michael hagerty said:
I began my career at an AM radio station 41 years ago. I worked at my first FM station 38 years ago. If I live 30 more years, I'll be surprised if either of those things exist at the end of my life.
Likewise here. The radio of those days is gone, of course. I remember seeing KDAC in Fort Bragg in 1964. They hadn't yet gotten cart machines (carts were still quite new), so they had lots of spots on 3-inch 3M "Living Letters" open reel tapes, and the rest on scripts in copy books. When KDAC carried Giants baseball, they had used a radio tuned to KSFO fed by a longwire antenna. The listener could hear occasional static crackle from the program. Also, there were audio cues to leave the "network", so the board op had to listen to Lon or Russ give the score cue or whatever. KDAC had a teletype, which provided whatever news they had. They were not on a network. On the weekends they ran the "Guest Star Show of the Week", which was some kind of transcription on 33 LP hosted by Merv Griffin or someone, featuring some singer and their hits. The rest of the time it was 45s and album cuts of MOR classics like Perry Como's "What Did Deleware", etc., along with DJs who doubled in other functions. They'd play a tune, read a spot, make a joke if they were clever, give the time and temperature, maybe the forecast, and play the next record. KDAC had 3 turntables, the norm for many stations, so that they could have two songs up and a spare for an ET (transcription) which could be a national spot, feature, or some kind of recorded show. The car companies were big on sending out ETs with "donut" ads (a sung jingle with an instrumental bed in the middle so the local DJ could read the script from the local dealer) and back to the singing part of the jingle at the end.
A few years later I went to visit KINS/KFMI in Eureka. By then carts were big and automation had started on FM. KINS had CBS network along with the Net Alert flip signs -- 3 pulses from the network would flip the sign to "3" and the board op knew to listen to the network for an advisory or whatever. The FM had open reel automation equipment that seemed to be more a hassle than a benefit to the owners. They had a Pet Patrol or a Swap Shop or something like that in the late mornings, and also an interview show around noon.
Everything I've mentioned in the past 2 paragraphs is gone today.
Every single thing except the stations themselves (and oddly enough all stations still have their original callsigns). Nothing is done the same way as in 1964 or 1971.
It was funny and quite fun to work at KWUN Concord in the mid to late 70s during its transition from old-school (as above) to modern programming. When I arrived they had "Adventures in Real Estate", believe it or not, which consisted of a real estate story and "riddle", a spot break to talk about the local agent sponsor, and then a return to "today's exciting conclusion" in which the announcer would talk about how important it was to get title insurance to avoid someone's grandmother coming back to take possession of the property. These were on ET. When I first arrived the ETs were carefully taken care of. When I left and the station had gone to oldies, they still had the program (Bill Adler, bless his heart could sell anything!) but the DJs hated the program so much they just tossed the ETs naked onto the floor between airings. I think they wanted to get the ETs so scratched up that they couldn't play the show anymore.