--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"I have got to tell you how much I enjoy reading all of the posts from you guys who started doing this in the 60s and early 70s... radio truly was amazing then. Radio was truly different. It was different by the way it was approached from both sides of the mic.... it was fun. Thanks for schoolin' us young guys on how it was done." tbarber
I pasted the above quote from another thread so I could start a new one with the proper "subject line."
I have to say that I never expected such a warm reception and appreciation for my "stories of days gone by" on this site. I've always gone about my way thinking nobody ever noticed or thought much of what we (or I) did back when. It's nice to know you did notice.
Soooooooooooooo,
It's time to unveil the story of a more recent past that I'm sure many of you remember, but may not know much about as to how it came to be and who was involved.
I haven't see ANY posts or comments on the last Jackson station I was a part of...
MIX/96
In early 1990 I got a call from my dear old friend the late Dave Perkins. As most of you know Dave was the OM of MISS 103 & WJDX-AM for almost 20 years. You probably don't know I hired David at WZZQ right before I left for Buffalo in 1977 where he rose to become PD and remained to facilitate the change to MISS 103. There isn't a day that goes by that I don't think of him.
Dave called me with a story that, at the time, was hard to believe. He said that through some sort of "arrangement" the company that owned MISS 103 was going to take over WSLI-FM 96.3 in addition to the stations they already had. Neither one of us quite understood what kind of arrangement that could be since no company could own more than one AM or one FM in a market. (remember THOSE days???) At any rate, he assured me it was going to happen and it was going to be an A/C station with the call letters WJDX-FM. He wanted to call it MIX/96 (I always liked the way that rhymed), and he wanted my help putting together the format and the music. So we talked about some ideas and agreed on my becoming his consultant. I sent him a list of music to track down, laid out the clocks, cut the promos & sweepers to go with the Jams jingles he'd had cut and off we went. The worlds' FIRST LMA (Local Market Agreement) was born!
That's the real historical aspect of the whole thing --this was the VERY FIRST LMA that had ever been done. Jackson may not have much in the way of broadcasting "firsts" but this one is quite significant considering what has transpired in the industry since that groundbreaking "agreement" back in 1989.
I continued as programming consultant until 1995 when the ownership situation became such that they brought in their own "in-house" people, but for those 5 years, I generated the music logs from Tampa and Fed-ex'd them to the station each week. In addition, I was the "station voice" on all promo's & sweepers, and pretty much de-facto PD by remote control. I made two visits a year to spend 3 or 4 days listening & meeting with everyone and offering my "ear" and advice. Dave & Shari, Wayne Scott and the rest of the staff had a pretty darn good thing going for a while. Once Dave fell ill and couldn't stay on the air, it just wasn't the same. With deregulation becoming a reality ownerships in the market began to change at a fever pitch and Mix/96 withered on the vine and eventually went away, but we had made "history" one last time.
...and as Paul Harvey would say, "now you know the rest of the story."
"I have got to tell you how much I enjoy reading all of the posts from you guys who started doing this in the 60s and early 70s... radio truly was amazing then. Radio was truly different. It was different by the way it was approached from both sides of the mic.... it was fun. Thanks for schoolin' us young guys on how it was done." tbarber
I pasted the above quote from another thread so I could start a new one with the proper "subject line."
I have to say that I never expected such a warm reception and appreciation for my "stories of days gone by" on this site. I've always gone about my way thinking nobody ever noticed or thought much of what we (or I) did back when. It's nice to know you did notice.
Soooooooooooooo,
It's time to unveil the story of a more recent past that I'm sure many of you remember, but may not know much about as to how it came to be and who was involved.
I haven't see ANY posts or comments on the last Jackson station I was a part of...
MIX/96
In early 1990 I got a call from my dear old friend the late Dave Perkins. As most of you know Dave was the OM of MISS 103 & WJDX-AM for almost 20 years. You probably don't know I hired David at WZZQ right before I left for Buffalo in 1977 where he rose to become PD and remained to facilitate the change to MISS 103. There isn't a day that goes by that I don't think of him.
Dave called me with a story that, at the time, was hard to believe. He said that through some sort of "arrangement" the company that owned MISS 103 was going to take over WSLI-FM 96.3 in addition to the stations they already had. Neither one of us quite understood what kind of arrangement that could be since no company could own more than one AM or one FM in a market. (remember THOSE days???) At any rate, he assured me it was going to happen and it was going to be an A/C station with the call letters WJDX-FM. He wanted to call it MIX/96 (I always liked the way that rhymed), and he wanted my help putting together the format and the music. So we talked about some ideas and agreed on my becoming his consultant. I sent him a list of music to track down, laid out the clocks, cut the promos & sweepers to go with the Jams jingles he'd had cut and off we went. The worlds' FIRST LMA (Local Market Agreement) was born!
That's the real historical aspect of the whole thing --this was the VERY FIRST LMA that had ever been done. Jackson may not have much in the way of broadcasting "firsts" but this one is quite significant considering what has transpired in the industry since that groundbreaking "agreement" back in 1989.
I continued as programming consultant until 1995 when the ownership situation became such that they brought in their own "in-house" people, but for those 5 years, I generated the music logs from Tampa and Fed-ex'd them to the station each week. In addition, I was the "station voice" on all promo's & sweepers, and pretty much de-facto PD by remote control. I made two visits a year to spend 3 or 4 days listening & meeting with everyone and offering my "ear" and advice. Dave & Shari, Wayne Scott and the rest of the staff had a pretty darn good thing going for a while. Once Dave fell ill and couldn't stay on the air, it just wasn't the same. With deregulation becoming a reality ownerships in the market began to change at a fever pitch and Mix/96 withered on the vine and eventually went away, but we had made "history" one last time.
...and as Paul Harvey would say, "now you know the rest of the story."