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Old Addresses...

Driving through downtown Wilkes-Barre reminded me of where some of the stations used to be housed...

WKRZ used to be somewhere on South Franklin Street.

WILK was 88 North Franklin, a pink building with neon letters outside. Now, it's a gray building... ironically, a distant relative of mine has his office there.

WBAX was across from Mark Plaza on Route 11, now Enterprise Rent-A-Car

WARM was in the Bowman Building, then in Avoca overlooking 81.

Any other what-are-they-now stories?
 
The WSCR/WBQW building on North Keyser Avenue was flattened a few years ago. There's a road to a warehouse in its place. The warehouse is is where the 3 towers used to be.

Scranton Prep, which had WGBI in its basement is still there. The next home, 415 Lackawanna Avenue, has been demolished. A new office building is in its place. It was to be the home of a natural gas company, but it left Scranton.

A jewelry store and some other things are in the Williamson Building in beautiful Downtown Olyphant, the first home of WWAX 750.
 
WKRZ used to be somewhere on South Franklin Street.

Wasn't KRZ originally in the Hotel Sterling? WBRE-AM/FM once was also in the Sterling. For those who may not know(and there could be a few)WBRE became WKRZ in the early '80s.

WBAX was across from Mark Plaza on Route 11, now Enterprise Rent-A-Car

The BAX building was the coolest, and I imagine one of the newest. Their studio sat atop the building, overlooking Route 11.

WICK was for years on the 100 block of Adams Avenue in Scranton, upstairs over a hardware store and a few other retail shops. WPTS/WARD was in Duryea, up a dirt road and on, I do believe, a piece of old coal land.

And WCDL(color me stupid, but do the calls still exist?)was on top of Salem Mountain outside of Carbondale. But as they always referred to it, "Melody Mountain."

Oh, and let us not forget WYZZ-FM which, before Susquehanna bought it, was located...where? W-B Township maybe? In the owner's house maybe? Seems to me that Frank LaBar used to pull endless airshifts on WYZZ. In fact, did anyone else even work there on-air?
 
Krz was never in the Hotel Sterling. It was moved out of the BRE building in a rush across the street. The building is no longer there. Actually helped Jim Rising put stuff in the KRZ truck. An old orange mail truck I believe. Later that year we moved to the old Red Cross building also on South Franklin St. Moved both stations without missing a beat. Actually had a moving company move the big stuff, but I remember carrying cart machines for Krz Am down the Street and boxes of carts. Ahhhhhhhhh the good old days.

Wazl/Wvcd in the Hazleton National Bank Building. Across from a Beauty Parlor. Yuk the smell of ammonia.

103.1 Wqeq- Walnut St. Freeland
 
WBAX, before it moved out of its COL, was located on the King's College campus on West Union Street in what appeared to be a magnificent old mansion. In reality, the place was held together by ivy roots and termites holding hands. I think it was originally on Garfield Street. Not sure of that. I think it's original stick was up by the VA Medical Center.

WYZZ was in the owner's home (first floor, later the basement) on Prospect Street in the Heights section of WB.
 
WYZZ was in the owner's home (first floor, later the basement) on Prospect Street in the Heights section of WB.

Do you remember his name? And how did one man acquire such a marvelous signal, then operate it out of his house? A little history would be good here.

WBAX, before it moved out of its COL, was located on the King's College campus on West Union Street

WBAX did have one shining "moment," perhaps lasting a year or two. When it was Big-X Radio, maybe 73-74, the place was cooking, people were paying attention. But a poor signal and a lack of funds, leading to hitting the wall with forward momentum, just put an end to it. My opinion, of course.
 
The owner of WYZZ was Richard Evans Sr. An odd duck, to be sure, and I'm not sure how much I can write here, all of it true, without being sued by the family for whatever -- libel, slander, blasphemy, sacrilege.

The studio was up on Prospect Street with an STL going to what may still be the Magic tower on Penobscot. For all I know, Magic may have their own antenna now.

Anyway, he ran 4500w TPO, with an ERP of 7500w and told everyone it was 50kw. When I was teaching communications at King's, I used to refer to the difference as "WYZZ Watts."

For a while, he ran some sort of broadcasting school; apparently, you paid him to work there, or something like that. He also wanted people to send him their records as, he said over the air, it made more sense for him to have them than you.

He had some kind of screwy copyrighted music format during the day which he was not able to explain to me, but said even an accidental violation would be deliberate.

There was a problem with the eventual sale. At one time, he needed $$ to keep going and his classical fans bought stock with the understanding that it would pay no dividends (pretty much a gift) but, should the station ever be sold, they would then collect on some ratio. When the station was sold, lo and behold, the contribution in time and energy the Evans family put into it just happened to exactly equal the amount realized in the sale. Somehow something got leaked and he had to pay up as he originally agreed.

Eventually, I wrote a retrospective for the CV --rather kindly-- but leaving nothing out. He threatened a lawsuit; I told him to ram it up his @. We parted ways.
 
Susquehanna kept evens on as a "consultant" after the sale. The only request was that he stay out of the way. Evans made a lot of money by renting space on his tower. Every construction company, taxi company, etc, had an antenna on that tower. Susquehanna eventually built a new, higher tower for Magic and cut the power a little bit.

Wasn't WPTS in downtown Pittston at one time?
 
Come to think of it, are any radio stations around here really nice? Entercom and Citadel seem to be in cramped quarters. The Times~Shamrock properties seem rather old. Doug Lane's former stations were in a nice building, but I haven't been there in years. What's the story out there? does anyone enjoy their eork environment? I'm just asking.
 
WPTS was located in Pittston, in the building on the corner where you would turn for the firehouse or the Pittston Tomato Festival site. The Bottom's Up bar is next door. There was a logo painted on the side of the building(The Ferraro Building?) complete with microphone. It's still there, faded but it can be made out.
 
Chez said:
WPTS was located in Pittston, in the building on the corner where you would turn for the firehouse or the Pittston Tomato Festival site. The Bottom's Up bar is next door. There was a logo painted on the side of the building(The Ferraro Building?) complete with microphone. It's still there, faded but it can be made out.

When did they move out of downtown Pittston? I know they were up on that coal land by the late '60s/early '70s.
 
masterg said:
And WCDL(color me stupid, but do the calls still exist?)was on top of Salem Mountain outside of Carbondale. But as they always referred to it, "Melody Mountain."

WCDL lost its calls during the Citadel period (most famously known as WKJN), but when Route 81 bought it back and revived the localism, they brought back the calls WCDL. It is still WCDL, broadcasting from Carbondale City Hall. Technically they still broadcast (transmit) from "Melody Mountain".
 
While working at Channel 28, I was told the old WBRE-AM & FM were in the current WBRE-TV building at 62 South Franklin Street...next to Boscov's. If I remember my information correctly, the current WBRE-TV control room (not master control) is the old WBRE-FM on-air studio.
 
WBRE AM/FM spent many years in the Hotel Sterling. It was then to the TV studio, then across the street to the Odd Fellows building when it became KRZ.
 
The BAX building was the coolest, and I imagine one of the newest. Their studio sat atop the building, overlooking Route 11.

It is the Enterprise Car Rental place now. At one point, they had a window where you could see the guys broadcasting from the highway but then they blocked the window. Urban legend has it that the Edwardsville police were getting too many fender benders or that the guys had too much sun in their eyes. Don’t know if either is true. The famous flood story of 1972 is of Sam Laqourri beating a hasty retreat from the building just as the river started coming onto Route 11.

Krz was never in the Hotel Sterling. It was moved out of the BRE building in a rush across the street. The building is no longer there.

I worked at 15 South Franklin Street when they made the move. I could peer out an upstairs window and see them moving in. It seemed like Tommy Sommers was on the air constantly. He was a WBRE TV and Radio engineer who helped put the thing together. He also did some news on the old WBRE All News Radio too.

WBAX, before it moved out of its COL, was located on the King's College campus on West Union Street in what appeared to be a magnificent old mansion. In reality, the place was held together by ivy roots and termites holding hands.

Now I remember fondly that building. Big red brick building, station was on the top floor I believe. It was the first radio station my dad ever saw in his life and he was blown away by the tour given to us by the Program Director at the time. (I interviewed the PD for a newspaper column I did when I was a teenager).

WYZZ was in the owner's home (first floor, later the basement) on Prospect Street in the Heights section of WB.

Yep, that was pretty strange. There was Mrs. Evans with cookies and milk and Spike the cat roaming the basement.

WBAX did have one shining "moment," perhaps lasting a year or two. When it was Big-X Radio, maybe 73-74, the place was cooking, people were paying attention. But a poor signal and a lack of funds, leading to hitting the wall with forward momentum, just put an end to it. My opinion, of course.

That shining moment came when Merv Griffen bought the station and moved it into its new building in Edwardsville. Merv came to the Valley, spoke at a United Way dinner and wowed them. Jim Ward was the GM and hired away a bunch of guys from WSCR. He had Bill Stuart from WARM, Scotty Young, Sam Laqourri and Ron Berry doing overnight. Remember the tag, “Call for Ron Berrryyyyyy”!!!! They even had survey sheets with the photos on them modeled after the WFIL sheets. I think they were gold and referred to themselves as “Bold Gold”. The late Johnny Margas had an airshift too but I don’t remember the exact line up.

The owner of WYZZ was Richard Evans Sr. An odd duck, to be sure, and I'm not sure how much I can write here, all of it true, without being sued by the family for whatever -- libel, slander, blasphemy, sacrilege.

It was a family operation. They had a few part time sales people, his son was the business manager,his wife was the traffic coordinator and mrs. Evans fed everyone.

the studio was up on Prospect Street with an STL going to what may still be the Magic tower on Penobscot. For all I know, Magic may have their own antenna now.

When I worked at Citadel, I got great joy taking new sales managers and reps up to that Prospect street house to see where “it all began”. The female reps would get nervous saying, “David, where are you taking me?” You could see them reaching for the pepper spray. Nervous nellies! When they saw the building, they were amazed.

He had some kind of screwy copyrighted music format during the day which he ]Anyway, he ran 4500w TPO, with an ERP of 7500w and told everyone it was 50kw. When I was teaching communications at King's, I used to refer to the difference as "WYZZ Watts."

For a while, he ran some sort of broadcasting school; apparently, you paid him to work there, or something like that. He also wanted people to send him their records as, he said over the air, it made more sense for him to have them than you.was not able to explain to me, but said even an accidental violation would be deliberate.[/color]

Yeah, he said it was a patented formula. But truth be told all it consisted of was a huge album collection where the deepest, obscure cuts were played. If you had the original “Witchcraft”, they’d find a version by the Akron County trio doing that version. The biggest advertiser was Harry Hollock’s Trucksville Pharmacy. You want to talk about theatre of the mind, the spots made it sound like it was Walgreen’s when in fact it was a modest little business with everything. You know how the Cracker Barrel store looks? Well that was what his drug store was like except it was dumpy, unlit and the merchandise was scattered. But dammit, he had everything.

Come to think of it, are any radio stations around here really nice? Entercom and Citadel seem to be in cramped quarters. The Times~Shamrock properties seem rather old.

The Times Shamrock properties came with the building. I always loved the facility. You had the old time radio theatre there, the rich polished wood, the rooftop, the nooks and crannies where you could stash a girlfriend (not that I ever did that!) I just loved the layout and the place. Citadel and Entercom seemed cramped because they have so many stations and so many people. You should have seen some of the mom and pop facilities in the 60s.

WPTS was located in Pittston, in the building on the corner where you would turn for the firehouse or the Pittston Tomato Festival site.

It was called The New Rose Building. Pink and black art deco.

When did they move out of downtown Pittston? I know they were up on that coal land by the late '60s/early '70s.

I think they moved in early 1960. That was a family business too. Mr and Mrs Fioranni were the bosses, he the President, she the Vice President, son in law Al Castelli, the GM, daughter Eleanor the business manager. Mylan Krupa was the engineer, staffers were Jerry Gilroy, Paul Grimes, Rick Shannon and before he joined WBAX, Sam Laqourri. Jim Ward later added a modular unit at that 83 Foote Ave facility for a sales office.

While working at Channel 28, I was told the old WBRE-AM & FM were in the current WBRE-TV building at 62 South Franklin Street...next to Boscov's. If I remember my information correctly, the current WBRE-TV control room (not master control) is the old WBRE-FM on-air studio.

The old WBRE AM and FM silmulcast and were in the Hotel Strerling. You could see the guy broadcasting from there. THe Hotel Sterling had these Sunday brunches and on your way to the big dining room, you'd see either Guy Randell or Bill Guest or Bob Rexroad doing an airshift. Fascinating. But when the station went all news, they moved into S. Franklin. As I recall, (I did an internship there) they shared resources with TV but had a few news booths and a board. Nothing spectacular but functional. Surprsingly, there was no great overlap between TV and Radio. Bud Brown anchored the morning news, Bill Graham was on, Guy Randell, Tommy Sommers, a woman with the last name Delano, and Joe Gries was the GM for both sales and programming.

Yonkstur
 
I used to always look at the studios in the Rex-Craft building along 81 when I went by; with several stations there, and all the antennas on the roof it was always quite impressive to me. Sure would have liked to have been able to go in there and see all my hero's hard at work :)

longing for the good old days
warm590

Thanks for all the info....this board is the best...... ;D
 
I used to always look at the studios in the Rex-Craft building along 81 when I went by; with several stations there, and all the antennas on the roof it was always quite impressive to me. Sure would have liked to have been able to go in there and see all my hero's hard at work

The WARM building in its day was quite impressive. I used to ride up there on my bike and watch the guys through the windows. Then as a teenager, I was a "go-fer" for a few of the jocks and sitting in that control room with the big board was huge. Years later, when Bob Cordaro moved his FM and WARD (WKQV AM) into that building, I actually got to broadcast from that very studio. (Yes, I made my wife take pictures!!!) Now driving by the building, you see these noise baricades and not a clue that one of America's great radio stations lived there.

Yonkstur
 
Urban legend has it that the Edwardsville police were getting too many fender benders or that the guys had too much sun in their eyes.

I'm near certain that is was indeed a sun issue. A couple guys I knew there said, that although you might find it hard to believe, there were times during the day when you were unable to see what was right in front of you.

That shining moment came when Merv Griffen bought the station and moved it into its new building in Edwardsville. Merv came to the Valley, spoke at a United Way dinner and wowed them. Jim Ward was the GM and hired away a bunch of guys from WSCR. He had Bill Stuart from WARM, Scotty Young, Sam Laqourri and Ron Berry doing overnight

Merv had WENE in Endicott, which was a pretty hot little outfit for such a small town. And thanks to Yonk on the Bill Stuart mention; I was certain he did mornings on BAX at one time. Okay, am I the only one who recalls WBAX really pushing itself as Big-X Radio. I swear they did it for at least few years. Jim Bryant, anyone remember him? Didn't Merv lose WBAX in a divorce settlement?
The biggest advertiser was Harry Hollock’s Trucksville Pharmacy.

A friend of mine, because of all their advertising on WYZZ, made a point to drive down from Scranton to see Harry Hollock's place. His reaction? He said to me, "...the place was so small you had to step outside to change your mind." I used to "try" to listen to WYZZ, but just couldn't for any length of time, mostly because I never heard anything recognizable. FWIW, I know music, my tastes are eclectic, yet they played the most obscure arrangements of the most obscure songs.

The Times Shamrock properties came with the building. I always loved the facility. You had the old time radio theatre there, the rich polished wood, the rooftop...

That floor was added to accomodate the radio station, which was then only WEJL-AM(originally WQAN), it was not part of the original building. It's been said that Mrs. Lynett, the mother of the three present publishers and widow of E.J. Lynett, still refers to that floor as "the new floor."

The WARM building in its day was quite impressive.

My first time through those doors was the day of my interview, the day Jim Davey hired me. Silly as it'll sound, I felt as though I was walking on hallowed ground. What really made me feel "big time" was the list of Susquehanna stations that was then stenciled/painted on the double glass doors of the station itself. Now, for those who may not know, WARM occupied, oh maybe, a quarter of the building before MAGIC arrived. The creation of the MAGIC studio forced some offices out and up to the second floor. The WARM control room through the late 70s and early 80s was probably the most functional radio studio you could hope to find. Not all brand new gear, mind you, but EVERYTHING was in great shape thanks to the house engineer, Eddie Kasubski. If something broke, Eddie was on it immediately.
 
Yonk-
I feel exactly the same when I pass the old WARM building; no sign of what went on there in the glory days!! If I can, i'd just like to say that WARM was the best station in the world, every person there was my hero and everything they did was cool. Now , being in radio, and reading all of the great stories here on the board it just makes me feel great about the memories!!! Sorry to see it go down the tubes, however :-[- megamillion is up to 95 mil and NY lotto is up to 12 mil...get the kitchen table cleared off for the board!!!!

longing for the good old days
warm590 ;D
 
If I can, i'd just like to say that WARM was the best station in the world, every person there was my hero and everything they did was cool.

I continue to think that WARM as it existed in the, let's say, mid to late 70s, could be plopped down on the FM side of things and succeed. Trust me, I'm not some wide-eyed boob who lives in and for the past, so there would have to be some serious tweaking and updating. But I do believe the basic WARM format - solid news, good jocks, fun promotions, lots of giveaways, 20/20 sports, the right mix of music - could make some serious waves hereabouts. Please, don't misunderstand, I have no delusions that you could reinstitute the exact sound here in 2006 and expect big things. However, the WARM format, at least the one many of us knew and loved, was really more of a philosophy than a format. I guess what my thought here is to take the very best full-service AC you could assemble and go FM with it. One absolute must would have to be limiting commercial inventory, no eighteen minutes an hour like WARM was once able to force upon its listeners. Hey, just me thinking aloud here...
 
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