Every year, KHJ made a big deal out of its anniversary.
The first year (1966), they asked listeners to send in birthday cards to the station.
Entrants got a Boss Goldens album and a 32-page souvenir booklet and were eligible for a drawing for a $2,000 swimming pool, a color TV, a scuba diving outfit, a surfboard, a complete wardrobe, a motorcycle or a roundtrip to Europe.
The second year (1967), KHJ had the listeners send in birthday cards. No prizes for the qualifiers, but the winner got a 1967 Firebird 400 Convertible.
The third year (1968), the listeners sent cards in again. This time, they gave away a color TV. One.
Maybe they felt like they were cheaping out. So in 1969, for KHJ's fourth birthday, they came up with the "Birthday Payday" contest.
Each hour, KHJ would announce some sort of historic event, but withhold the date. If you were whatever number caller, you told them your birthday (month and day) and if your birthday matched the date of the historical event, which they'd announce on the air, you won whatever the jackpot was.
It launched on Wednesday afternoon, April 30 with $2,500 and went up by ten bucks each time they had a loser.
Their winner happened overnight Friday night into Saturday morning, May 3. $2,920. Too soon, too little, wrong daypart. Sucks for promotion, so KHJ figures it's worth it to re-launch the contest with another $2,500 Monday morning.
A second winner 45 hours after re-launch---$2,950. Again in overnights on May 7.
So, KHJ, made of money in those days, decides to roll the dice one more time, and re-set the jackpot to $2,500, with ten bucks added each hour until the jackpot is won.
And every hour of every day for the rest of the May---nobody wins. By May 30, the jackpot is $8,020. On the back of the May 28 Boss 30, there's a promo that reads:
"On July 16, 1969, the United States is scheduled to rocket the first man to the moon! If the "Birthday Payday" jackpot hasn't been won by then, it'll be worth $18,230 in KHJ cash!"
The trouble is that the official rules for the contest didn't give an end date. KHJ was stuck.
Until the first week of June. When a listener claims what is by then a $10,420 jackpot ($91,520 in today's money).
And for the third time---it happened in overnights. 3:11 a.m.:
For KHJ's fifth birthday (1970), Bill Wade held a piece of cake up to the camera for a Boss 30 cover.
KHJ never mentioned its birthday again.