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Hazleton Radio

Recently moved back to "beautiful" Hazleton .Curious about the engineering status of both WAZL and WKZN.WAZL's transmitter sight has always been in the Hazleton Heights part of town. ( At one time WOLF TV channel 56 had side mounted their antenna on their tower.) Where are their studios located now ?Do know they have moved out of downtown Hazleton.Any idea who does engineering work for them ?Contractors perhaps ?
WKZN's transmitter site is literally located in a "junk yard" south of Hazleton on route 309.Does WILK do their engineering work ?How are they re-broadcasting WILK's signal ?
Just curious. Many thanks.
 
Fwiw, this sometimes-outdoor worker with a trusty portable is very impressed with WAZL 1490.

Their Oldies format, if it can be called that, sounds almost like the feel of a 1970's Chicken-AoR station (for lack of a better term ; there *were* some of those around). Depending where I am, WAZL is either a ton of bricks or chewed up by WBCB Levittown and/or the sports station from Lancaster. But when they are on the radio, they are really 'on'.

The Tampa Bay Rays games are also a kick. Not just had the Rays become my third-favorite team a year ago when I was in florida, but I love hearing ads for restaurants on 'Gulf To Bay Boulevard' and 'Dale Mabry' here in water-less Coal Country.

* * * * *

So THOSE are the junkyard-towers I saw along 309. I kinda figured they had to be. Were they the same towers or site from their WTHT days? The 1290-1300-1310 channels were really, really packed in back in the Sixties. And then they put on a 1300 in Nanuet NY -- and after that, a 1310 in Parsippany NJ! Two omnis already had been on in New Jersey on 1310 .....
 
WTHT transmiiter and twin towers were located on Laurel Hill Terrace off of route 93 about two miles east of the Hazleton state general hospital.The towers were eventually removed however the ground radials are still probably there.A housing development now occupies that space.I had worked there in 1964 while attending electronics school.
 
Hey Retired Guy:
The last time I looked, which was about six years ago, not only were the tower bases still there, the towers themselves were still there on the ground. It's just off Hilltop Road in the Terrace, although a house was built in the middle of Hilltop Road in the '70s. The towers were never formally taken down, they were torn down by vandals. I knew someone who claimed to be one of them. Also, the remnants of the building were still there, in a pile of wood in what is now an addition to someone's back yard. I wrote a book about Hazleton history a few years ago and included a radio chapter. I used a couple of the pictures I took of WTHT's remnants, as well as the newspaper ad announcing it's birth, October 25, 1961 at 5:45 AM. I found the remnants of the station in the 70s, before the area was built up with homes. So, I have a few things from it. It had burned sometime in the late '60s, so everything was damaged. But I have a partially melted reel of tape, which turned out to be blank, and part of a program log from its WHZN days. Tell me if I'm right, but from what I heard from people who worked there, the station was owned by a guy named Lou Adelman. When the staff tried to unionize, he walked in one day and hit "plate off." Some very good people worked at WTHT -- Dave DeCosmo, Leo Valovich, Al Sword (who became a respected newspaper reporter later). I can still see those towers lit up at night. And they were great call letters. They'd be perfect for an N/T station today. But I remember looking a few years ago and finding that some station indeed has the WTHT call letters.
 
Hi L.A.
You are correct.WTHT was owned by Lou Adelman of Richmond,Virginia .Neil Conway,the manager of the Capitol theater, was the first general manger.He left for a job with PP&L and was replaced by Don Murray from WAZL.I remember Don very well.A great voice and a nice guy.Al Danko from the newspaper was in sales and Beverley Pantages was the secretary and also did a quasi cooking show.Frank Meriman from the Wilkes Barre area took over when Fred Williams left for WAZL and he handled a call in show called "Open Mic".
Ed Deckman from Wilkes Barre was the SOLE engineer.The FCC was on their back constantly because at times,when Ed was not working,they had no engineer on duty with a first class radio-telephone license.Directional stations at that time required a person with "ticket" on duty at all times.Paul Wensko,who taught electronics at HHS vo-tech,was a standby engineer at the station.It was rumored that Vic Diehm of WAZL was informing the FCC about WTHT.( Don't know for sure)It is customary in television when the FCC was in town stations would contact each other about their impending visit.I received many calls from Baltimore television stations alerting us.Tex Collins worked the weekends at WTHT.I had left in April of 1964 for electronics school and a stint at WLSH and I missed all of the union activity and unrest which you mentioned.I do have air checks with jingles of WTHT on cassette.I hope to transfer them to CD when the spirit moves me. Those call letters now belong to a station in New England I believe.What is happening with WAZL ? Where are their studios now ?Who does their engineering work ?I remember the Tito brothers who handled engineering for Vic Diehm back in the 1950's and 1960's.Also I knew Ron Jay (Gilanarro) and Jack Mitchell of WAZL.I always thought that the announcers at WAZL were top notch for small town radio during that era.Nice to hear from you and it was great to reminisce.
Regards
Tim ( Retired Guy )
 
Tim:
I forgot Paul Wensko worked at WTHT. Now that I think about it, I believe Joyce Steinman, who years later was the GM at WQEQ, got her start in radio there as well. And I forgot to mention something else I have from WTHT – about which you may know something. It’s a big wooden sign which reads, “Hilltop Road, Operation Rescue, WTHT ¼ mile.” I think it had something to do with the Sheppton Mine Disaster in 1963, though I’m not certain. But, if you left in ’64, you were probably there for “Operation Rescue,” whatever it was. I have the sign on display in my hall and anyone who visits looks at it and inevitably says, “What the heck is that?”
Sword told me years ago there were constant engineering problems and the FCC was always around the corner. I wouldn’t doubt for a second it was prompted by Diehm.
Those jingles and airchecks you have! I would love to hear them and/or buy them from you!!! One of the few airchecks I heard from WTHT is Leo Valovich on the air the afternoon JFK was assassinated.
As for WAZL, I don’t want to speak out of turn. I worked there for five years (in fact, I was the PD who first added several news additional daily newscasts, then eventually turned it N/T in the ‘90s), but have had no ties to it whatsoever since. However, three very good friends of mine worked there until about two weeks ago, when everyone was let go. I really haven’t asked them much about what happened, and they haven’t really said. The station is all automated/voicetracked. To me, its future seems murky, and that’s being positive.
Ownership has changed several times the last few years, and appears to be in a state of flux right now. Citadel owned it for a while and turned it into a WARM translator in the days when WARM was N/T. Then it was bought by a firm called Route 81 Broadcasting, which also owned WCOJ in Coatesville. But there was a major internal upheaval within the firm, and the man who I’m told founded it – a guy named Lloyd Roach – was booted from it. Roach had brought Pat Ward back as GM and the station appeared to be doing fairly well. But there were a succession of changes since. A friend of mine tried to buy it, and in fact, was operating it, but the deal fell through. Recently, a group with two “radio guys” from New Jersey was planning on buying it and had taken over operation. But that too fell through. Right now, it’s owned by Lex Sloot and is housed in his Printmark building on Poplar Street in the Heights. But Lex isn’t operating it; he has someone whom I do not know, though who’s said to be a computer genius, running the station. Steve Green above mentioned the music mix. It’s the one put together by Tony Pacelli, an oldies pro who really knows what he’s doing. But I suspect there will be changes; at least in the mix and the size of the playlist, if not a full format change. Supposedly, there is a major announcement planned for September 1st. No idea what it will be.
You’re quite right about WAZL in the past – it had more than its share of talent. In addition to the Titos, whom you mentioned, Paul Cerula and Bill Graham were two of the greatest newsmen to ever work in NEPA. Graham, I was told, turned down a network job offer from Mutual, because he didn’t want to move to DC. And I believe that. Later, he moved to TV and was a weekend anchor for Channel 28, and also worked at WBRE radio. Guy Randall, who made a name for himself years later at WBAX and WEJL worked at WAZL. Al Donati, who as Al Dee later worked in the New York market. Hank Reynolds (Levandowski was his real name) was a terrific morning man for years. There was also Jim Boyle, Joe Kayley, Ken Jefferies (who’s now in LA), Terry Moran, and the list goes on. It includes four people with whom I still work, Bill Waschko, Lisa Ragazzi (Schugardt), Pacelli and Mike Moran, and Scott McAndrews, with whom I worked for years at two stations. WAZL had many, many talented employees over the years.
It’s also worth noting that Vic Diehm was quite an innovator. He put WAZL-FM (97.9) on the air in, I believe, 1947, making it the first FM in this market. By the way, he was also talking to NBC about putting the market’s first TV station on the air here in 1951. When I worked at WAZL and it was being sold by Ohio real estate magnate Frank Mangano to 4-M Broadcasting, Waschko and I had to clean out the transmitter building and we found all the original paper work. I later asked Kitty Kahler what happened and she told me, in effect, Vic just didn’t believe TV would ever take off and thought it would drain the radio station. So, at the last minute, he pulled out, NBC went to the Baltimores and WBRE was born two years later. But the original script had NEPA’s first TV station in Hazleton, on Channel 35 (or was it 56, I forget), as WAZL-TV. Imagine how different this entire market is if that had happened!
But you know what Tim, today WAZL’s a stand-alone 1,000 watt station at the bottom of the market. Two of the counties it clearly reaches, Carbon and Schuylkill, don’t count with Abritron. That makes it a less than top-shelf property in today’s market.
Years ago when I was PD and it was owned by 4-M Broadcasting, I tried to sell management on the idea of claiming two dark frequencies – 1340 AM in Wilkes-Barre (the old WBRE) and 1320 AM in Scranton (the old WSCR); doing, in effect, what WILK later did when it took over the old WGBI (910 AM) and WTHT/WHZN/WWKC/WXPX (1300 AM). I wanted to simulcast our talk format from WAZL on those two other frequencies and take the then-two other N/T stations in the market, WILK and WARM, head-on in all three cities. We had a corporate sales manager named Tom Harpster (who came from Z-95 in Allentown and later worked at Rock 107) who agreed with me and tried to sell management on the idea – making the point that the AM would likely be profitable in a couple of years and that the heritage call letters, WAZL, would be known marketwide. (the FM at the time was WZMT, the original “Mountain”). Ownership wouldn’t budge. WAZL’s “dark days” came soon thereafter. I still think that was the thing to do.
Sorry I babbled on so long. Sometimes I talk too much.
 
I thought WAZL was at it's most promising resurgence when Pat Ward was there a few years ago. For their news reports, they were actually looking for news instead of reading highlights from the newspaper or internet (or whatever it is most stations do). They were also trying to bring in more local programming of local interest. It really looked like they had turned a corner. Then Pat Ward was let go and as LA Tarone mentioned, there have been a number of management changes since. It just seems no one wants to invest in local radio anymore. I hope the new management has some good plans incorporating local issues, but being that they just let go the talent, all of whom had a lot of ties to Hazleton, and knowing the state of radio today, I'm not holding out much hope.

I always thought Tony Pacelli and Mike Naydock had great local ties and were always top notch on the radio. I was disappointed when they were let go from WKAB (now WHLM). I still like 103.5 and Joe Reilly has expanded the playlist a great deal, but I always felt something was lost when the on-air talent was let go or left (I know some left on their own, partly because he moved the studio to Bloomsburg I think).
 
Through the grapevine I have heard that WAZL has changed its image (and format?) to Panorama radio. Its my understanding that Tony P was let go and that Mike Naydock and Mike Moran then left; and that a manager of Panorama has taken over operation of WAZL?? Whats up there? Are any radio people left?
 
A few things here, if I may. Damian, with the possible exception of sales whiz Ginny Buckley, no one else left KAB-***-HLM on our own. We are all fired, in several different ways. Tony Pacelli was fired the day the sale took effect. Scott McAndrews was held over because of his computer expertise until the studio had been moved from Berwick to Bloomsburg. Then he was fired. Everyone else was fired sometime in between. Me, I was fired in the newspaper. I got a call one night from Ben Timberlake at the Press Enterprise who asked me, “LA, how does it feel to know you won’t be with the station anymore.” I answered, “Well, you know something I obviously don’t.” I’d been fired in radio before, but never through a newspaper! In fairness, Joe Reilly contacted me a couple of days later and said he’d handled it badly and was sorry about it. No big deal – a new broom sweeps clean, and I expected it. And give Reilly credit, HLM-FM has done well since, despite the absence of live air talent. But the AM is a terrific little station! It’s got a very good news department and is the full service local station those of us old enough remember from the ‘70s. It has excellent community involvement and is, pretty much, what those of us who grew up in this business would call a true “local station.” It is quite good.
As for AZL, it is indeed, as Kevin mentioned, all automated/voicetracked “Panorama Radio.” The format has not changed, but there are no radio people left. I was told ownership considered changing call letters (which would have been perhaps the dumbest move in market history) and decided against it last minute. I mentioned Pacelli in an earlier post. He and I have known each other, and have been friends for about 267 years. He’s a true pro inside and out. But I didn’t mention Mike Naydock before, and I should have. Naydock is likely the most versatile jock I’ve ever heard. The man can do anything – and I’ve heard him do much of it. AOR, Alternative-AOR, AC, CHR, Big Band/Jazz, Country – you name the format, he can do it, and better than most. About the only thing I haven’t heard him do is classical, and I’ll bet he could – he DOES know something about it. But no matter the format, Naydock is still Naydock! His indomitable style shines through. He’s always intelligent, conversational, friendly, yet somewhat cocky/funny. No one sounds quite like him. He was middays and, later, afternoon drive on the original Mountain, WZMT, and I always thought one of the reasons that station had, to borrow a political term, gravitas. He’s a class guy and a great guy with whom to work. And he’ll do anything! I pressed him into service as a newsman several times 20 years ago, and he did great! The fact that there’s no room for him in Hazleton Radio speaks to the obvious --- Hazleton Radio, as some of us have known it, is dead. It no longer exists. But Naydock should be in radio somewhere. He’s 10 stars!
 
Just a comment: The signal strength of WAZL doesn't compare to what it was in the 1960s and '70s.
I realize that as a 1 KW station on a 'local' frequency, it isn't supposed to go too far, but the signal used to go pretty well all the way to Dallas, above Wilkes-Barre.
I remember listening to LA Tarone, and an FM-style album cut show on weekends back in the day.
I don't know if it's because of a replaced transmitter, or the fact that the old one ran on tubes, or what, but it's just not what it used to be.
Incidentally, if it is getting interfered with by WBCB, you couldn't ask for a better interferer.
WBCB (Levitown/Trenton) is a great little station. ;D
 
L.A.

I was just going by some of the comments Reilly had posted here along with Mike Naydock. The story was that during the transition, most of the staff was let go and some were going to be rehired. From what I understood, Reilly was going to eventually rehire Naydock but Naydock couldn't wait and took the job with WAZL (I can't blame him, who can go for any period without a paycheck). Now I didn't get any impression that Naydock was angry (I guess when you work in radio, you come to expect these things). I heard Pacelli was laid off because Reilly planned on being the PD, which was Pacelli's job at WKAB. The last one I heard about was the girl who was on in the evenings. What I heard there was that Reilly was moving the studios to Bloomsburg and she did not want to go there. Now a lot of this is based on the above noted comments and you might be able to find them (this was about the time ownership changed). I heard elsewhere that McAndrews was fired for other reasons, but that is obviously hearsay and I have not heard anything about that from any official sources (you would probably be better informed about that).

WHLM's playlist is much improved. I do miss on air personalities. I think Reilly decided to focus the FM on the music and AM on traditional radio. It reminds me a lot of the Mountain, another station I like. If I could have 103.5 with the current playlist and the old WKAB personalities, that would almost be perfect. Some of them might just be available for employment.

Re: WAZL I wonder what the long term plans are. I do love the current playlist focusing on the 70's and 80's. Being in my mid-30's that fits in perfectly with what I listen to and I've always felt the stations in our market do not focus on that era enough. I can find 60's and 70's stations, or current stations with some 80's, but none in that perfect range for my generation of 70's and 80's. Buzz 102/103 was almost a perfect fit, but unfortunately they are long gone.
 
Damian:
It’s five years ago, so my memory had faded a bit. But, I do remember Reilly talking to Naydock with something of a quasi-promise of a job somewhere down the line. It never materialized, but I don’t remember whether that was because Mike took the job at WAZL or just because it was never offered. What you heard about Pacelli being let go because Joe would be his own PD is correct. Tony knew it was coming and wasn’t surprised when it came. The evening girl, Sherry, did indeed say she didn’t want to drive to Bloomsburg everyday. But I don’t know that Reilly intended on keeping her anyway. The funny thing about her was that she did traffic and continuity and decided to try air work on a lark. She liked did, was pretty good at it and generated quite a response, especially from male listeners who thought she sounded sexy. She was a great girl and a lot of fun to work with, though I haven’t seen her in five years or so (I ran into her and her husband in a store a few months after the sale).
As far as Scottie, I don’t really know. I worked with him for years at two or three different stations. I loved the guy! He was a riot to work with, the consummate professional, a great jock and an absolute wiz in the production room. I always thought his solo production was agency quality. He always did more than his “job description” called for and rarely kicked about anything. I never knew anyone who worked with him who had a bad word to say about him. I can’t imagine what any “other reason” might be.
I agree with you about both the AM and the FM. As I mentioned before, I think the AM is a terrific little station. It is indeed the “local full service” station that many around here used to be. I also like the fact that the FM’s playlist is broader than you find on your average “Classic Hits” (which I still refer to as AOR). But I miss hearing an actual jock.
WAZL has indeed changed the focus of the playlist within the past month or so, and there is a heavier focus on 70s/’80s – it seems to me, particularly the ‘80s.
I indeed remember the short-lived Buzz! The first day I popped it on, I heard REM’s “The End of the World As We Know It” and said, “Now THIS is a cool station.”
 
LA

To be honest with you, I can't remember the incident with McAndrews either. I just remember hearing that there was some embarassing incident and he was let go. I'm reluctant to speculate, but I don't believe it was anything illegal or that sort. I think you're right about the quasi job. I got the impression reading Reilly's thread a few years back he at least publicly was saying he wanted to reassemble some of the old WKAB team. Obviously that did not pan out, it looks like for several reasons. He does talk on the FM in the morning and has news updates, but it's very limited. I love a music focused station, but I'm not as big on a completely sanitized station. I think the Mountain does a good job with that, though it is obviously almost completely voice-tracked.

With the Buzz, I can tell you for 2 years, I actually did not change the station. For me, in my upper 20's at the time, it was the perfect station (especially after the 1st year when they added a lot of 70's songs). I loved the variety. I mean it wasn't just Tom Petty, Bruce Springsteen and Madonna. It was also ABC, the Buggles, M, Gary Newman, and all those great one hit wonder songs you rarely hear anymore. Talking about it now really makes me miss the Buzz. It's a shame it was so short lived (I remember the last month when they went all Christmas, I knew it was coming to an end).
 
Also, I remember with the Buzz a few months before Entercom jettisoned the format, it seemed to be catching on. I was hearing it more and more at stores, at people's desks, etc. At the time I remember radio people saying it was starting to eat away at WKRZ's ratings and that was the real reason Entercom let it go.

The Mountain is good and I love their no repeat 9 to 5 Monday to Friday they had (I think they still have that). But for my wife and I, the Buzz was the perfect station for those 2 all to brief years.
 
Zenith Transoceanic said:
If you are refering to the WDMT 102.3 "the Mountain", then I would have to guess you are not in Hazleton these days, as the signal barely gets there, if at all, in my experience.

I work in Wilkes-Barre. It was a bummer when Entercom moved the 103.1 transmitter, but WHLM-FM is pretty close to the same format as the Mountain. (Speaking of which I can't see the purpose of having WILK on an FM in an area that already has the AM. They should spin one of them off to something else, just a waste of airspace IMHO).
 
As a purist, I'd be inclined to agree about the WILK signal, but the reality is that the FM
signal does do somewhat better toward Tunkhannock, and in this age of computers
and flourescent lights, there are many work places AM signals struggle to penetrate.
3/4 of radio listeners, up to 90% in some markets, listen to FM almost exclusively, so
it's almost mandatory to get on the FM band.
 
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