Even to not pony up the money….great moveTo be fair, he didn't prevent the Beatles from playing Buffalo. He didn't pony up the money to promote the show, and neither did anybody else.
It's easy to risk other peoples' money. At the time it was a possibility, The Beatles hadn't been on Ed Sullivan and the date offered was a Monday night in February. The guarantee was $3500 - about $35,000 today. You have to remember that ticket prices for the first Beatles concert at the Washington Coliseum went for $2-4 bucks. The Aud had a capacity of about 15,000 for a concert at that time, and the promoter had to pay the venue rental, staging, sound, hospitality, labor, insurance, and more. WKBW passed on it, and Neaverth and the jocks would have been on the hook for all the upfront money if they took the deal. Hindsight is 20-20. At the time, the Beatles had a #1 record, but a packed Aud wasn't guaranteed, especially on a Monday night in February. Of course, after that Sunday night on the Sullivan show, things looked a little different.Even to not pony up the money….great move
OK, I guess you'll just ignore everything he did after 1964.Nice explanation, makes sense, but fact is, he passed in the Beatles. To me, that’s his legacy.
Danny Neaverth. The guy who prevented the Beatles from ever playing in Buffalo. Genius.
The Beatles also toured America in 1965 and 1966.To be fair, he didn't prevent the Beatles from playing Buffalo. He didn't pony up the money to promote the show, and neither did anybody else.
The Danny and Joey crossovers were legacies. He's said that they were mostly ad-lib'd rather than scripted. If anything was written, it was only a phrase or sentence and they worked off of that. The crossovers were listened to by DJs in countless markets throughout the northeast. In many cases, jocks "bicycled" them to other jocks around the country. Don Berns recalled that he used to record them on a small Wollensak reel-to-reel tape deck. And then there were Neaverth's characters: The Engaged Woman, Pierre Puck, The Chief, Mister Moto and Danny's sidekick, Artie. It was the golden age of personality Top 40 radio. Over a long time ago.Danny legacy to me were the halarius crossovers he did with Joey Reynolds around 7pm each night. Funny stuff, some of the bits had to be written, they were just that good. It was usually the topic at lunch in school the next day! It's why I decided on a career in radio.
I would quibble with your view that KB’s attempt to resurrect its legendary music format didn’t work. The audience grew into the plus two range when Entercom pulled the plug for progressive talk. At the time (2003-06), there were still enough listeners around who remembered Danny and tuned it. Who knows what would have happened if Entercom had stayed with the format, perhaps adding an FM repeater. WECK is proof that a format of Oldies hosted by legendary jocks can achieve a 3 to 4 share.There is no doubt that Dan was a good entertainment for listeners at that time ..50 years ago. However, this is 50 years later. He would not last a second with any kind of success in a world with so many audio options. He even came back to KB in the early 2000’s and it did not work. Nobody cared. All of these jocks people mention from 50 years ago were great, but there is no way any of them would survive now. People want younger not older. KISS has a weekly cume of 177k young people. That’s enormous, and that is according to Nielsen ratings
The thing people don't want today is a "friend on the radio". That worked when calling the next town over was $0.30 cents a minute and there was no Internet, no cell phones and no social media. Today, I can talk to my daughter in Ecuador for free, text friends in Europe... for free and even have old-fashioned phone calls across the country for free. Radio "friends" filled a void back then; that space is amply and better filled today.There is no doubt that Dan was a good entertainment for listeners at that time ..50 years ago. However, this is 50 years later. He would not last a second with any kind of success in a world with so many audio options. He even came back to KB in the early 2000’s and it did not work. Nobody cared. All of these jocks people mention from 50 years ago were great, but there is no way any of them would survive now. People want younger not older. KISS has a weekly cume of 177k young people. That’s enormous, and that is according to Nielsen ratings
In spite of all the new technology, many studies have shown that people are lonelier and more disconnected than ever. Many no longer use the phone to "Speak" with someone. Text, Email and Chat functions have replaced actual communication. People actually once wrote meaningful letters and mailed them in the days of Yesteryear.The thing people don't want today is a "friend on the radio". That worked when calling the next town over was $0.30 cents a minute and there was no Internet, no cell phones and no social media. Today, I can talk to my daughter in Ecuador for free, text friends in Europe... for free and even have old-fashioned phone calls across the country for free. Radio "friends" filled a void back then; that space is amply and better filled today.
Late at night I'd welcome a "Friend on the Radio" since I'm up late. Video didn't kill the radio star, Radio killed the radio star. 🙁In spite of all the new technology, many studies have shown that people are lonelier and more disconnected than ever. Many no longer use the phone to "Speak" with someone. Text, Email and Chat functions have replaced actual communication. People actually once wrote meaningful letters and mailed them in the days of Yesteryear.
You inadvertently pointed out that Radio is becoming obsolete. Folks may not want a "Friend on the Radio" or anything else. Of Course, many stations still think "Be The 9th Caller" contests are compelling content...😑
Even 30 years ago, almost no listeners cared about on air contests or station bumper stickers...
I heard KB was starting to take audience away from cash cow WBEN. Don't know if that's true but KB didn't have a lot of promotion behind it. Nobody said it would go after KISS but the numbers were better than they are today.There is no doubt that Dan was a good entertainment for listeners at that time ..50 years ago. However, this is 50 years later. He would not last a second with any kind of success in a world with so many audio options. He even came back to KB in the early 2000’s and it did not work. Nobody cared. All of these jocks people mention from 50 years ago were great, but there is no way any of them would survive now. People want younger not older. KISS has a weekly cume of 177k young people. That’s enormous, and that is according to Nielsen ratings
Pretty much. Same with the simulcasting AMs on FMs (not translators but full power FM's) - they didn't know what to do with the FM so let's put WINS, WSB or WBBM on it.I heard KB was starting to take audience away from cash cow WBEN. Don't know if that's true but KB didn't have a lot of promotion behind it. Nobody said it would go after KISS but the numbers were better than they are today.
If I owned KB I'd sign it off at midnight to save on the power bill or maybe sign off permanently. Maybe they are sticking around for the 100th anniversary of the station....nah nobody cares, they just don't know what to do with it.