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Programming Genius was: Programming Genious

C

cabradio

Guest
Who in Boston would any of you suggest is Boston's Programming Genious? When were they at the height of their career, and what ultimately brought them down, if they are no longer on top?

Now...keep you replies on point. No name calling. Critical posts are welcomed as long as it is not in an insulting tone. I don't say this because we want to handle these people with kid gloves! I say it to keep the board a positive, pleasnt place to come and discuss radio. Surely some programmers need some knocks across their heads...this isn't the place to be so crude or rude.

I appreciate everyone's input. I'm tired of being the bad guy, but will continue if necessary.

Find a way to enjoy this place without it needing to be so destructive.<P ID="signature">______________



</P><P ID="edit"><FONT class="small">Edited by cabradio on 09/22/05 07:04 PM.</FONT></P>
 
Re: It's Called....

> Spellchecker....look into it. ;0
>

I forgot to mention...I respelling ever English word and I started with GENIUS. It shall now be spelled, GENIOUS! Actually, it looks better the way it was originally spelled...okay, which word is neckst?<P ID="signature">______________



</P>
 
First person that comes to mind, to me, is the late Sonny Jo White of KISS 108 in it's heyday. But I think he was a victim of his own success, may he rest in peace. And to go back even further, perhaps Mel Phillips (sp) in the early days of the Big 68 WRKO. Today, probably Cadillac over at KISS/Jamn, he has managed to keep both properties tight and at the top of their game.

Guess this is a good starting point for discussion.


> Who in Boston would any of you suggest is Boston's
> Programming Genious? When were they at the height of their
> career, and what ultimately brought them down, if they are
> no longer on top?
>
 
> First person that comes to mind, to me, is the late Sonny Jo
> White of KISS 108 in it's heyday. But I think he was a
> victim of his own success, may he rest in peace. And to go
> back even further, perhaps Mel Phillips (sp) in the early
> days of the Big 68 WRKO.

Sunny Joe, absolutely!! Mel Phillips, I'm not so sure how much of WRKO's success in the "Big 68" days was him or Bill Drake...Drake kept his PDs on a pretty short leash.

I'm gonna be a bit controversial here and nominate Oedipus. Yeah, he got a little (understatement of the week here) big for his britches, but here's a guy with no programming experience taking over a station that was still stuck in 1969 doing "hey man" Woodstock radio and turned it into a major force in the market for many years. WBCN, along with WBZ and Kiss 108 was consistently in the top 5 for over a decade. And this was during some years that were tough going for many AORs
 
Maybe only because we shared the same musical tastes, but I thought Joanne Doody did a nice job when she was with the River 92.5. She was also did a show with FNX for a long while and may even have been the PD there for a time. She's got a good ear and knows how to avoid the overplayed.
 
More Programming Geniuses...

Here are, in my opinion, some more programming geniuses:

(1) Clark Smidt: In the early 1970's, he took WBZ-FM-106.7 to an automated top-40 format which for a time was the second-most-popular station among young adults in the market, behind only WRKO-680.

In 1975, he left WBZ and took over programming duties at the old WCOZ-94.5, which at the time was an also-ran beautiful-music station. In August of that year, Smidt dumped beautiful music for a "modified" progressive-rock format, at first automated, but with live announcers 17 hours a day by October (and 24/7 by the end of 1975). The station quickly became a force to be reckoned with in Boston radio.

Smidt eventually became a radio programming consultant; I believe Smidt is still in that business.

(2) Tommy Hadges: In March of 1968, he put together a late-evening and overnight show called "The American Revolution", a program of progressive rock, on WBCN-104.1 (which was otherwise classical). The block became quite successful, and as a result, 'BCN went 24/7 progressive rock by that Summer. He started what has now become arguably the most legendary rock station in the business.

(3) Ron Robin: Why would I include a top-40 jock among my list of programming geniuses? In early 1978, he left the old WVBF-105.7 in a dispute over the length of a weekly program of disco music he did titled "Disco Notes". He found a new home for the show at WBOS-92.9; at first a four-hour show on Sunday nights. By April, disco had expanded to the 8 P.M.-12 Midnight hours every night; by September, WBOS was New England's first 24/7 disco station, and Ron Robin programmed it. For a few months in late 1978 and early 1979, WBOS was extremely successful as a disco station, ranking in the Arbitron top ten in 12-plus and even higher among teenagers and young adults (indeed, the station's ratings were much higher during late 1978 and early 1979 than they were prior to that or have been since).

The success of WBOS as a disco station was short-lived as WXKS-107.9 flipped to disco in January, 1979 and with a huge promotions budget, blew 'BOS out of the water and forced it to change formats in 1980. I'm of the opinion that if "Kiss-108" had not come along at that point, WBOS would have become hugely successful in 1979 and might well have evolved the way "Kiss-108" eventually did (going beyond pure disco).

(4) Arnie "Woo-Woo" Ginsberg: As far as I've been able to determine, "Woo-Woo" was the man who made the decision for WXKS-1430 to drop disco (and a partial simulcast with it's FM sister station) in late 1979 to flip to adult standards as one of the first four or five "Music of Your Life" stations. As a disco station partially simulcasting it's FM sister, WXKS-AM barely showed up in the ratings. After the flip to adult standards, the station did far better, even landing in the top ten (in 12-plus) during one Arbitron book---and this was back when WXKS-AM was still a daytimer!

(5) John H. Garabedian: At the end of the 1960's and the beginning of the 1970's, he was the youthful program director (and an air personality) at the then-WMEX-1510. Although the recently-flipped-to-Top-40 (1967) WRKO-680 had a much better signal than WMEX, the fact that WMEX was able to successfully compete against WRKO for a time was due in large part to Garabedian's programming skills. And he's still in the business, hosting the weekly "Open House Party" which is syndicated to a number of top-40/CHR stations around the country.
 
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