Your WYZZ story is hysterical, I never had the pleasure myself.
I did. When I was 19, right after getting back from Career Academy and then starting King's, I too went to WYZZ for a job interview. As a teenager, on our few family vacations I had visited CKLW, WXYZ, (Windsor-Detroit) WFIL, (Philadelphia), WKBW (Buffalo) and WWWE (Cleveland). I mean these were powerhouses. In Washington D.C. I visited WRC (the NBC affiliate where Willard Scott was) and Harv Moore's station plus the Westinghouse TV show Panorama which featured a very young Maury Povich. I'm telling you this not to brag but to set up the story. So after seeing all these places, I went to WYZZ. (Ironically when I first got married, we lived in an apartment above a grocery store right down the street (Prospect) from WYZZ. ) So imagine my shock when I visited the 50,000 watt powerhouse in a, well, house resembling that of my grandfather! I went in (it was March) and the place was like a blast furnace. The entire first floor were offices but with thousands of albums stacked up everywhere. I then went down to observe the board op, a college grad named Leonard Brozena who was running the board. I sat on a stool as Leonard ran the show. The big event of the afternoon was going to be the Metropolitan Opera Broadcasat at 2pm. Leonard explained to me the music system of playing one instrumental, one Longines symphony, everything was so convoluted I lost interest halfway through it. Anyway, at 12:45 Mrs. Evans comes down the steps with a tray with a huge glass of milk, a turkey and cheese sandwich on rye, a few crackers and a candy bar. "Here's your lunch Leonard" she said setting the tray down. Then she looked at me and said, "Do you work here yet?" And I answered "No, I was just observing". She smiled and went back up the steps. No "wanna drink of water?" Nuthin!!!!!! In the meantime, these cats start crawlin' around and Leonard introduces one of the felines as Spike. At around 145pm, Leonard says, "Watch this!" And he puts on Roberta Flack's "Killing Me Softly" which was peaking at that time in March of 1973. A minute into the song, the door at the top of the stairs opens up and Mr. Evans says, "I hope that record is in cue and not on my radio station!" And Leonard says, "Yes Mr. Evans!" in his best Eddie Haskell voice.
I did a demo and was offered weekend work but I got a better offer from WVIA FM which ironically now carries The Metropolotican Opera.
Leonard went into teaching but some of the staff there were Frank LaBarr, Jones Evans, Chuck Whittier, (these were old time WBAX guys from the late 50s and early 60s) a guy named Tillman Smith who ran a high school bands program, and a few others. But when they opened the mike, there was a pause and you could always hear the click. One of the main sponsors was Harry Hollock's Trucksville Pharmancy. It was a unique part of broadcast history in our region.
Yonkstur
Yonkstur