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Terrble DJ

DavidEduardo said:
RadioStarOne said:
.I bet that David E, Weav, John Mac, Robert W. Morgan, The Real Don Steele, Dave Sholin, David Kaye and even The Big A had their fair share of bad days on the air.

Every day that I was on the air was a bad day.

As soon as I became a PD, I took myself off the air. It was a brilliant move, and much appreciated by listeners.

Past a certain point (mid-70s) being an on-air PD really became too big a workload in a major market. Both Charlie Tuna and Charlie Van Dyke (who were doing mornings and programming KIIS-FM and KHJ, respectively) said they'd rather focus on one or the other.

But back in the day, there were a lot of PDs who were also good jocks: Tom Donahue, Van Dyke, Tuna, Johnnie Darin, Bobby Rich, Freddie Snakeskin...
 
1--KOIT PD slaps his forehead) " I coulda had Bobby Ocean!"--michael hagerty
2--OMG! ...that WAS the Program Director! Andy something. So much for a union announcer. Must be cheaper than to have a real DJ. Like Bobby Ocean... --geek-orama

I know everything changes, but, with the sudden departure of Bill and all the behind-the-scenes folks, Julie, Laurie, Larry and the old reliable More Music Morning Show, it's too bad the change doesn't seem for the better.

When there are still folks in the biz remembering your name long after your last light rock, less talk air shift, it's such a bonus. In the middle of all these changes, thanks Michael and Geekdawg for the total recall. Such DJ Name Retention deserves at least a little back story to better season it to your taste. Not at all untypical of hundreds of others here in California and across the nation, here's a little wider peek into what's going down at that once Number One frequency. DISCLAIMER -it's just another POV; doesn't require defense, still:

Unlike Ralf Barbieri, I did not get yelled at, nor shown any disrespect at that previous Less Jock, Light Rock radio station with which I was associated. I got nothing.

For several years I was the station's James Bond, and accepting last minute on-air missions was my challenge. In fact, it began as a DJ's dream job -- the PD, respected throughout the metropolis and it's furthest fringes as a top tier broadcasting player who had kept this station at the top of the pile for freakin' EVER, contacted me. Said he wanted me on the air staff.

Wow; I was actually asked by their successful-beyond-reason Program Director to join the ratings dominating air team. No auditioning, no stressful interview, this never happens. He said he knew my range, knew I would fit in. Quite an honor.

It ended quite differently, but with no berating, no lies, no mean spirited attitude. In fact, Nothing. Once Entercom's hireling from New Orleans was installed, he either harshly criticized or completely ignored those whom he had been instructed to eliminate and only allowed attention to the ones he was told to retain. I guess I fell into group one.

All I know is, where I had previously been notified by assistant PD and all-around powerhouse, Julie, for fill in emergencies (BTW: all requests, with only one exception in close to three years, were accepted and executed, once even with 15 minutes notice), I was never contacted again. At all. Never. Not even to say hello, goodbye, nyah-nyah, request my building key card or double check my employee ID number. Now I know what Nawlins' crickets sound like.

EDITORIAL: Any entity that would ignore her boss' accomplishments and eliminate his paycheck for the sole purpose of displaying numbers at the next stock meeting scam would, of course, have missed the occasion for their product's programming development with integrity. That station could have sounded FANTASTIC, after Bill, under Julie.
 
Know your range? LOL! Of course YOU realize, BO, that the person at that station now quite probably has no idea what a personality's range even IS! Your abilities and just plain aura of fun, even on the less jock station are a huge loss.
 
skyrocker said:
All I know is, where I had previously been notified by assistant PD and all-around powerhouse, Julie, for fill in emergencies (BTW: all requests, with only one exception in close to three years, were accepted and executed, once even with 15 minutes notice), I was never contacted again. At all. Never. Not even to say hello, goodbye, nyah-nyah, request my building key card or double check my employee ID number. Now I know what Nawlins' crickets sound like.

The exact same thing happened when the Bullitt family (KING) sold KSFO to ABC. Mickey Luckoff and his friends built a KSFO studio at 900 Front Street, and on the very last day of the oldies format, Gene Nelson was on air as the morning man over at KSFO at 300 Broadway. He said he had not been contacted by anybody from ABC about anything. He just did his shift, shut the door behind him, and both 300 Broadway and Gene Nelson were history.

THIS is by KGO's (falsely) revered Mickey Luckoff.

There is never any excuse to treat employees like that. Never.
 
The Bullitt Sister's did not sell KSFO to ABC. Check the record. The guy who owned The Good Guys electronics store sold it to ABC. Wasn't it First Broadcasting?
 
suburbandj said:
KING Broadcasting owned KYA AM and FM. KSFO was owned by Gene Autry

Autry sold KSFO to King, which sold KYA AM to Bonneville, which owned KOIT-FM. KYA became KOIT-AM.

King sold KSFO years later to First.

In a thread a year or so back, Jerry Gordon made me aware that Autry sold KSFO, KVI and KEX because his first wife, Ina, had it in her will that those stations (somehow, KMPC in Los Angeles was exempt) were to be sold and her community property share donated to the Autry Foundation within five years of her death. Gene sold KTLA television, used the proceeds to buy out his partners in Golden West Broadcasting, sold San Francisco, Seattle and Portland and followed Ina's wishes.

After that was finished, Gene made a half-hearted attempt to rebuild GWB, buying an FM for KMPC (the old KUTE, Glendale) and WCAR, Detroit, but Golden West was never able to regain its luster.
 
King actually sold KSFO & KYA-FM to First. I worked there....longest damned call letters you ever had to say (or have sung, in the case of the jingles.) "KSFO-KYA-FM," blah, blah. It was a mouthful. Jerry Gordon's wife was the best damned Continuity Director ever while there. No better, before or since.
 
michael hagerty said:
After that was finished, Gene made a half-hearted attempt to rebuild GWB, buying an FM for KMPC (the old KUTE, Glendale) and WCAR, Detroit, but Golden West was never able to regain its luster.

KUTE certainly played a variety of formats in its history.

There's the anecdote that during the days when it was K-LIT, the hyphen between the K and the L was removed several times from the raised brushed metal signage on the front of the TV building. The manager held a staff meeting to say that if anyone were caught stealing the hyphen, they would be dismissed.

On Sunset Boulevard, I think that the calls, without the hyphen, may have been more appropriate.

Then they switched to AAA and moved to studios near the west entrance to Forest Lawn in Burbank. I recall sitting in the same manager's office and being told that they had only gotten a 1.1 despite masterful programming because the signal was so bad. Two months later, under a "rent to buy" LMA, the station got a 6.7 and was #1.
 
DavidEduardo said:
stewie said:
KOIT has DJ's?

Are we going to have a terminology debate?

DJs, Air Personalities, Announcers, Talent, Jocks. They are on the air, they play music. The terms are pretty interchangeable today.

I think you sometimes forget that many on this board (aside from yourself and many others mentioned in this thread) had successful careers in radio both in front and behind the mic. I'm willing to bet many of the stations you listen to are using equipment my fingers touched at some point. Yes, I know they have DJ's.

My point was obviously lost on you.
 
michael hagerty said:
Autry sold KSFO to King, which sold KYA AM to Bonneville, which owned KOIT-FM. KYA became KOIT-AM.

Ah yes, I remember the Great Hand-off when they tried to get the KYA 1260 listeners to tune in to KSFO for the morning DJ, whoever it was at the time.

Interesting (well interesting to me, but probably to nobody else) is that the the original KOIT 93.3 was once 1260 KYA's original sibling. But the KOIT callsign that went to 96.5 and subsequently to 1260 has no connection to the original KOIT.
 
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