DavidEduardo, when you were GMing at Y-100 sister AM the calls changed from WWOK to what?
Stormychuck said:DavidEduardo, when you were GMing at Y-100 sister AM the calls changed from WWOK to what?
JohnJax said:Y-100 of the early 80s just did their own thing regardless of what Billboard listed as the biggest hits. Still, it all worked didn't it? How's this for a jog of the old memory. AT40 chart position included if available. Mama Used To Say (30)- Junior, Double Dutch Bus (30) - Frankie Smith, Genius of Love (31) - Tom Tom Club. The Gap Band was very hot in S Fla. Burn Rubber must have been an album cut or it just didn't make the AT 40. Even with all the high-energy stuff, I recall DeBarge and "All this Love" playing all over S Fla long before it went national where it just hit #17.
But probably the best example of going out on your own regardless of what anyone else was doing when Y-100 took a chance on a "A Night To Remember" by Shalamar. Never making the AT40 charts - it was #1 on the old Y as I recall for 4 weeks. My Lord, how I miss those days and I will be the first to admit - A Night to Remember is still among my favs from the 80s.
Stormychuck said:DaveEduardo, not to worry, most of the people who lived out in Sweetwater (Swampwater) as it was known, wouldn't have been able to tell the difference anyway.
musiconradio.com said:I don't understand WHTT when I listened was a like a secondary y100 it actually simulcasted at times (if memory serves right).
Stormychuck said:DaveEduardo, Sweetwater did have only one bar, right there on the canal, sort of, yes I had been there a couple of times, and yes it was another world, spooky people, but fun. I worked at WWOK/WIGL 73-74 so I fit in at the time. And yes they loved their country music...
True the transmitter site, what about 2 or 3 miles west, on 8th street past Sweetwater, turn right on the dirt road and a half mile or so in to the north, sweetwater could hear WWOK loud and clear no static at all.........