J
JohnnyMorganWXJX
Guest
I moved this up from the thread below because it warrants a new thread--possibly misplaced, but i will leave that to the ahnds of those who decide such things.
> > Boston------WMEX and WBZ
>
> Don't forget WRKO...they knocked WBZ off the the top in
> their first book, and out of the format in less than a year.
> 'RKO ruled the market until FM took over in the mid 70s.
This brings up an interesting point:
After the WOR-FM situation, where Drake was given the FM by RKO to do with what he wished--the thinking being he'd do a KHJ thing there--and WOR-FM's perceived failure vs. WABC, it became general opinion the Drake radio couldn't survive on the East Coast; that it was a West Coast thing for surfers and "valley guys" and that the intelligensia on the East Coast liked their personality top 40, and the long PAMS jingles, and the countdowns, and Cousin Brucie, etc.
But, here's the facts:
WRKO knocked off WBZ within a book, and out totally within a year. CKLW knocked off WKNR in similar fashion, though it wasn't out until 1972.
WFIL knocked perennial Philly power WIBG out of the top when Famous 56 started in 1966. By 1968, BOTH were doing Drake radio--WFIL under Jay Cook as "Boss," and WIBG under Drake disciple Paul Drew with the Johnny Mann sound (they *may* have been PAMS jingles, but they were the Drake-Mann sound).
KQV in Pittsburgh was dominant under John Rook, but KDKA didn't give up their top 40 until 1968, after Rook (and John Borders) added some "Drake" elements.
WLS beat WCFL after Rook "Drakeified" the Big 89 in 1968.
WIXY/Cleveland beat WKYC almost from the start, but WKYC hung on until 1968 as well--and wasn't dead until they BOTH tried Drake elements. WIXY survived.
And in 1968, after the national trend and after both WOR-FM and WMCA (under Terrell Metheny) brought Drake elements to NYC, even Rick Sklar could see the writing on the wall. WABC shortened their jingles, emphasized more music, and shut up some of the extraneous DJ patter.
So, where exactly was Drake a failure? Besides Cincinnati...
> > Boston------WMEX and WBZ
>
> Don't forget WRKO...they knocked WBZ off the the top in
> their first book, and out of the format in less than a year.
> 'RKO ruled the market until FM took over in the mid 70s.
This brings up an interesting point:
After the WOR-FM situation, where Drake was given the FM by RKO to do with what he wished--the thinking being he'd do a KHJ thing there--and WOR-FM's perceived failure vs. WABC, it became general opinion the Drake radio couldn't survive on the East Coast; that it was a West Coast thing for surfers and "valley guys" and that the intelligensia on the East Coast liked their personality top 40, and the long PAMS jingles, and the countdowns, and Cousin Brucie, etc.
But, here's the facts:
WRKO knocked off WBZ within a book, and out totally within a year. CKLW knocked off WKNR in similar fashion, though it wasn't out until 1972.
WFIL knocked perennial Philly power WIBG out of the top when Famous 56 started in 1966. By 1968, BOTH were doing Drake radio--WFIL under Jay Cook as "Boss," and WIBG under Drake disciple Paul Drew with the Johnny Mann sound (they *may* have been PAMS jingles, but they were the Drake-Mann sound).
KQV in Pittsburgh was dominant under John Rook, but KDKA didn't give up their top 40 until 1968, after Rook (and John Borders) added some "Drake" elements.
WLS beat WCFL after Rook "Drakeified" the Big 89 in 1968.
WIXY/Cleveland beat WKYC almost from the start, but WKYC hung on until 1968 as well--and wasn't dead until they BOTH tried Drake elements. WIXY survived.
And in 1968, after the national trend and after both WOR-FM and WMCA (under Terrell Metheny) brought Drake elements to NYC, even Rick Sklar could see the writing on the wall. WABC shortened their jingles, emphasized more music, and shut up some of the extraneous DJ patter.
So, where exactly was Drake a failure? Besides Cincinnati...