michael hagerty said:KSFO was the true innovator in the GWB stable.
KEX wasn't too shabby, either. In fact, KEX kept the MOR full service format long after most stations had abandoned it.
michael hagerty said:KSFO was the true innovator in the GWB stable.
DavidKaye said:michael hagerty said:KSFO was the true innovator in the GWB stable.
KEX wasn't too shabby, either. In fact, KEX kept the MOR full service format long after most stations had abandoned it.
alok said:To all that commented on ratings ,PPM's ,etc. Thank You ,I learned much.
I was wondering if PPM's were around in the early days of Top 40 radio , 1950's / 60's / 70's ,if we would have be able to experience what many of us feel was "unique radio".
With plenty of jingles ,great DJ's and a plain "never ending fun sound" radio gave us.
Or would have the PPM's ,if around in the 50's - 70's, made radio then just a "jukebox" with no real DJ's,few jingles ,kind of blah.
Just a place to hear the sponser message?
Al
michael hagerty said:One other thought, Al...even in the glory days, no station I can name ever had a majority of the audience (apart from perhaps teens in certain dayparts). But, for example, the peak rating for KHJ that I've been able to find was about a 13 share. Huge. But it means 87 percent of the audience was listening to something else.
DavidKaye said:michael hagerty said:One other thought, Al...even in the glory days, no station I can name ever had a majority of the audience (apart from perhaps teens in certain dayparts). But, for example, the peak rating for KHJ that I've been able to find was about a 13 share. Huge. But it means 87 percent of the audience was listening to something else.
I am told that KISN in Portland used to have a 75 share evenings. But, as you mention it was teens in certain dayparts. KISN was Top 40 and had the likes of The Real Don Steele and Mike Phillips at the time.
DavidKaye said:michael hagerty said:One other thought, Al...even in the glory days, no station I can name ever had a majority of the audience (apart from perhaps teens in certain dayparts). But, for example, the peak rating for KHJ that I've been able to find was about a 13 share. Huge. But it means 87 percent of the audience was listening to something else.
I am told that KISN in Portland used to have a 75 share evenings. But, as you mention it was teens in certain dayparts. KISN was Top 40 and had the likes of The Real Don Steele and Mike Phillips at the time.
Lkeller said:At the time, they had competition from Drake - on 62/KGW, if I remember correctly. Funny how Drake always managed to pick up stations with the original 3 letter calls.
Anyway, IIRC, KISN was one of the few stations that held up well against the Boss juggernaurt - the other being KCBQ in San Diego, which sometimes bested Drake's KGB in the ratings.
michael hagerty said:Ballpark guess for fall '64:
1. KRLA
2. KMPC
3. KNX
4. KFI
5. KFWB
6. KPOL
7. KLAC
8. KFAC
9. KABC
10.KHJ
11.XETRA
And some of those might be tied with others. Back then, the numbers were whole numbers, no decimal points, so ties were common.
michael hagerty said:Lkeller said:At the time, they had competition from Drake - on 62/KGW, if I remember correctly. Funny how Drake always managed to pick up stations with the original 3 letter calls.
Anyway, IIRC, KISN was one of the few stations that held up well against the Boss juggernaurt - the other being KCBQ in San Diego, which sometimes bested Drake's KGB in the ratings.
Llew: KGW wasn't a Drake client. Just another station that copied elements of the sound. As to the three-letter call thing, there was KYA, KGB, KHJ and WOR-FM (which, since it was ID'd as "OR-FM", counts as 4). Outnumbered by KYNO, KSTN, KFRC, WRKO, CKLW, WHBQ, and KRTH.
And the Drake myth overlooks that there was a battle in many of the markets he consulted. KHJ may have knocked KRLA out of #1 in 6 months, but KRLA was still a significant factor until 1972, getting very close in 1969. World Famous Tom Murphy (a KISN alum) was doing so well in mornings on KRLA in 1971 that Drake made the decision to replace Charlie Tuna with Robert W. Morgan, who'd just bombed in Chicago. And even though KRLA wasn't a factor after 1972, KKDJ was closing in fast when Drake left RKO.
In San Francisco, KFRC took the lead early, but KYA took it back within a year and won key dayparts and demos until 1970...four years after KFRC's launch.
CKLW had significant competition from WKNR for a year or two, and WOR-FM never worked until after Drake. About the only market he truly steamrollered was Boston, where WMEX had a weaker signal and committed a series of blunders.
Anyone who's read my posts over the years knows I was a Drake fan. But those are the facts.
Huff said:michael hagerty said:Ballpark guess for fall '64:
1. KRLA
2. KMPC
3. KNX
4. KFI
5. KFWB
6. KPOL
7. KLAC
8. KFAC
9. KABC
10.KHJ
11.XETRA
And some of those might be tied with others. Back then, the numbers were whole numbers, no decimal points, so ties were common.
I don't have a full ranker from 1964, but the July 1964 Hooper report showed KRLA with a 16.4 all-period average share and KFWB in second with a 13.6
Lkeller said:michael hagerty said:Lkeller said:At the time, they had competition from Drake - on 62/KGW, if I remember correctly. Funny how Drake always managed to pick up stations with the original 3 letter calls.
Anyway, IIRC, KISN was one of the few stations that held up well against the Boss juggernaurt - the other being KCBQ in San Diego, which sometimes bested Drake's KGB in the ratings.
Llew: KGW wasn't a Drake client. Just another station that copied elements of the sound. As to the three-letter call thing, there was KYA, KGB, KHJ and WOR-FM (which, since it was ID'd as "OR-FM", counts as 4). Outnumbered by KYNO, KSTN, KFRC, WRKO, CKLW, WHBQ, and KRTH.
And the Drake myth overlooks that there was a battle in many of the markets he consulted. KHJ may have knocked KRLA out of #1 in 6 months, but KRLA was still a significant factor until 1972, getting very close in 1969. World Famous Tom Murphy (a KISN alum) was doing so well in mornings on KRLA in 1971 that Drake made the decision to replace Charlie Tuna with Robert W. Morgan, who'd just bombed in Chicago. And even though KRLA wasn't a factor after 1972, KKDJ was closing in fast when Drake left RKO.
In San Francisco, KFRC took the lead early, but KYA took it back within a year and won key dayparts and demos until 1970...four years after KFRC's launch.
CKLW had significant competition from WKNR for a year or two, and WOR-FM never worked until after Drake. About the only market he truly steamrollered was Boston, where WMEX had a weaker signal and committed a series of blunders.
Anyone who's read my posts over the years knows I was a Drake fan. But those are the facts.
Thanks for the info, Michael - very educational as always. I guess it is interesting that KRLA continued to do reasonably well - I remember KRLA being very good in the 69 period you speak of. I've read some comments (on Reelradio, IIRC), to the effect that KRLA was actually trying to fail in the late 60s, because the members of the trust that held the license for 1110 wanted to buy the station. (The former owner had been Jack Kent Cooke's corporation, but the license had been yanked by the FCC a few years earlier due to improprieties). I believe Johnny Darin confirmed that HE felt KRLA was trying to fail, given that they had removed him as PD after he had taken KRLA to within reach of KHJ's ratings.
Any comment on that?
michael hagerty said:Llew: KGW wasn't a Drake client. Just another station that copied elements of the sound. As to the three-letter call thing, there was KYA, KGB, KHJ and WOR-FM (which, since it was ID'd as "OR-FM", counts as 4). Outnumbered by KYNO, KSTN, KFRC, WRKO, CKLW, WHBQ, and KRTH.
And the Drake myth overlooks that there was a battle in many of the markets he consulted. KHJ may have knocked KRLA out of #1 in 6 months, but KRLA was still a significant factor until 1972, getting very close in 1969.
In San Francisco, KFRC took the lead early, but KYA took it back within a year and won key dayparts and demos until 1970...four years after KFRC's launch.
CKLW had significant competition from WKNR for a year or two,
and WOR-FM never worked until after Drake.
michael hagerty said:In San Francisco, KFRC took the lead early, but KYA took it back within a year and won key dayparts and demos until 1970...four years after KFRC's launch.
michael hagerty said:Llew: KGW wasn't a Drake client. Just another station that copied elements of the sound. As to the three-letter call thing, there was KYA, KGB, KHJ and WOR-FM (which, since it was ID'd as "OR-FM", counts as 4). Outnumbered by KYNO, KSTN, KFRC, WRKO, CKLW, WHBQ, and KRTH.
DavidKaye said:KYA was never a Drake client. He tested his ideas out on KYA pre-Boss Radio, while PD there, but left after a brief stint. KYA may have adopted a few of his ideas but KYA went their own way.
Also, was KSTN consulted by Drake? Sure, they used the Drake jingles and formatics, and there was a close relationship between Knox Larue and Gene Chenault, but I think that was it.
DavidKaye said:michael hagerty said:In San Francisco, KFRC took the lead early, but KYA took it back within a year and won key dayparts and demos until 1970...four years after KFRC's launch.
Having listened to both, and having lots of friends who did, it was a no-brainer. KYA had class. KFRC sounded like Los Angeles, and we hated the LA-sound. We'd listen a bit but KFRC just wasn't cool. KFRC wasn't cool until after Drake left and people such as Michael Spears were running things.
Listening to old KFRC airchecks, early KFRC sounded almost exactly like KHJ except for no "Boss Radio" or "Million Dollar Weekend" slogans (which KEWB and KYA respectively had been using). But aside from that KFRC was a KHJ clone in those days.
Fast forward 5 years and KFRC sounds like a totally different station from KHJ, and much better for it.
michael hagerty said:DavidKaye said:KYA was never a Drake client. He tested his ideas out on KYA pre-Boss Radio, while PD there, but left after a brief stint. KYA may have adopted a few of his ideas but KYA went their own way.
Also, was KSTN consulted by Drake? Sure, they used the Drake jingles and formatics, and there was a close relationship between Knox Larue and Gene Chenault, but I think that was it.
David: I wasn't clear. I mentioned KYA because Drake had been PD there. You're right, he never consulted. He did, however, consult KSTN while doing KYNO and KGB before taking on RKO. I don't know if he continued to consult KSTN beyond that or for how long.