michael hagerty said:Signal was really irrelevant. All you needed was to adequately cover the metro (which KHJ did).
...and, in turn, which KBLA (Humble Harve, Tom Clay, Dave Diamond) and KDAY (the post-XERB Wolfman Jack) didn't...
michael hagerty said:Signal was really irrelevant. All you needed was to adequately cover the metro (which KHJ did).
OldSchoolWoman said:I grew up on the East Coast listening to WABC, WLS, CKLW, Dick Biondi on WKBW, Jerry G. on KYW, and ABC owned KQV in my hometown. I was used to lots of talk, long jingles,beeps, bells, whistles, and news every hour or :55 whatever the case. This was all before Drake moved East. I went to LA in 65 and thought KHJ was the best thing since sliced bread. No endless chatter, no ABC news for 45 minutes at 6:30,no two hour talk block like WBZ, WQAM, or Barry Gray on WMCA. I loved it. HOWEVER-----after at least 10 years living in Florida with thousands of robo-jock stations (mostly owned by COX) --------and after listening to the WABC week-end--------I'd give most anything to have that back all day all the time because then I'd be 20 again and I think that is what some of this is about. ( But then I'm a social worker and we do introspect!) But somehow all that clutter sounded cool once again.
Marv-L.A. said:The fact that LA was one of those rare cities which had three top 40 stations for almost three years (May 1965/March 1968) was a heck of a blessing.
Ultimajock said:Marv-L.A. said:The fact that LA was one of those rare cities which had three top 40 stations for almost three years (May 1965/March 1968) was a heck of a blessing.
...you count only three? Hmmm. HJ, KFWB, KRLA, KBLA -- I count four...
DavidEduardo said:Ultimajock said:Marv-L.A. said:The fact that LA was one of those rare cities which had three top 40 stations for almost three years (May 1965/March 1968) was a heck of a blessing.
...you count only three? Hmmm. HJ, KFWB, KRLA, KBLA -- I count four...
And Anaheim had KEZY which covered quite a lot of LA County, since Orange County was not in the metro back then.
Marv-L.A. said:I have no idea when KBLA existed; someone will have to refresh my memory, (as well as KROQ-AM when Jim Wood & Steve Lundy worked there), but their signal wasn't the best.
We also had KDAY, which went AOR in 1971 or 1972; I'm not sure when they became a top 40 outlet, but KHJ, KRLA & KFWB certainly ruled the roost during the sixties; the fact that all three co-existed for almost three years was pretty rare back then, in any radio market anywhere.
Lkeller said:Michael,
Uh...very minor omission: KFWB 1958 (?) - 1968
Question - what was KRLA doing between 71 and 74? I left LA in 73, and don't remember a time that it didn't play rock & roll...I know it went thru an album-rock phase, so perhaps you're not considering that Top 40. If that's true, then we should remember KDAY also experimented with a album-rock format starting around 70 or 71.
Sorry...don't mean to quibble...