Savage said:
Same jingles, used at the same time, both properties 1967-1968: "Now radio comes alive, you're listening to K-B...."
"It's radio 6-3-0, it's W-P-R-O....."
The "now radio" jingle package (one of the hokiest packages every recorded) evokes this memory: Jack Armstrong, having recently arrived at KB, rolls a "now radio" jingle into some smokin' song and lets it rip over the song intro... "Just listen to that! Yessir they're walkin' out in droves folks!"
It made me laugh. Being a radio junkie, I knew what he was talking about. At the time McLendon's WYSL 1400 was using a terrific jingle package that featured about a dozen cuts, shotguns, fast-to-slow, slow-to-fast, acappella and stagers. It was a tightly produced package that worked well with the music, currents as well as oldies (which were never more than five years old, or so it seemed.)
Fast forward a year later to the KB package Jeff Kaye custom produced which featured jingles that sounded like BS&T, Carole King, Chicago, Crow, the Beatles, Mungo Jerry and James Taylor. Any radio junkie worthy of his Sennheiser HD-414's or Koss Pro4aa's can vividly recall every ounce of energy Armstrong put into howling "Your leeeeeeeaader" over the intro of the jingle that sounded like the bridge in Chicago's "Beginnings" or a Don Berns talk-up of the intro to the KB jingle that sounded like the Beatles' "Come Together." (These weren't the Pop Tops, these were the actual jingles.) Very often, they were as good or better than the songs that followed and they sound every bit as good today.