And in those few later books, we had the creativity of a bunch of really good Top 40 radio folks, starting with Mike McVay and all these other folks:
1976-1977 Real Don Steele
1976-1977 Chuck Browning
1976-1977 Dave Conley
1976-1978 John Driscoll
1976-1977 Jimi Fox
1976-1977 Rich "Brother" Robbin
1976-1977 Tony Evans
1976-1977 Phil Flowers
1977-1977 Andy Barber
1976-1978 Dave Hume
1976-1978 Joe Nasty
1976-1978 Willie B
1976-1978 Dave Trout (Freddie Snakeskin)
1976-1979 Boyd R. Britton
1977-1979 Charlie Tuna
1977-1980 Beaver Cleaver (Ken Levine)
1978-1979 Mike Carson (Dave Skyler)
1978-1979 Jack Armstrong
1978-1978 "Machine Gun" Kelly
1978-1978 Lou Richards
1978-1978 Gary Cocker
1978-1978 Mike McVay
1978-1979 Dave Sebastian
1978-1979 Jim Conlee
1978-1979 Phil Conrad
(From
KTNQ Los Angeles Radio History)
Some of those dates are off. Actually, most of them.
Browning only did the launch. Didn't stick around.
Jimi Fox got blown out after a year.
Rich Brother Robbin stayed seven months.
Tuna didn't arrive until September of '78.
The honest-to-God truth is it was a revolving door. A ton of people in two and a half years---including
FOUR PDs.. Nancy Plum (who's not listed there) might have been the only one who made it from start to finish. Maybe Tony Evans.
If I remember correctly, this was the starting lineup (the station launched the day after Christmas, 1976):
6-9 AM: John Driscoll
9AM-Noon: Tony Evans
Noon-3 PM: Willie B
3-6 PM: The Real Don Steele
6-9 PM: Rich Brother Robbin
9 PM-Midnight: Joe Nasty
Midnight-6 AM: Nancy Plum
Weekends/fill-ins: Beaver Cleaver
Rich left in July of '77. Willie B took his place. And Dave Conley took noon-3.
Beaver left around then too, because his workload on M*A*S*H increased in the '76-'77 season. Andy Barber replaced Beaver on weekends and fill-ins.
Jimi Fox was out by December of '77. John Driscoll stepped up as PD and stayed in mornings for three months, then Jackson Armstrong arrived for mornings.
Willie B left in March of '78, and Machine Gun Kelly took that timeslot.
Joe Nasty was right behind Willie and I don't remember who took his timeslot.
Steele quit in June of '78, right after Storer announced its plan to take KTNQ country and do an automated Top 40 on FM (the plan later morphed into a sale of the two stations to two different buyers. Andy Barber moved into afternoons.
Driscoll hits the silk in August of '78 and is replaced as PD by Mike McVay.
Charlie Tuna arrived in September of '78 for mornings and Jackson Armstrong went to afternoons, replacing Andy Barber.
McVay left in February '79 and was replaced as PD by Jim Conlee.
Machine Gun Kelly quit in April of '79. Honestly, I have no idea who replaced him. One of the names from Alex Cosper's list that I haven't mentioned, I'm sure. By that point, they were three months away from going Spanish.
Ironically, April-May '79 was the first book where KTNQ (with a 2.4) was able to beat KHJ and KFI (both with a 2.1). But because of the lag times in those days, nobody saw it until after the format change.