However in Nashville he never had great ratings and for a guy loved and considered a broadcasting legend, he could walk down 4th Avenue to WLAC's studios and never be noticed. In fact he often looked like a struggling working man. I don't know if he had any idea of the impact he had on people. When it came to 50,000 watt signals, most people talked about 650 not 1510. He had no airs about him.
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I would guess most of the guys on the air back then weren't very well known unless they happened to pick up a tv gig along with the radio. Oh yea, I think John knew the impact...but as you point out, he had no airs about him. When I went to work at WLAC FM in 1965, I spent most of my off-air time hanging around down stairs. Hoss, John, Herman and Gene all treated me like an old friend, even though I was in awe just being around all of them.
Most people were nice, no big heads, not telling others how they should do their job. Maybe a hint, but done with a feeling of, "hey, have you thought about trying this?" Not, "you stupid idiot, why don't you go back and sell cars or deliver groceries/"
Most of my years in radio we never asked how many hours we worked, we just did it untill we finished.
Radio for jocs was considered a six day gig. We had fun. It wasn't about the money. Give me enough to pay rent, car note, gas and have party money......that was what we did.
I don't like to get on a single post binge, but the fun was squeezed out when the corporation was more interested in the stock prices and investors than their stations.
How I got from John R to that point, you just have to know me to understand.
Nuff said.....and I do enjoy my job now, but it doesn't depend on ratings and kissing somebody's bottom. Plus, I still talk to radio people every day and it gets me out of the house. But since I've passed that majic retirement age, when it quits being fun, I'll turn my mike off and walk away. (if they dont' get me first
