Bob1370 said:
Guess my reaction as a listener/observer, was that 'VOR's sound stirred memories of what we'd been doing at WHEN in '73 and '74 under John Patton and Jim Ashbery--what they had in common other than a general feel and concept was that they were both fun to listen to (and I'd venture a guess 'VOR was also a fun place to work, just as WHEN was back in the day). Wish we had more stations like them today.
Think it's possible now to take a station and recreate that feeling for today's listeners?
John Patton and my old college friend, Jim Ashbery, were among the very best at what they did. One only need look at Jim's resume to realize just how good he was - WNBF-Binghamton, WHEN-Syracuse, WFLA-Tampa, WCCO-Minneapolis, WSB-Atlanta among others - all legendary in their individual markets. Patton programmed some great stations as well.
Bob, of course it's possible. But very unlikely, as we both realize, in today's radio climate and the current economy. Perhaps if some of these mega-corps collapse soon enough, as many are predicting, and the business returns to individual owners (with plenty of money) - there's a chance!. A slim chance as we know since the clock is ticking. Unfortunately, the business has done little in the last 20 years to bring new listeners into the fold - add to that the ipod, the internet, video games and a paucity of good music being produced and you see the problem.
Today, a station of this type would only entertain those who are older and grew up listening to the radio as folks our age did. Maybe the answer, as some have suggested, is to turn the radio business as a "blank canvas" over to some of the 18-30 year olds and see what they come up with. It worked for guys like
Todd Storz, Gordon McClendon, Bill Drake, Tom Donahue and others years ago.
While I'd like to share your optimism, I'm just not willing to hold my breath until it happens.