No, not KQV keeping Jeff Christy .
The thread about WPTT has got me to wonder- what if in the early 90s WTAE decides to keep Rush Limbaugh instead of letting him go to KDKA?
Rush's show actually debuted in Pittsburgh around 1990 on tape delay on the weekends. I remember Lynn Cullen complaining about him in such a way I thought WTAE was hiring the next Howard Stern on the airwaves.
So I had to listen, and as a result my entire political philosophy changed.
But enough of the bio sketch- WTAE had something of a left-wing slant at that time- especially with Cullen and Larry King on overnights.
And as a result, whoever was programming the station thought he was a fad, thought that he was too shallow, and let him go to KDKA.
It says here KDKA was able to hold off WDVE for 15 more years as a result (at that time WDVE really was making their first moves to take control of the market with a then-fresh Paulsen and Krenn and a hey dey era for rock music). Love him or hate him, there's no doubt Limbaugh has an audience to this day and KDKA's fall from grace after his depature to 104.7 speaks volumes.
My question is what if they kept him? What if they put Rush on from 12-3 and moved Hoerth to 9-11 after the sports shows?
What would have happened?
It says here-
WDVE would have taken control of the market in the early 90s.
WTAE would never have gone all sports. You get the idea they might have evolved into a 104.7 type station in time- and with similar success- FM or no.
KDKA might have gone all sports- getting the contracts of ALL the teams in the market (keeping hold of the Pens, grabbing Pitt for a song when they were available, wresting the Steelers from a more politically based WTAE). With their signal and because of the market- they would have become the highest rated sports station in America.
We'd have an Air America affiliate on either The Edge, WBGG or WPTT right now.
104.7 would be JACK.
WRRK would be . . . who knows?
The thread about WPTT has got me to wonder- what if in the early 90s WTAE decides to keep Rush Limbaugh instead of letting him go to KDKA?
Rush's show actually debuted in Pittsburgh around 1990 on tape delay on the weekends. I remember Lynn Cullen complaining about him in such a way I thought WTAE was hiring the next Howard Stern on the airwaves.
So I had to listen, and as a result my entire political philosophy changed.
But enough of the bio sketch- WTAE had something of a left-wing slant at that time- especially with Cullen and Larry King on overnights.
And as a result, whoever was programming the station thought he was a fad, thought that he was too shallow, and let him go to KDKA.
It says here KDKA was able to hold off WDVE for 15 more years as a result (at that time WDVE really was making their first moves to take control of the market with a then-fresh Paulsen and Krenn and a hey dey era for rock music). Love him or hate him, there's no doubt Limbaugh has an audience to this day and KDKA's fall from grace after his depature to 104.7 speaks volumes.
My question is what if they kept him? What if they put Rush on from 12-3 and moved Hoerth to 9-11 after the sports shows?
What would have happened?
It says here-
WDVE would have taken control of the market in the early 90s.
WTAE would never have gone all sports. You get the idea they might have evolved into a 104.7 type station in time- and with similar success- FM or no.
KDKA might have gone all sports- getting the contracts of ALL the teams in the market (keeping hold of the Pens, grabbing Pitt for a song when they were available, wresting the Steelers from a more politically based WTAE). With their signal and because of the market- they would have become the highest rated sports station in America.
We'd have an Air America affiliate on either The Edge, WBGG or WPTT right now.
104.7 would be JACK.
WRRK would be . . . who knows?