@michael hagerty I just noticed you updated your avatar to the photo of you in the Sturgeon.
It looks like you were having lots of fun!
I was. It's a great machine. There's also more than a little awe. Some of the best talent I ever heard stood at that board. To be there myself---that was something.
It looks like I might have a reason to visit Modesto at some point, too (why Modesto, of all places??)
I'm going to assume that you haven't seen the movie
American Graffiti. After all, it's 52 years old and you're not:
This was George Lucas' (who went on to create the Star Wars and Indiana Jones franchises) second movie ever and his first hit. And radio plays a big part in it. It's essentially one night in 1962, from just before sundown to just after sunup, the night before kids who'd graduated high school earlier that summer were supposed to go off to college.
They're cruising the downtown streets, listening to the radio. On that radio---Wolfman Jack (That was artistic license. Wolf was working in Shreveport, Louisiana at that time, and was a year away from really figuring out that character).
One of the characters (played by Richard Dreyfuss) sees a beautiful girl in a white '57 T-Bird at a stoplight. She mouths "I love you" before driving off. He can't find her, so he goes to the outskirts of town, to a local radio station, to see if Wolfman will deliver a message on-air to her.
The movie was based on Lucas' experiences as a teenager in Modesto. And it was huge---the third highest-grossing movie of 1973, behind
The Exorcist and
The Sting. So there's a whole "
American Graffiti" culture in the town and there's been an annual event with a festival and street show in early June every year for 30-plus years.
Because of the timing, Chris Sharp (owner of the Sturgeon) has helped extend the early June timeline with "610 Day" on June 10th for the past several years.
In its Top 40 era, KFRC's signal came into Modesto loud and clear 24-7---as loud on the dial as local stations. People there grew up listening to KFRC just as much as they did to their local Top 40 station, KFIV.
For the past several years, the Sturgeon has been stored in an RV storage facility and only brought out for events a few times a year. A place in the Modesto Graffiti USA Museum would serve as storage but allow it to be seen by the public instead of hidden out of sight.
www.graffitiusamuseum.com