Whoops, didn't mean to offend, but in all fairness, that's one shift which I didn't get to hear because of my own radio work. I was talking about the overall sound, not on a shift by shift bassis.
Your right about Chuck Taylor fulltime, I meant a part time saturday night shift. What your forgeting is having Chuck Taylor 5 hours per week, gives the record collector and REAL OLDIES lover some type of ownership in the station, they feel it's their own station, and they will support you the rest of the week no matter what you do. If you look at some of the old surveys--I'll send you some if you like---there's a lot that doesn't get played. Many people my age I talk too feel cheated by the oldies format because they play the same stuff all the time, don't play any rare oldies, and have people on the air who sound like there 21 years old.
Just a few thoughts from one listener, didn't mean to offend. You sounded good but I meant over all.
I myself am not on the air anymore. Only 3 people knew who Chuck Howard was, and my mom didn't listen. My mic got turned off a long time ago, and I now just push buttons. As a blind kid, I played radio all the time and dreamed about it. I got to live that dream, even did afternoon drive for a while. Even though I had 2 listeners---3 when P Norman was on his way to work---those were the most fun days of my life. Radio has kept me from collecting disability like a lot of blind folks. And, a friend found one of my radio shows in a gragge sale for $5, and I have a tape of Jimmy the Greek's last signoff, my Sager Buick commercial, and the beginning of The Sunday Movie, so how can you beat that.
Again, in NO WAY did I mean to offend.> .......and don't sound like another B97!!!!
>
>
> I gotta chime in here and take exception to the above
> statement. My recollection of being at B97 from 93-98 was
> that we were very successful in the ARB. I know that we got
> mornings up to #3 25-54 behind Bob Connors and Wags and
> Elliott. While doing Afternoons, I hit #1 in the demo and
> got a contract bonus. We pulled a stunt in November of '93
> that shot the ratings up with a very little budget.
> Thousands showed up at Cooper Stadium for a series of
> Listener Appreciation concerts. So, I think we were pretty
> successful until Dave Van Stone came along and started
> blowing it up. We started adopting a strategy of "sounding
> like an AC station but playing Oldies", but it didnt click.
> As for your Chuck Taylor comment, Chucko's a great guy with
> a tremendous passion for obscure Oldies. But his style would
> not work on a regular, full time basis.
>