Hey Guys:
Did KABC have a music format before they became talk in 1960?
Thanks
T.J.
Did KABC have a music format before they became talk in 1960?
Thanks
T.J.
t.j. said:Hey Guys:
Did KABC have a music format before they became talk in 1960?
Thanks
T.J.
t.j. said:Hey Guys:
Did KABC have a music format before they became talk in 1960?
Thanks
T.J.
michael hagerty said:t.j. said:Hey Guys:
Did KABC have a music format before they became talk in 1960?
Thanks
T.J.
T.J.:
Yes. They were MOR (competing against KMPC) in the mid-50s. In fact, KMPC took Airwatch Traffic and Roger Carroll away from KABC in 1959.
They tried a Top 40 format for a few months in '59 (with the legendary Don MacKinnon in mornings...he'd been there for the MOR format, too), got killed by KFWB, and went talk in 1960.
Back to the MOR format...KABC was quite innovative, with Roger Carroll playing music in stereo in '58 and '59...one channel on KABC-AM and one on KABC-FM, with listeners told to take two radios, separate them by six feet and sit in the middle. Tape exists and it sounds quite good. The FCC didn't approve FM stereo until 1961, so KABC was ahead of its time.
nmoore6676 said:michael hagerty said:t.j. said:Hey Guys:
Did KABC have a music format before they became talk in 1960?
Thanks
T.J.
T.J.:
Yes. They were MOR (competing against KMPC) in the mid-50s. In fact, KMPC took Airwatch Traffic and Roger Carroll away from KABC in 1959.
They tried a Top 40 format for a few months in '59 (with the legendary Don MacKinnon in mornings...he'd been there for the MOR format, too), got killed by KFWB, and went talk in 1960.
Back to the MOR format...KABC was quite innovative, with Roger Carroll playing music in stereo in '58 and '59...one channel on KABC-AM and one on KABC-FM, with listeners told to take two radios, separate them by six feet and sit in the middle. Tape exists and it sounds quite good. The FCC didn't approve FM stereo until 1961, so KABC was ahead of its time.
In my case it was WBLY in Springfield that started witht AM_FM stereo at about the same time but only on weekends. Do you recall, was it FM on the left and AM right or visa versa?
westfield60 said:I for one would vote to have them go back to a music format. Anything to stop torturing your listeners with the drone of Peter Tilden, and the overly "happy" and excited John Phillips fiasco.
Lopaka said:I do recall both KABC and KGO attempting to compete in the pop/rock field in the late '50's and very early '60's. It must have been difficult to promote a rock format while carrying Don McNeil's Breakfast Club in the a.m.
Lkeller said:In New York, WABC was number 1 for many years with a Top 40 format, even though they had long network news blocks. I'm not sure if WABC was Top 40 during the Breakfast Club period or not.
Lkeller said:Lopaka said:I do recall both KABC and KGO attempting to compete in the pop/rock field in the late '50's and very early '60's. It must have been difficult to promote a rock format while carrying Don McNeil's Breakfast Club in the a.m.
In New York, WABC was number 1 for many years with a Top 40 format, even though they had long network news blocks. I'm not sure if WABC was Top 40 during the Breakfast Club period or not.
Even if KABC had basically a music format before 1960, it was typical in those days for network affiliated stations to have a wide variety of programming, similar to KNX - which had Bob Crane playing MOR in the morning, but also long news blocks, Mike Roy's cooking show, Art Linkletter's House Party and Arthur Godfrey from the CBS network.
As somebody noted, I've also heard KGO tried Top 40 very briefly in the early-mid 60s before going to NewsTalk, branding itself as K-Go naturally. This was before Drake's KFRC, so you would have thought they'd be a strong competitor against KYA and KEWB's inferior signals.
Are you sure? I could swear Herb Oscar Anderson was warbling "Hello again, here's my best to you..." and playing the hits on WABC in morning drive around 1962. Just sayin'...oldiesfan6479 said:WABC had to air the format killer (Don McNeill) from the day they went Top 40 (1960?) through the end of 1967. 01/01/68 was "freedom day" with the split into four ABC networks.Lkeller said:In New York, WABC was number 1 for many years with a Top 40 format, even though they had long network news blocks. I'm not sure if WABC was Top 40 during the Breakfast Club period or not.
JimPastrick said:Are you sure? I could swear Herb Oscar Anderson was warbling "Hello again, here's my best to you..." and playing the hits on WABC in morning drive around 1962. Just sayin'...oldiesfan6479 said:WABC had to air the format killer (Don McNeill) from the day they went Top 40 (1960?) through the end of 1967. 01/01/68 was "freedom day" with the split into four ABC networks.Lkeller said:In New York, WABC was number 1 for many years with a Top 40 format, even though they had long network news blocks. I'm not sure if WABC was Top 40 during the Breakfast Club period or not.
michael hagerty said:JimPastrick said:Are you sure? I could swear Herb Oscar Anderson was warbling "Hello again, here's my best to you..." and playing the hits on WABC in morning drive around 1962. Just sayin'...oldiesfan6479 said:WABC had to air the format killer (Don McNeill) from the day they went Top 40 (1960?) through the end of 1967. 01/01/68 was "freedom day" with the split into four ABC networks.Lkeller said:In New York, WABC was number 1 for many years with a Top 40 format, even though they had long network news blocks. I'm not sure if WABC was Top 40 during the Breakfast Club period or not.
Nope. '68.
Thanks for clarifying. Shows my synapses are still firing properly regarding HOA, but not McNeil. I was in class by that time and the nuns trucked no nonsense.oldiesfan6479 said:michael hagerty said:JimPastrick said:Are you sure? I could swear Herb Oscar Anderson was warbling "Hello again, here's my best to you..." and playing the hits on WABC in morning drive around 1962. Just sayin'...oldiesfan6479 said:WABC had to air the format killer (Don McNeill) from the day they went Top 40 (1960?) through the end of 1967. 01/01/68 was "freedom day" with the split into four ABC networks.Lkeller said:In New York, WABC was number 1 for many years with a Top 40 format, even though they had long network news blocks. I'm not sure if WABC was Top 40 during the Breakfast Club period or not.
Nope. '68.
What exactly are we all referring to here?
Prior to the ABC network split in '68, WABC was saddled with Breakfast Club,
but it was for one hour a day (10-11 AM, IIRC). HOA was on 6-10.
Review the WABC DJ schedule here:
http://musicradio77.com/schedule.html
JimPastrick said:Thanks for clarifying. Shows my synapses are still firing properly regarding HOA, but not McNeil. I was in class by that time and the nuns trucked no nonsense.oldiesfan6479 said:michael hagerty said:JimPastrick said:Are you sure? I could swear Herb Oscar Anderson was warbling "Hello again, here's my best to you..." and playing the hits on WABC in morning drive around 1962. Just sayin'...oldiesfan6479 said:WABC had to air the format killer (Don McNeill) from the day they went Top 40 (1960?) through the end of 1967. 01/01/68 was "freedom day" with the split into four ABC networks.Lkeller said:In New York, WABC was number 1 for many years with a Top 40 format, even though they had long network news blocks. I'm not sure if WABC was Top 40 during the Breakfast Club period or not.
Nope. '68.
What exactly are we all referring to here?
Prior to the ABC network split in '68, WABC was saddled with Breakfast Club,
but it was for one hour a day (10-11 AM, IIRC). HOA was on 6-10.
Review the WABC DJ schedule here:
http://musicradio77.com/schedule.html