The whole question is appples and oranges. BTW: WOR-FM (during its Top-40 period), was, if I recall correctly, programmed or consulted by Drake...
mredindc said:What a shame that Ron Jacob's book, KHJ Inside Boss Radio, is not only out-of-print, you can't even get it on Amazon.com
Two-thirds of the book consists of Jacobs' memos to the Boss Jocks. None of the memos come from Bill Drake. (A PD at another of the RKO-owned stations that subsequently adopted the "Drake" format told me that any of the memos he received about the format were copies of Jacobs' memos. Nothing was ever authored by Drake.)
DavidEduardo said:mredindc said:What a shame that Ron Jacob's book, KHJ Inside Boss Radio, is not only out-of-print, you can't even get it on Amazon.com
I believe the book is still available via Ron's website... it's self-published and I believe Ron can do a print-on-demand order.
http://www.93khj.com/
Two-thirds of the book consists of Jacobs' memos to the Boss Jocks. None of the memos come from Bill Drake. (A PD at another of the RKO-owned stations that subsequently adopted the "Drake" format told me that any of the memos he received about the format were copies of Jacobs' memos. Nothing was ever authored by Drake.)
As I understand it, Drake was the creative force for the concept and the monitor as well as mentor for the indvidual station PDs. Most consultants don't memo the statff, and Drake was an in-house consultant for all practical purposes. TR memoed the jocks at KFRC, not Drake, for example.
To me, it was the chemestry between Drake and his PDs (remember TR was, with Jacobs, one of the Poi Boys in Hawaii when KPOI had 30 shares) that made things work.
And one thing is certain from reading RJ's memos... he listened to the station all the time and caught every good and bad thing. Today, I wonder how many PDs listen enough to their own stations.
calguy said:Your last sentence jumped out at me. I'd have to say that many of today's PD's can't listen to their stations very much as they have too many duties. Many program more than one station, and even more are so short staffed that they're also the MD and in some cases have no APD, so when you take into account meetings and other activities, listening to one's own station is pretty far down the list of things to do. The other problem is that a majority of programmers have little or no on-air experience and can't really tell a jock what he or she is doing wrong. In some cases these PD's rise to VP positions and have to oversee formats they're not familiar with. This can be a disaster when they insist on leaving their mark on all the stations they're responsible for.
Lkeller said:Tuna - beware of sounding too polished with everything worked out so smooth that you lose a human sound of warmth.
I was listening to a KHJ Charlie Tuna 69 air check on Reelradio the other night, and kept thinking My god - this guy is polished and smooth...but also witty, clever, relaxed sounding, and adult. How old could he have been at the time? 25 tops? Just amazing. He can't have been very old because he still looks youthful almost 40 years later ...though that may be partially because his hair never ages.
This is a fascinating thread. I have nothing intelligent to add here (some would say that's par for my course). But please keep it up, everybody else.
radiorob2.0 said:It is also about talent. Dan Ingram and Robert W Morgan could interchange cities, both could adapt to format and surroundings. However, I don't think LA could adopt Cousin Brucie but New York City might take to RDS.
I believe the book is still available via Ron's website... it's self-published and I believe Ron can do a print-on-demand order.
http://www.93khj.com/
OldSchoolWoman said:Dick Biondi would have quite well on WABC, WNBC, and into New York City.
radioman148 said:Gene Taylor former PD & later GM of WLS told the story on a WLS reunion many years ago that after Dick Biondi was fired from WLS he was shortly thereafter suppose to go to work at WABC. However, one of the big ABC executives nixed the idea. According to Taylor the executive said any DJ of an ABC station that gets fired cannot be hired at another ABC station.
DavidEduardo said:That brings us to the art of airchecking. In the early days of Top 40, an aircheck was often, "I heard your show yesterday and it was horrible."
Then some really good PDs became coaches and worked on every aspect of a show... with the main objective being to bring out the jock's best qualities and self confidence while working on the things that they did not do as well.
Now, as you say, many PDs are so worried about other things that are part of the business but are not part of the process of making a good station that he or she may ask, "how's your show doing? I've gotta listen in the next few days!"
Oh, and who is training the PD's today, anyway?
radioman148 said:Biondi worked at KRLA for 4 months in 1963 preceding his Mutual network radio show.
He returned to KRLA for over 2 years from June 65 through Aug 67 then returned to Chicago to WCFL for 5 years.
Ultimajock said:...in fact, Biondi's voice is one of those introducing The Beatles on the HOLLYWOOD BOWL album. For the 1965 Capitol recording, KRLA, which co-promoted the concert, got its main air staff, Biondi included, together on the Hollywood Bowl stage (I think Emperor Bob Hudson might have been omitted, since he had a show to do the next morning drive) and had them introduce The Beatles in unison...
BACKnUSSR said:Ultimajock said:...in fact, Biondi's voice is one of those introducing The Beatles on the HOLLYWOOD BOWL album. For the 1965 Capitol recording, KRLA, which co-promoted the concert, got its main air staff, Biondi included, together on the Hollywood Bowl stage (I think Emperor Bob Hudson might have been omitted, since he had a show to do the next morning drive) and had them introduce The Beatles in unison...
That was because a KRLA jock, (and later legendary Game Show host) Bob Eubanks, was the concert promoter.