Unfortunately, I have no ratings data before fall, 1966...but the sense I've gotten is that KEWB pretty much ran out of gas, and Crowell-Collier out of real interest, by '64.
1069_KIFR said:As we approach the Holidays, I believe it is time for a thread to bring up either KFRC or John Mac Flanagan. Let the discussions begin!
Lkeller said:But I'm under the impression that KEWB's best days were already behind it by 1965 - against KYA - even before KFRC joined the picture. I know that was true in LA of KFWB, which had been eclipsed by KRLA after 4 or 5 years of competition. Maybe Michael can verify with some ratings info from that era.
DavidKaye said:Drake, of course, refined the format by...
(5) The last thing the DJ says before the vocal starts is the callsign. The first thing out of the record is the callsign.
Of course, as time went on and Drake eased out of the picture and the local PDs got more control, stations such as KFRC really came into their own, refining the formula to fit their own needs, and KFRC replaced KSFO as a must-listen.
michael hagerty said:DavidKaye said:Drake, of course, refined the format by...
(5) The last thing the DJ says before the vocal starts is the callsign. The first thing out of the record is the callsign.
Of course, as time went on and Drake eased out of the picture and the local PDs got more control, stations such as KFRC really came into their own, refining the formula to fit their own needs, and KFRC replaced KSFO as a must-listen.
David...#5 was really a Buzz Bennett invention ay KCBQ and if you listen to airchecks of KHJ and KFRC prior to 1973, or maybe very late '72, you won't hear it. The jocks pretty much let the jingles and promos carry the call letters for them. KHJ did start doing it...but I'm not sure KFRC did...which makes me think it may have been Paul Drew (who was KHJ's PD before replacing Drake) instituting it there.
KFRC really began their post-Drake period while Drake was still at RKO...when Sebastian Stone was PD in '72-'73.
DavidKaye said:
I wish I could have gone to that panel featuring both Chuck Blore and Bill Drake. I'm sure it was enlightening. As I have read over the years, Blore had worked out exactly what he wanted in a station format (which was quite unlike the seat-of-the-pants thing most PDs were doing in 1958), and by 1965 Bill Drake had taken it a step further and turned it into a science.
Some things that struck me both in my reading and in my listening to old airchecks of KEWB and KFWB was that Blore had pioneered some very important formatics: (1) Always end the jingles with the station signature sung to EXACTLY the same tune -- prior to that, signatures were crammed into pre-made beds.
michael hagerty said:David...#5 was really a Buzz Bennett invention ay KCBQ and if you listen to airchecks of KHJ and KFRC prior to 1973, or maybe very late '72, you won't hear it. The jocks pretty much let the jingles and promos carry the call letters for them. KHJ did start doing it...but I'm not sure KFRC did...which makes me think it may have been Paul Drew (who was KHJ's PD before replacing Drake) instituting it there.
KFRC really began their post-Drake period while Drake was still at RKO...when Sebastian Stone was PD in '72-'73.
Lkeller said:So KKDJ always came out of the song with "KKDJ 102.7 FM!" I assume it was their desperate effort to cram both their call letters and odd sounding dial position into your head.
DavidKaye said:Lkeller said:So KKDJ always came out of the song with "KKDJ 102.7 FM!" I assume it was their desperate effort to cram both their call letters and odd sounding dial position into your head.
At one point the KFRC jingle sing was bastardized to "610 KFRC", which sounded pretty bad. But then again, until then none of the KFRC jingles actually had 610 on them because it just didn't fit musically the way "93 KHJ" or "The Big 8...CKLW" fit. Come to think of it, KSTN never had a jingle with "1420 KSTN" on it, at least that I can remember.
Still, even without a 610 or a 1420 in the jingle, people still managed to find KFRC and KSTN on their radios....
rwagoner said:I liked the 610 KFRC jingles at the end of the station's real run (1986). I always remember KFRC as a top-40 station, not the crap oldies station it later became.
I don't recall KKDJ as any jingle but KKDJ. The jocks would sometimes say Stereo 102 point 7, or something like that. Wasn't pushed to sound weird.
rwagoner said:I liked the 610 KFRC jingles at the end of the station's real run (1986). I always remember KFRC as a top-40 station, not the crap oldies station it later became.
I don't recall KKDJ as any jingle but KKDJ. The jocks would sometimes say Stereo 102 point 7, or something like that. Wasn't pushed to sound weird.
Lkeller said:rwagoner said:I liked the 610 KFRC jingles at the end of the station's real run (1986). I always remember KFRC as a top-40 station, not the crap oldies station it later became.
I don't recall KKDJ as any jingle but KKDJ. The jocks would sometimes say Stereo 102 point 7, or something like that. Wasn't pushed to sound weird.
Another alternate call-letter-first slogan they'd push was "Double Kay-Dee-Jay!"
michael hagerty said:Lkeller said:rwagoner said:I liked the 610 KFRC jingles at the end of the station's real run (1986). I always remember KFRC as a top-40 station, not the crap oldies station it later became.
Another alternate call-letter-first slogan they'd push was "Double Kay-Dee-Jay!"
Wow, Llew...I don't remember that...K-Double-I-S, yes...but not "Double-K-D-J". When was this?
Lkeller said:michael hagerty said:Lkeller said:rwagoner said:I liked the 610 KFRC jingles at the end of the station's real run (1986). I always remember KFRC as a top-40 station, not the crap oldies station it later became.
Another alternate call-letter-first slogan they'd push was "Double Kay-Dee-Jay!"
Wow, Llew...I don't remember that...K-Double-I-S, yes...but not "Double-K-D-J". When was this?
Not sure, Michael...my memory is not as year specific as yours. I'm guessing about '71 - '72. My girlfriend and I would drive out to her parents' house in Northridge (they had a pool), and her younger teenage brothers would always be blasting KKDJ in the patio. I remember that Jeff Salgo was the DJ I'd usually hear. I think it was before they went 'upscale' with better known talent like Russ O'Hara (not putting down Salgo - he was an unknown at the time...at least by me).
RadioStarOne said:KKDJ-102.7 "NEVER" Used a Double KKDJ anything! You guys must be getting old! (Sorry) The only time a K-Double I I S Jingle was used was after the KKDJ 102.7 and KIIS-1150-AM marrige stunt as the sale to Combined Communications was approved. (Darn, I still hate the day that sale was ever consumated, it ruined a great radio station!) Take that to the bank or take the time to e-mail Charlie Tuna he'll tell the tale! He was there the night they gave away the KKDJ call letters. If anyone at 102.7 did a Double K-D-J jingle or soft shotgun prior to Rick's arrivial I don't know as I wasn't in the southland at that time, but I was there right after Rick took over programming the station and was hooked the moment I heard it for the first time.
michael hagerty said:RadioStarOne said:KKDJ-102.7 "NEVER" Used a Double KKDJ anything! You guys must be getting old! (Sorry) The only time a K-Double I I S Jingle was used was after the KKDJ 102.7 and KIIS-1150-AM marrige stunt as the sale to Combined Communications was approved. (Darn, I still hate the day that sale was ever consumated, it ruined a great radio station!) Take that to the bank or take the time to e-mail Charlie Tuna he'll tell the tale! He was there the night they gave away the KKDJ call letters. If anyone at 102.7 did a Double K-D-J jingle or soft shotgun prior to Rick's arrivial I don't know as I wasn't in the southland at that time, but I was there right after Rick took over programming the station and was hooked the moment I heard it for the first time.
RadioStarOne:
Llew says in his post that it was in '71 or '72...before Rick Carroll's (and your) arrival.
Also my impression was that Llew wasn't talking about a jingle but about the jocks saying "Double K D J".
I don't remember it either, but I didn't listen to KKDJ much until Rick got there.