Hey! I'm one of those WB/Scranton originals who made it to the bigs, but I got something to add to this this discussion about 'BAX. (Nokmo, I hope you don't mind.)
Yonkstur jogged my memory good about Dick Booth and Dave Donlin. I got my professional start at 'BAX. Dave Kush, the news director, hired me to work part time 5 mornings a week - ostensibly to be the sports announcer, but in reality Kush wanted me to be his helper doing news. That was fine with me because news was really my main interest at the time. Truth be told I didn't know dada about sports, and when I got hired I got a few sports encyclopedias and started cramming like mad.
Mostly I was rippin' and readin' sports during the morning show, so my sports knowledge shortcomings weren't too obvious until one morning when I went into the studio missing my copy on the top story (I suffer from practically terminal disorganization). There wasn't any time to run out and get it, but I figured I could wing it -- I had been following the story a while. I was doing fine until I suddenly couldn't remember the names of the three baseball free-agents who the story was about (nobody big: Reggie Jackson, Rollie Fingers, and Andy Messersmith).
I hemmed and hawwed my way through the story. Dave Donlin, who was a sports nut, heard the whole gawd-awful thing and decided he wanted my head on a platter for that. Donlin wasn't GM at the time but made a pretty big stink about it. Kush ran interference for me, but about a month later when Donlin succeeded Booth as GM my fate was pretty much sealed.
Fortunately, I had also been working as weekend DJ, so when a new nighttime DJ was hired from WACM, I went there and took his spot.
When Donlin took over as GM, he proceeded to overturn the format and clean house. Just about everyone was gone in very short order. But you know what they say about paybacks - well, I got mine two years later. By then I was the top-rated morning jock at WOND in Atlantic City, where we had a GM vacancy. One day the owner was giving a tour of the station to none other than Dave Donlin. I acted like we were the best of friends, glad-handing him, bringing up names of people we knew - asking how they were, etc.
After Donlin left, Howard Green, the station owner, calls me down to his office to ask about Donlin. I didn't say anything that wasn't true - but I was none too complimentary.
I don't know if that cost him the job, but he wasn't hired - and I like to think it was on my say-so.
But Donlin was typical of the guys that paraded into and out of the general manager's office at BAX in those days -- wanting to turned everything upside down and reinvent the wheel. That - as much as BAX's poor nighttime signal - probably accounts for their poor showing in those days. (I loved the old SuperBAX bumper stickers. I'm not sure, but I may still have one!)
Oh, and a correction from an earlier post: Bob Wollensek went by the name "Brian" Wilensky, not "Bob."