zumahans said:Great memories. I also appreciate the old school spelling of Tiajuana.
My mother grew up in Tiajuana, that's the way she pronounced, we pronounced it, and they pronounced it. I have a 1964 Pemex map - in Spanish - that lists the city on the map and in the mileage grid as "Tia Juana."
The USGS calls the river, both inside and outside Mexico, as the Tia Juana River.
Tijuana is so much 1960s era political revisionism.
zumahans said:Interesting. I wonder if Ticuan and Sycuan are the same word, with only a slight consonant shift.
JON BRUCE said:Hi Lopaka, Yes the calls were XEGM and the country format on it in the 1950's was mentioned on one of the Cal Worthington country music tv shows in the early 60's I watched on KCOP CH 13. One of the jocks was Smokey Rogers I believe. He later went on to jock on 1470 XEAU. Buck Wayne was another 1470 jock who I got to know in the mid 1970's. I am just starting to find out information on XEAC myself. Bill Earl of "boss cool stuff" was scheduled to have a meeting with Art Way last saturday but Art was forced to cancel it at the last minute. That meeting would have filled us in on the details of XEAC we are interested in, as I can't remember listening to 690 prior to the switch to XEAK, but I must have as I remember hearing rock hits during that year on the air (I was only 10 years old in 1956). I recall hearing Patch the roving DJ on XEMO in the mid 1960's.
doublecashkgb said:Ricky Spinn was the late, great Perry Allen. He used it when he made (live btw) prank calls
to people and other stations. The Radio KDEO Quonsent Hut, great little station with no power.
Can you imagine if they would have bought an FM in about 1972?
bizwriter84 said:doublecashkgb said:Ricky Spinn was the late, great Perry Allen. He used it when he made (live btw) prank calls
to people and other stations. The Radio KDEO Quonsent Hut, great little station with no power.
Can you imagine if they would have bought an FM in about 1972?
Thank you so much for this information. Yes, that must have been the fellow. I recall those prank calls. I miss the wild woolliness of independent stations in those days.
In the evenings, 1972-1973, KDEO had what might be termed an "alternative" rock format of sorts ... and played, for example, the soon-to-be-banned cut, "Junkie John" by Penrod. During the same time period, I called KGB FM to request they play that cut but the DJ had never heard of it. Until recently, the tune was pretty much unavailable anywhere. (Apparently the cut was banned due to explicit drug references.)
Also, Rico recalls Richard Cotten (I think he spelled it that way), which came on before Brother Springer. You got the tag line exactly right.
Just incidentally, I spoke to Ken Kramer years ago on-air when he was subbing on KSDO 1130 (news talk) and asked if he remembered Brother Springer. Ken not only remembered, he did an amazingly accurate voice impersonation of Brother Springer on the air -- what a scream.
t.j. said:Hey Guys:
I have been reading all of the post here. Very enjoyable reading.
Would anybody know the format history of XERB from 1957 to 1966? I do know that XERB went R&B Aug 1, 1966. (Got that from Wolfman Jack's Web Site and articles I researched on line)
Was XERB Country in the mid 50's?
Thanks
T.J.
radio-darn said:t.j. said:It is kind of amazing at the detailed info that was once listed each day, but was eye-opening was to realize the obvious: formats, as we know them, largely did not exist as such back in the 50's and even into the 60's. A given station could play a hodge-podge of programming throughout the day with classical music in one hour and country music later in the day. I actually worked at a station which still did that in the 70's. We called it "block programming" and at different times of the day we were different radio stations targeting different segments of the local population (we were the only radio station in town and too far from other stations to have any competition).
Kind of reminds me of Chris in the Morning on KBHR!