We love having Rick Dees in the afternoons at KQLH 92.5 FM! I gotta tell you he has rocked our world, all I hear is Rick Dees? Really? The real Rick Dees? Where is our studio, and is he there? And can we meet him. Of course we are not going to tell the local paper: "No, he is not live. it's all just recorded.."
The show is timely, daily, up to date and fresh everyday. On KQLH, he proves he is very much relevant, and a total pro. The best! Our listeners love the music on our station, and they love Rick Dees...We hear that every day.. We are the little station that could and a prime example of how community LPFM is helping to save radio from the internet by keeping people involved and interacting with the dial. We are proud of our sound with our Nautel Transmitter, Orban Processor, and Audio Arts by Wheatstone Board, all beamed out from our hilltop below Mount San Bernardino via two ERI 100 antenna sections.. Do like Dees did...Stop by and play a round of gold nearby in Yucaipa and enjoy our station. You will fall in love with it. Nothing says an LPFM can't sound as good as the big stations..
That may be. But do you think Dees is donating his show to the station?
getting a real audience is what our local owner/hero is after and he is willing to pay Rick for it today to hopefully make a little profit tomorrow. I know you know all of this; I am not sure what your point is.
Keep in mind that by law he CAN'T "make a little profit." My point, as you put it, is I'm just wondering what his deal is, since he can't run barter spots, as is typically the deal. We all know there are basic costs involved with a national syndicator.
You really think the station is paying money for it? Are they running funding announcements? Are they soliciting contributions during his show?
Who says he can't make a profit?
Wjile I never lived in LA...I was a fan of Rick Dee's and his TV appearances, disco duck, and of course his radio work.
Seems like he had "clean up" duty at KHJ towards the end of that stations life as an AC/Top 40 station.
Came across this aircheck:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SRkeDooGJCA
My first reaction....crappy music, huh?
Also, not a lot of production that I would expect with jingles, etc.
Anyone know what was going on at KHJ during this time?
I think Dee's was the last morning man before their flip to country, no?
The FCC. Only non-profit organizations can apply for LPFMs. And yes, it's a tax status. I've completed those tax forms, I've worked in non-profit radio, and any left-over money must be directed to operating costs. But when you look at most non-religious LPFMs, they have next to no revenue, much less any "profit." So that brings me back to my question. What's the deal here? A radio station that at most can reach a couple hundred people doesn't have much to offer.
The issue is how does an LPFM compensate a syndicator for a daily show by a national host?
The issue is how does an LPFM compensate a syndicator for a daily show by a national host?
As suggested in the previous post, they pay cash and do not carry the network spots.
It sounds here like Chuck's jingle package, "The Rhythm of the Southland" hadn't arrived yet.
...and RKO did KHJ no favors by positioning KRTH so close musically..
In fall '79...four to five months after this aircheck, KHJ was tied with KDAY for 16th with a 2.4. .
The issue is how does an LPFM compensate a syndicator for a daily show by a national host?
A man who is hell-bent on getting a syndicated show on a LPFM with little to no current revenue would have to to what some LPFM operators have been doing for years for things they need for the station: Pay out of pocket as a donation to the LPFM organization, use the money you just donated to pay said syndicator.
There is a lot written about the heyday of the RKO/Drake stations.
I am fascinated by the final years, the decisions made, and how those decisions were made.
They seemed to be a less cohesive company in those days (compared to when they all ran the same format.)
Endless parlor discussions about if and what they could have done differently....
It was a long, slow fall. Setting aside the legal case that ended up costing RKO its licenses, the turning point was really when Drake left RKO in 1973.
For the previous eight years, Drake and his local PDs were guaranteed no interference from sales or management.
When Drake left, Bruce Johnson made the local GMs kings of their domains again---just like most of their competition. Which made RKO stations (apart from the legacy and their brilliant engineering) just like every other station. Having Paul Drew as National PD helped maintain some level of consistency, but the GMs were driving. Some were better than others, but all were watching market share and revenue slide from the glory days, and engaging in varying degrees of crisis management (apart from Pat Norman, who knew he had the golden goose at KFRC).
KRTH and WROR were the ones that always amazed me. "Leave the AM alone, put an automated or live-assist AC format on the FM and we'll have a one-two sales punch." No, what you'll have is a station playing 80 percent of your playlist with fewer commercials and less talk on FM that will cannibalize your 18-49 females. I believe Bill Drake would have seen that and chosen another path.
Michael - But wasn't the "Hit Parade (year)" format under Drake on KHJ-FM, and I assume other FMs - the same thing you are talking about? While the format was more to the light rock end than KHJ-AM, it was probably 75% Boss 30, and at least for awhile, featured many of the AM jocks including The Real Don Steele, though they were not ID'd by name.
I have station specific radio memories over the years attached to certain songs, and IIRC, the first time I heard Bang a Gong in 1971, it was on 101.1, and the automated back-announcement was Steele's - "That was Teeeeeeeee Rex! Bang a GONG!!!" I'll let you do the voice and intonation in your head.
The following Solid Gold format probably less cannibalistic than Hit Parade, but recurrents and "goldens" were also big on KHJ-AM
Who is paying to put Dees on an LPFM?