MsMusicRadio said:Seems Group W was only committed to running a real rocker in Cleveland for some reason
As David pointed out, KYW/WKYC was not a very good rocker with all the NBC commitments.
MsMusicRadio said:Seems Group W was only committed to running a real rocker in Cleveland for some reason
radioman148 said:It took a lot longer for the Rock FMs to knock off the big AM in Chicago. It happened earlier in most other markets.
True, but I would have to say 610 KFRC was the last great AM TOP 40 in a major market. That station still had awesome ratings in the summer of 1983 with Dr. Don, Bill Lee, Jack Armstrong, Mark McKay, etc. . With KMEL and KITS on FM it would take well into 1986 before KFRC decided to hang it up.radioman148 said:Mark Jeffries said:radioman148 said:It's surprising when you think of it that before WLS, Chicago didn't have a full time rocker. In a city as big as Chicago you would think that somebody would have tried it sooner. Fortunately for WLS they didn't.
And LS was lucky in that it took until the early 80s for an FM Top 40 station to knock them out (although the Loop knocked them out in male teen/18-34 demos during the height of Disco Demolition). Both WDHF/WMET and WEFM tried, but failed (and to a certain extent WBBM-FM in its early live jock, pre-"Soft Rock 96" days). It took Mike Joseph's "Hot Hits!" at B96 (and Buddy Scott's refinements) while Gehron was still stuck in the "Top Tracks" reaction to the Loop at LS to end LS' reign at the top, which they never regained as WLS-FM or as Z95.
It took a lot longer for the Rock FMs to knock off the big AM in Chicago. It happened earlier in most other markets.
radioguy39nj said:radioman148 said:It took a lot longer for the Rock FMs to knock off the big AM in Chicago. It happened earlier in most other markets.
WLS outlasted WABC by seven years! A number of top 40 FM upstarts in NY, WOR-FM (which became WXLO), WPIX (now WEMP) eroded WABC but could never overtake them. When the original WKTU flipped to disco in 1978, it rocketed to #1 within three months. WABC never recovered and flipped to talk in 1982. WLS lasted until 1989.![]()
Fastphilly said:True, but I would have to say 610 KFRC was the last great AM TOP 40 in a major market. That station still had awesome ratings in the summer of 1983 with Dr. Don, Bill Lee, Jack Armstrong, Mark McKay, etc. . With KMEL and KITS on FM it would take well into 1986 before KFRC decided to hang it up.radioman148 said:Mark Jeffries said:radioman148 said:It's surprising when you think of it that before WLS, Chicago didn't have a full time rocker. In a city as big as Chicago you would think that somebody would have tried it sooner. Fortunately for WLS they didn't.
And LS was lucky in that it took until the early 80s for an FM Top 40 station to knock them out (although the Loop knocked them out in male teen/18-34 demos during the height of Disco Demolition). Both WDHF/WMET and WEFM tried, but failed (and to a certain extent WBBM-FM in its early live jock, pre-"Soft Rock 96" days). It took Mike Joseph's "Hot Hits!" at B96 (and Buddy Scott's refinements) while Gehron was still stuck in the "Top Tracks" reaction to the Loop at LS to end LS' reign at the top, which they never regained as WLS-FM or as Z95.
It took a lot longer for the Rock FMs to knock off the big AM in Chicago. It happened earlier in most other markets.
Fastphilly said:Radioman- What is ironic is that RKO owned the freq @ 106.1 and would simulcast KFRC back in the mid 70's. RKO sold 106.1 and that freq ten years as KMEL drove the nails in KFRC's coffin. I absolutely love WLS (even though I never heard the station live)..I have an unscoped aircheck from May 1976 celebrating 16 years of the station as a top 40 at the time..It was John Landecker.
radioman148 said:radioguy39nj said:radioman148 said:It took a lot longer for the Rock FMs to knock off the big AM in Chicago. It happened earlier in most other markets.
WLS outlasted WABC by seven years! A number of top 40 FM upstarts in NY, WOR-FM (which became WXLO), WPIX (now WEMP) eroded WABC but could never overtake them. When the original WKTU flipped to disco in 1978, it rocketed to #1 within three months. WABC never recovered and flipped to talk in 1982. WLS lasted until 1989.![]()
If I remember correctly WABC panicked and went disco for a short time after KTU over took them in the ratings. Dan Ingram later said that he believed that WABC could have lasted longer if things had been done differently.
MsMusicRadio said:When I visited Cleveland in the early Sixties, WERE and WJW were not playing any TOP 40. WHK was the main station and WKYC/KYW the other TOP 40. CKLW also came in like a local. I played with the radio enough that I think I'm right :. In Boston, before WRKO, WBZ and WMEX were the two Top 40's
DavidEduardo said:MsMusicRadio said:When I visited Cleveland in the early Sixties, WERE and WJW were not playing any TOP 40. WHK was the main station and WKYC/KYW the other TOP 40. CKLW also came in like a local. I played with the radio enough that I think I'm right :. In Boston, before WRKO, WBZ and WMEX were the two Top 40's
Part of the issues with 1100 AM had to do with the NBC / Westinghouse "Bully" case. Inconsistent and uncertain status left the Cleveland property as the orphan of the outcome of this case.
WJW and WERE were 50's, and the arrival of WHK with competent Metromedia management (Jack Thayer) nudged those stations off. Color Radio Channel 14 really dominated for a while, while the arrival of WIXY and the talented Norm Wain and his partner Bob Weiss (the old WDOK) in early '66 gradually reduced the WHK reign. It wasn't till about late 71 or early 72 that we got WGCL on FM, and the switch to that band began for Top 40.
In most of Cleveland, CKLW did not come in all that well, and remember that the Big 8 did not become Top 40 until about the time WIXY also converted, preempting the possibility that CKLW get real measured listening in any place except the western suburbs on the lakeshore.
In most of Cleveland, CKLW did not come in all that well, and remember that the Big 8 did not become Top 40 until about the time WIXY also converted, preempting the possibility that CKLW get real measured listening in any place except the western suburbs on the lakeshore.
radioman148 said:The several times I was in Cleveland in the late 60s & 70s I heard CKLW very well on a car radio. Now I understand that's not the same as listening to a table top radio in the area, but it was always very good reception for me.
borderblaster said:It's been said that CKLW once hit number one in Cleveland. Urban legend?
borderblaster said:It's been said that CKLW once hit number one in Cleveland. Urban legend?
briancraig said:The highest 12+ ranking I have for CKLW in the Cleveland market is #5 in the Fall of 1970:
WERE 10.9
WIXY 9.6
WDOK-FM 9.0
WJW 7.9
CKLW 7.4