At the end of the day, Howard Stern was (at the time) something fresh, new, and completely different than anything else on Cleveland radio.
Jeff and Flash--who are legends and God love 'em--were by 1994 tired, worn out, and completely mismatched with the alternative rock format that WMMS was running at the time.
Also don't forget, a lot of old school WMMS fans weren't thrilled with the Buzzard's flip to alt-rock (remember "The Buzzard: The Next Generation"?), and were flocking to NCX anyway to hear their old favorite "mullet-rock" tunes.
And here's this guy Stern going places no DJ ever went to before on the radio, and that's what brought down the Buzzard.
Of course WMMS then spent many years wandering aimlessly in the radio wilderness before finally finding renewed life with their hybrid talk/rock/sports mancave format thanks to the Browns, Rover, and Maxwell/Alan Cox
Jeff and Flash--who are legends and God love 'em--were by 1994 tired, worn out, and completely mismatched with the alternative rock format that WMMS was running at the time.
Also don't forget, a lot of old school WMMS fans weren't thrilled with the Buzzard's flip to alt-rock (remember "The Buzzard: The Next Generation"?), and were flocking to NCX anyway to hear their old favorite "mullet-rock" tunes.
And here's this guy Stern going places no DJ ever went to before on the radio, and that's what brought down the Buzzard.
Of course WMMS then spent many years wandering aimlessly in the radio wilderness before finally finding renewed life with their hybrid talk/rock/sports mancave format thanks to the Browns, Rover, and Maxwell/Alan Cox