Garrett said:Both had excellent DJ staffs, although who can compete against Matty, JJ, Sunny Jo, Lady D, Ed and Uncle Dale? Especially Uncle Dale!!!! Even their second stringers (Jojo Kincaid for example) were entertaining to listen to!
On the other hand, I enjoyed Karen "The Madam" Blake.
The REAL difference between Kiss and Zou (at least in the 1986-88 pre-Sunny Jo at ZOU era), was that WZOU had a very very very TIGHT playlist! They had 30 or 40 songs, and that was it. Oh, they had a good musical selection, but you could only listen for so long, and I think that's what they were going for. And, you didn't get a remixed version of a song, you got EXACTLY the released single. Meanwhile, Kiss108 had a much more loose playlist. WXKS would play what WZOU was playing but then they'd throw in something from David Bowie, or Aerosmith or Beastie Boys. There was NOTHING that was too dangerous for them to throw in. Plus they continued to break out new dance tracks. Kiss 108 NEVER played it safe, and this, I think is how they survived. They simply took more risks, and had better known talent.
Audio was different too! Both stations were heavy on compression, but Kiss always seemed to have just a bit more base, and ZOU had a slightly better signal into Brighton Center and to the west. Unlike WHTT, neither one ever had reverb. Early on, WZOU relied far more on Jingles than Kiss 108 did until later. And if I recall, it was orignally WZOU that used Ernie Anderson for voice-overs.
Both stations also seemed to have tremendous respect for each other (at least during the WZOU years) and I never heard on-air staff at either station bash or even mention each other over the air, (although I understand that that changed when Jam'n came around).
But asking which one I listened to more? That's like asking me to chose between Pepsi and Coke. Both stations were good, they each had different flavors. WZOU was kind of sort of the replacement for WHTT, but not exactly. Kiss 108? That was the one with the black and red bumper-stickers all over town, and how could you skip that?
I liked them both!
cbsnomore said:"Even their second stringers (Jojo Kincaid for example) were entertaining to listen to!"
LMAO, Garrett. I'll be sure to pass this opinion along to JoJo. He was the APD and took over Sunny Joe's airshift when he came off 6-9p without missing a beat. Then on to help launch Q-106, San Diego, arguably one of the best CHR stations in history. He was APD there, too. Fast forward to today....who is the ONLY former 'XKS jock working in a top 5 market?
Got anymore of whatever that is you're smokin? I want some.
Duke
Steve N. said:I was always a Kiss listener because of their dance-heavy playlist and of course the Kiss classics ("There But For The Grace Of God," "Shame," etc.). Needless to say, once Steve Rivers took over Kiss, it basically became WCOZ III ('ZOU, of course, was WCOZ Jr.).
Good God, I hated WCOZ!
Needless to say, I am no longer a Kiss listener since John Ivey destroyed what little was left of the Kiss heritage sound back in 1994. Now Kiss 108's idea of Kiss classics are "You Shook Me All Night Long" and "Pour Some Sugar On Me" - great disco songs, as Uncle Dale once said of "Stairway To Heaven."
Steve N. said:I was always a Kiss listener because of their dance-heavy playlist and of course the Kiss classics ("There But For The Grace Of God," "Shame," etc.). Needless to say, once Steve Rivers took over Kiss, it basically became WCOZ III ('ZOU, of course, was WCOZ Jr.).
Good God, I hated WCOZ!
Needless to say, I am no longer a Kiss listener since John Ivey destroyed what little was left of the Kiss heritage sound back in 1994. Now Kiss 108's idea of Kiss classics are "You Shook Me All Night Long" and "Pour Some Sugar On Me" - great disco songs, as Uncle Dale once said of "Stairway To Heaven."
Retro said:I turned to Kiss 108. ZOU just seemed to cliché for me at the time.
mistermicrophone said:Steve N. said:I was always a Kiss listener because of their dance-heavy playlist and of course the Kiss classics ("There But For The Grace Of God," "Shame," etc.). Needless to say, once Steve Rivers took over Kiss, it basically became WCOZ III ('ZOU, of course, was WCOZ Jr.).
Good God, I hated WCOZ!
Needless to say, I am no longer a Kiss listener since John Ivey destroyed what little was left of the Kiss heritage sound back in 1994. Now Kiss 108's idea of Kiss classics are "You Shook Me All Night Long" and "Pour Some Sugar On Me" - great disco songs, as Uncle Dale once said of "Stairway To Heaven."
What does Ivey have to do with TODAY'S playlist??? You Shook Me All Night Long & Pour Some Sugar On Me are two records that test through the roof with W25 - 34, TODAY. So they are played outside of nights...what's wrong with that??
Retro said:Steve N. said:I was always a Kiss listener because of their dance-heavy playlist and of course the Kiss classics ("There But For The Grace Of God," "Shame," etc.). Needless to say, once Steve Rivers took over Kiss, it basically became WCOZ III ('ZOU, of course, was WCOZ Jr.).
Good God, I hated WCOZ!
Needless to say, I am no longer a Kiss listener since John Ivey destroyed what little was left of the Kiss heritage sound back in 1994. Now Kiss 108's idea of Kiss classics are "You Shook Me All Night Long" and "Pour Some Sugar On Me" - great disco songs, as Uncle Dale once said of "Stairway To Heaven."
I really hated the so-called "fresh paint job" that Steve Rivers did to Kiss! However that is just personal oppinion and the ratings said otherwise. Also, the ratings also said that the masses wanted a straight forward top 40 station, not a Rhythmic leaning pop one.
Ironically when Sunny Jo White programmed ZOU, it had the highest adult numbers in its history! Alan Chartland (I think it was him) wasn't too happy though as he thought the station was moving sideways on him.
Then there was when Sunny Jo was working at WVBF...