You're right about Loupas but dead sounding audio? I always thought their 70's audio sounded pretty lively. They put reverb just on the top end so it didn't have the muddy reverb on the bottom like other stations.
You're welcome to your bias about late 60's CFL compared to early 70's CFL. Your CFL was a greater artistic success and more popular with people in radio but the 70's version was a bigger commercial success and more popular with regular listeners.
For someone who uses truth as part of their handle, you played fast and loose with a couple of your "facts." Bert Berdis (spelled with a "d" not a "t") and Ron Britain (spelled with one "t") had nothing to do with the original Chickenman. Berdis did take part in the second revival of Chickenman in 1977 but that had nothing to do with WCFL and I don't think he ever worked there. I believe Dick & Bert found each other in California while working on the Tim Conway Show in the early 1970's and formed a partnership that lasted almost ten years.
I stand corrected on the issue of Bert Berdis. I also will accept points off for misspelling of some names. Speaking of names, how about some of the WCFL jocks real names.....Ron Britain's real name was Ron Nagel, Joel Sebastian's real name was Joel Sleuth, Barney Pip's real name was Barney Pippenger.
Most of the information that I have talked about here came from a 27 year friendship with Barney Pip. We had many conversations about WCFL. I also visited WCFL as a teen in 1967 and saw most of the jocks do their shows. Ron Britain had a real Chinese gong.
It was not a carted sound effect. He actually hit it. I also spent some time with Ken Draper, Jim Loupas and John Webster. When I mentioned newscasters working for WCFL who ended up at the networks, I left out Michael O'neil. According to Barney, Ron Britain did have involvement with the original Chickenman with Jim Runyon and Dick Orkin. I don't know if anyone remembers Mary Sweeney who was the secretary for all the djs and a really nice person. Now let's clarify my audio processing comments. Circa 1967, both WCFL and WLS had incredibly flat, dead audio versus WABC, New York. WCFL and WLS finally did something with their audio chain, albeit late, around the early 70s. They both added more compression and sounded punchier but, still far inferior to WABC's audio chain. One other thing to think about, the WCFL of 1967 had one huge advantage over the WCFL of 1972 and 1973. The advantage
was much better current music. By 1972 and 1973, the current top forty music had gotten very boring versus the excitement of the 1964-1967, which was musically dynamic. Also, there were many current Chicago hits in 1967 by the Cryan' Shames, Shadows Of Knight, Buckinghams, New Colony Six and others that did not exist by 1972 with the exception of the group "Chicago" which did not "Make Me Smile".