• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

WAKY

owning Oldies

BobOnTheJob said:
Of course they don't...They've already dropped the term "oldies" and are on the way to Classic Hits via the "Greatest Hits Of The 60's & 70's" route. WGRR did it...WRKA will too. WAKY will own the Oldies format in the next 12 months IMHO...

In case you haven't noticed, being "THE Oldies station" isn't exactly a major badge of honor (or revenue) these days. Besides, their signal contour (according to RadioLocator.com, anyway) looks like they only cover about half the market with anything close to a local signal.
 
Remember, though a 70 dbu is a city grade on a commercial FM and 60 dbu is a standard city grade, with their 232 meter (757 feet above average terrain), their Metro 54 dbu and marketable 45 dbu (auto stability) does a good job of coverage, from one end of the market... The 60 dbu goes right over Churchill Downs and UofL...The 54 dbu kisses the edges of Crestwood, Sellersburg, Shelbyville and covers Brandenburg, Corydon and Springfield.... E'town/Hodgenville/Bardstown all are within the 60 dbu.. Very marketable as a C3....
 
pattern study on antennas expensive these days? One antenna to the next with major change is unexpected. Good investment.

Remember all the old WAKY jocks are on dialysis or in nursing homes except for Bobby Haaaaaaaaaatfield. He's running his own station. Getting the old jocks wouldn't make it sound like WAKY sounded in it's heyday.

Best sounding oldies station , no, station around. because it's oldies doesn't mean you have to talk like the geriatric.

Why did we loose the enthusiasm and energy ( E Alvin says it's Mo) in radio and all start talking like NPR jocks?

WASE was okay and the sound may not be that much different but the WAKY calls addition makes the station.

Thank you
 
Chief.. Right On! :D E.Alvin Davis is right... Mo! Hey? Why did all (not overdone uncontrolled) energy go?? We all are sounding like Dick Clark remembering the great days (Dick is great with his trademark and discussion, but we're talking jocking...)... :)
 
Oldies jocks

Energy, passion, enthusiasm-yes.

"Boss jocks"-no. Great in '68, the kiss of death in 2007.
 
Re: Oldies jocks

Oldies Cat said:
Energy, passion, enthusiasm-yes.

"Boss jocks"-no. Great in '68, the kiss of death in 2007.

gotta agree: I listened quite a bit over the weekend...recognized all the jingles (nicely remixed)...thought
the music was pretty much on-target...but the jocks are another story.
this is not a slam at their talent or ability...but they sounded forced and structured...
here's how it's seemed to go
TUNE
jock backsell "that was [artist] with [title]"...
JINGLE
jock talks over next tune "now here's [artist] with [title] on fun lovin' WAKY"

the energy seemed forced...not quite puking...but close...

here's my disclaimer: I understand the WAKY formatting is newly launched: I'll give it a few
more weeks (another trip to Louisville) and see how it's adapted.

BTW...the signal is pretty good...driving north it was listenable (except for a few drop-outs) from Horse Cave
to the Bowman Field area of Louisville. didn't hear any problems with the signal in the highlands...
 
The following is from the WAKY tribute site http://www.79waky.com:

Ricci Ware Interview
MP3 Format - 17:14 - 6062 KB

While the first voice heard on WAKY belonged to station owner and radio legend Gordon McLendon, the first DJ on that historic day was Ricci Ware. In this May 22, 2007 interview, Ricci describes how WAKY took Louisville by storm from practically the first record. (Was it really "Purple People Eater"? Did anybody find the million dollar WAKY check? Did that make-believe swimming pool have lifeguards?) You'll also hear how Ricci came to work for "The Old Scotchman" and what sent him back to Texas to go to work for his next station -- KTSA in San Antonio -- where he's remained for nearly five decades.

Click here for the interview:

http://www.79waky.com/audiointerviews.htm#ricciware
 
Over-tightening at first, will not hurt.. Got to get a 'basic flow' before opening up the personalities on the basis of the liners.. We all did this when kicking off new formats at radio stations... Adjust the basics core of the delivery and then work out from there.. Wait a month or two and see where they are at.. Process....
 
Let's talk about the "new' WAKY audio processing. I listened for an hour Saturday...did they have to sell their processor to buy the jingles? It's clean, but shallow sounding & notably softer in loudness than the rest of the market. The mics lack robustness as well. The jock who was voice tracking at 5:30PM (either he was voice tracking or their clocks are 2-3 minutes off as every time he gave the time, it was off a couple minutes) was buried under the music. Anyone with inside info reading this? Their audio was fine before...why did they fix something that wasn't broken?
 
WAKY's audio has been restored to normal...but the Saturday evening guy's voice tracks were still buried beneath the music.
 
I have to admit that I am an oldies junkie. Came to Louisville last weekend for a wedding. Found WAKY and kept the dial there all weekend. They played stuff from the 50's through the late 70's and lots of songs not normally in the cookie cutter oldies format rotation. Good for them! As for the jocks, see romer's May 21 post. They still sound that way. Still, I wish them success, and hope that this niche works for them.
 
I'm pretty sure I heard Johnny doing an actual shift on WAKY a couple weekends ago. Probably voice tracked, definitely not just liners..
 
I was in Louisville last week...and heard Randolph doing afternoons.
Web site has him as doing afternoong, too...
 
skippertthomas said:
Engineer and Rob.... When did this all come down??? Where were the calls?? Danville??
It was my understanding the WAKY calls were assigned to our Greensburg station...
 
On AM they were...now its WGRK AM in Greensburg. We got em from the irrascible Mike Wilson when CBC bought WGRK-FM G-burg, WAKY-AM G-burg, and WAKY -FM S'filed from him in 96 or thereabouts. WAKY-FM (ours) is now WYSB. I guess he had got the calls when they left 790-back in the day.
 
How ironic is that? ??? I guess when we bought the WAKY calls and then changed to GRK that was a full reversal...of sorts :-\
 
The WAKY calls left 790 in 1988, about two years after the oldies format ended. They first put the WVEZ beautiful music format on AM calling it "The Beautiful 790" and a year later tried automated country and called it "WACKY Country", cleaver. JQ has samples of the later on his www.79waky.com. Greensburg picked up the calls. When Greensburg and 102.7 Springfield became co-owned (CBC i believe), the stand alone stayed in Greensburg and the "FM" suffix of the calls went on 102.7.

The WKLO calls wound up in Danville about a year and change after 1080 dropped them. Junior Shane wanted to build a radio station and convinced Johnny Randolph to run it. Johnny was willing but the deal was the station had to be in, or around, Danville. The "new" WKLO was now a 1000 watt directional daytimer. Johnny was the manager and morning man, his wife was middays and a local guy who won a "you can be a DJ contest" was afternoons. The format was live and local country and used old WKLO jingles, of course 1080 was not included. Gary Burbank voiced the top of the hour ID, "This is ten, in the middle of the dial, WKLO Danville". It was a decent facility all the music was on carts and the board was build by Junior. Funny story about the carts, since WKLO was a daytimer Johnny was concerned about theft of music; you know those music carts look like 8-tracks. He placed a sign over the cart area and in big letters annonced:

THESE TAPES WILL NOT PLAY IN AN 8-TRACK PLAYER

Around 1990, Johnny and Junior had a falling out over their "gentleman's agreement". Also, there was a chance to acquire an FM, what became 105.1 Lancaster, and apparently Junior pass on the chance. So Johnny took everyone over to WHIR/WMGE and teamed up with then owner Wayne Perky.

WKLO quickly spun out of control. The format briefly changed to oldies. Then Junior hired Rich Hunter as manager. The format became a form of Adult Contemporary. They even hired talk show host Dale Wright for lots of money. He did a few days until the first paycheck bounced and Dale quick coming to work as his loyalty stopped with his paycheck. WKLO bounced its last check in 1991 and went dark. The towers located on Highway 34 just off US 27 came down a couple of years later.

If you're looking for the gold records and memorabilia of this version of WKLO it can be found at Junior's amphitheater at Pine Knob.
 
radiorob2.0 said:
It was a decent facility all the music was on carts and the board was build by Junior.

It was the late 80s and somebody built their own board?

Wow.

That was "the thing" in the 60s and 70s. In the late 80s it was just stupid. LOL.
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom