the Drake Format is that you can pay the jocks next to nothing and they are interchangeable parts. I do like the Drake Format for those reasons.
RADIO TRUTH said:I disagree with just about everything David Eduardo just wrote. There were very few talented jocks outside of some of the major markets and the talent was so thin overall, that many personality top forty stations in major markets did it very poorly too. Since we are comparing Drake to big personality non-Drake stations, let's talk about the few markets that had both. Los Angeles-KFWB was a classic example of a major market top forty station that was so cluttered sounding that KHJ's sparse Drake personality format had no trouble beating it. KFWB didn't have the talent or programming to pull off personality, top forty radio, when done correctly requires alot of talent on-the-air, in programming, promotions and even in engineering. KRLA was not much better with the exception of the time Dick Biondi was on KRLA. Bob Eubanks and Casey Kasem were extremely bland sounding on KRLA. You mentioned Robert W. Morgan, Humble Harv and Don Steele, in comparison to Dan
Ingram, Gary Stevens, Harry Harrison and most all of the WABC and WMCA jocks, they sounded bland by comparison. The only Drake jock who really sounded good was Charlie Tuna and he sounded better on KOMA
before he ever got to L. A. because he had more freedom. New York City is a different story. If you use the excuse that Drake didn't do well in New York because it was too early for FM, WWDJ on AM did a format that was very Drake sounding and it did just as badly as WOR-FM. If the Drake format was on a 50000 watt AM in New York, it still would have failed against WABC who were still the number one station in New York until the winter book of 1978. WABC had the big personalities, the jingles, the audio processing and the format moved. A bunch of unknown Drake jocks would have failed against that no matter what broadcast band they were on. In Boston, signal was a huge issue, WMEX was directional into the water with a very narrow pattern. WRKO had a much better signal. Again, switch the stations and the outcome would be different. San Francisco was another issue of signal between KYA and KFRC and Doctor Don Rose had much more freedom than other Drake jocks but, Doctor Don Rose sounded better on WFIL and WQXI before he ever got involved with Drake.
As far as Ron Jacobs book, it is self serving. I owned a radio station and knowing that I could not get the talent that I needed, I used the Drake Format and we sounded great because it was easy to teach and didn't require alot of talent to execute it. Another advantage of the Drake Format is that you can pay the jocks next to nothing and they are interchangeable parts. I do like the Drake Format for those reasons.
RADIO TRUTH said:The Drake Format was so simplistic that it didn't need much teaching.
None of the CKLW jocks could shine Dan Ingram's shoes.
None of the CKLW jocks had enough talent to execute a format as complex as WABC's mid 60s format.
All of CKLW's jocks would have had trouble surviving at WABC because the WABC format required the dj to be a personality and talk for more than ten seconds.
RADIO TRUTH said:I disagree with just about everything David Eduardo just wrote. There were very few talented jocks outside of some of the major markets and the talent was so thin overall, that many personality top forty stations in major markets did it very poorly too.
Since we are comparing Drake to big personality non-Drake stations, let's talk about the few markets that had both. Los Angeles-KFWB was a classic example of a major market top forty station that was so cluttered sounding that KHJ's sparse Drake personality format had no trouble beating it. KFWB didn't have the talent or programming to pull off personality, top forty radio, when done correctly requires alot of talent on-the-air, in programming, promotions and even in engineering.
KRLA was not much better with the exception of the time Dick Biondi was on KRLA.
You mentioned Robert W. Morgan, Humble Harv and Don Steele, in comparison to Dan
Ingram, Gary Stevens, Harry Harrison and most all of the WABC and WMCA jocks, they sounded bland by comparison.
The only Drake jock who really sounded good was Charlie Tuna and he sounded better on KOMA
In Boston, signal was a huge issue, WMEX was directional into the water with a very narrow pattern.
WRKO had a much better signal.
Again, switch the stations and the outcome would be different. San Francisco was another issue of signal between KYA and KFRC and Doctor Don Rose had much more freedom than other Drake jocks
but, Doctor Don Rose sounded better on WFIL and WQXI before he ever got involved with Drake.
As far as Ron Jacobs book, it is self serving.
I owned a radio station and knowing that I could not get the talent that I needed,
I used the Drake Format
and we sounded great because it was easy to teach and didn't require alot of talent to execute it.
RADIO TRUTH said:The reason for this was because the average WABC listener listened for 5 minutes but, they had a 6,000,000 cume and it made them alot of money and gave them consistent number one ratings.