RicoGregg said:
In the late 70s, the then-station manager of KMEN appointed his son to be the PD. To make a long story short, he was, without a doubt, the worst Program Director in the history of K/MEN, and believe me, they had some stinkers in that chair over the years.
I have to admit, the way this guy destroyed the once-great KMEN was nothing short of spectacular. In his quest to corral a "sophisticated" audience for K/MEN, he:
1) Cross-pollinated the music to make it sound half-MOR, half-CHR.
2) Have the jocks read up to 15 minutes of news every half hour.
3) Give the marine weather forecast. San Bernardino is at least 60 miles inland, and 1290's signal does not reach the coast.
4) Clutter the already mangled programming with an afternoon drive sports talk show. It may have worked for KMPC, but this was NOT KMPC, needless to say.
5) Had whoever was Chief Engineer mess with the station's compression to the point where there practically wasn't any. The station soon sounded like it was coming out of a tin can with a string attached.
By the Winter of 1980, the all-cartridge automation system had been brought in and the voice tracking had begun. In either the Fall or Summer book of 1980, the manager's son had led KMEN to ZERO ratings. They literally did not show up in the Arbitrons. Heads rolled everywhere, from the station manager's office, to the PD's chair, to the control room. In late summer or early fall of 1980, KMEN became an Oldies station and listeners started coming back slowly.
I wish that I had a father who was a station manager to give me a station to destroy. However, I don't think that I could destroy a station as well as this guy did.
Mate, I don't know where you got your information but it appears you have confused the wrong people with the wrong periods of time. I am Mike Matthews brother and Jerry Jolstead is my Step dad. I am VERY familiar with the facts and circumstances of KMEN's illustrious history.
FOR THE RECORD: The person you are referring to is Mike Matthews. (Formerly of KSTN Stockton, KROY Sacramento, KYA San Francisco, KFXM San Bernardino, KMEN, KHJ (weekends) KRTH weekends and a few others I don't remember) BUT he was not the PD during the periods of time you describe. Mike was the PD of KMEN from August 1976 to January 1978. In 1976 he and Jim Zippo left their #1 rated time slots at KFXM and went to work for KMEN hoping to recreate a dream period in San Bernardino radio history. During this period KMEN enjoyed it's biggest resurgence in 8 years beating KFXM in both PULSE and ARBITRON MSA's. Unfortunately, the MSA was overshadowed by KFXM's massive survey area know as TSA (Total Survey Area) KMEN simply didn't have the signal to compete. Signal strength in 1976 became a much greater handicap than it was in 1963. Further Arbitron and Pulse had expanded their TSA survey areas giving the stronger signal an overwhelming advantage. In short, in every metro area where KMEN and KFXM had a signal, KMEN once again became the local leader. Unfortunately the war was no longer defined by the MSA as it had been in the 60's. The larger TSA was the determining factor that utilized areas where MOST Inland Empire stations, except KFXM, did not have signal!
As for programming: In response to your post, the periods of time you are referring to KMEN was programmed by Burkhart-Abrams consultancy. Dwight Rhodes was the PD for the Abrams group from January 1978 to August 1978. In August of 1978 the station dropped Burkhart-Abrams and hired Mike Novack as PD (formerly KYNO, KFRC and K100) In February of 1979 KMEN's owner Lincoln Dellar demanded that the station switch to a "times of your life" MOR format. Ted Brown (Formerly KFXM, KCBQ, KMEN, KYNO ect ect....) was the PD during this period. The station employed the late John Rebensdorf to host a sports talk show and also made a heavy commitment to news. The MOR format (TERRIBLE) lasted for 8 months until August of 1979 when station manager Jerry Jolstead hired Jerry Clifton to program KMEN and a new station they had just acquired (KBBL Riverside to become KGGI =99.1) 99.1 went on air in January of 1980. Mike left the station in June of 1980. He was a DJ during those very difficult final years BUT was NOT the PD.
Mike and Jerry both agree that the Burkhart-Novack-MOR-Clifton years were difficult particularly for those that remembered KMEN from the Glory days of the 60's BUT the REAL truth is: KMEN's inferior signal, the slow death of TOP 40 (CHR) and AM radio were the REAL culprits, not a program director or manager. Thousands of AM stations all over the country suffered the same fate as KMEN. The attempts at prolonging AM/TOP 40 radios life was noble BUT death was inevitable. Switching formats to NEW, SPORTS, TALK, RELIGION, ECT ECT... were temporary fixes as owners struggled to find a solution. In the end AM was relegated to NON music formats and there is only so much room in the market place. It was a Humpty Dumpty situation and although a number of very talented people tried KMEN could never be put together again. It's Death was not pretty. Mike and Jerry both believed it was a tremendous irony that they were there in KMEN's very beginning and it was only fitting that they should be there for it's end!
On a happier note: I am glad to see KMEN 129.com continuing to honor the legend and preserving the memories that my step dad, brother, family and thousands of faithful listeners still cherish until this day. Those were the BEST of times!
After KMEN, Mike worked for Harvest Christian Fellowship for 15 years producing A New Beginning with Greg Laurie. Additionally, from 1980 to 1990 he continued as the national voice for Firestone tires, Wells Fargo bank, Nordstroms and the Las Vegas Bureau of Tourism and a number of local businesses. He also was one of the last DJ's to work at KHJ-AM (weekends) before successive format changes. He is presently a Family Law Attorney (retired) and living in the Philippines. He wanted to reply to this post himself but apparently this site has blocked south east asian countries from posting.