Bob is still around; I run into him on the street occasionally. He does part time announcing at WHEP Foley. He's a good broadcaster. I didn't agree with his policy of signing off at 6 pm year round, even tho a daytimer can stay on until 8 pm in the summer. I wouldn't call the music "AC" back then - it was more like pre-nostalgia. I used to hear off-the-wall things that some old timer announcer played which went too far back for anyone to remember. The current satellite format music is well researched; my significant-other (63 yr old female) listens to it for hours every day.
Not only would I not have signed off at 6; I would have stayed on the air with the 40 watts or so that the FCC allowed, using an automation system.
I'm sure someone would listen to the Sat AM tape delay of a Fri nite high school football game, and the sponsors might buy it ... but it's not my cup of tea.
The station had a good record of community inolvement during Bob's tenure, and the same goes for the next owner, John Ward Hinds.
It took the next owner (Hagen) to finally get FCC to allow it to go non-directional, as the DA pattern was nulling a station that ceased to exist in 1963, and the null made the station unlistenable in the adjacent communities of Daphne/Spanish Fort.
Not only would I not have signed off at 6; I would have stayed on the air with the 40 watts or so that the FCC allowed, using an automation system.
I'm sure someone would listen to the Sat AM tape delay of a Fri nite high school football game, and the sponsors might buy it ... but it's not my cup of tea.
The station had a good record of community inolvement during Bob's tenure, and the same goes for the next owner, John Ward Hinds.
It took the next owner (Hagen) to finally get FCC to allow it to go non-directional, as the DA pattern was nulling a station that ceased to exist in 1963, and the null made the station unlistenable in the adjacent communities of Daphne/Spanish Fort.