Does anyone here remember the old WBEN of the '60's and '70's? I always thought it sounded very professional, somewhat serious, and a bit old fashioned....but very classy.
Nick Seneca said:Do you mean the WBEN of:
Jack Ogilvie
Tom Whalen a/k/a "Mr. Operator"
Arthur Mometer
and of course, "your AM MC, CB!"
Yes, it was very classy, all right! Call me a geezer, but I miss that 'BEN and stations like it!
Nick Seneca
SirRoxalot said:One thing that you might want to note is that Buffalo was around Market 25 back in the '60s, and was a destination market. Now, at Market #54, like a lot of other mid-markets, we're a destination only for those people who are already from the area.
Element9 said:Growing up in my home, I remember mom and dad starting the day with WPhD or John Rivers and Mary Van Voorst on QFM97. Occasionally, they'd spark one up before breakfast and start the day with a smile.
Late at night when Jim Santella was on, they'd crank up the Sansui receiver with the big speakers in the living room. Those Klipsch speakers were the size of a small refrigerator and the neighbors at the end of our street could hear Zep, Deep Purple and the Doors with no problem.
Mom and dad knew how to rock the house in more ways than one. Ahhh, growing up in a two-parent household in the late 60's, early and mid 70's... hard to believe that was nearly 40 years ago.
....poof
Where were we?
Oh yeah, it's 2007.
Already?
-9-
rdcuffpa1 said:SirRoxalot said:One thing that you might want to note is that Buffalo was around Market 25 back in the '60s, and was a destination market. Now, at Market #54, like a lot of other mid-markets, we're a destination only for those people who are already from the area.
I was waxing philosophical about that fact the other day. My new area - the Lehigh Valley - certainly feels a lot smaller than WNY did back in the 1960s and 70s, and it was...but now is steadily climbing as a bedroom community to NYC and Philadelphia.
It is interesting to extend the thinking further, back to the first quarter of the 20th Century, to visualize how important Buffalo was back then.
Alas, the "morning zoo" and Don Imus world is a far, far cry from "yours truly, 'Buehly'"...
Richard in Allentown, PA
Mike Sheridan said:Hey -9- You must be Alex Keaton!Element9 said:Growing up in my home, I remember mom and dad starting the day with WPhD or John Rivers and Mary Van Voorst on QFM97. Occasionally, they'd spark one up before breakfast and start the day with a smile. Late at night when Jim Santella was on, they'd crank up the Sansui receiver with the big speakers in the living room. Those Klipsch speakers were the size of a small refrigerator and the neighbors at the end of our street could hear Zep, Deep Purple and the Doors with no problem.
Mom and dad knew how to rock the house in more ways than one. Ahhh, growing up in a two-parent household in the late 60's, early and mid 70's... hard to believe that was nearly 40 years ago.
Do your parents still have their hearing?
Mike
Growing up in my home, I remember mom and dad starting the day with WPhD or John Rivers and Mary Van Voorst on QFM97. Occasionally, they'd spark one up before breakfast and start the day with a smile.
Didn't the Bills go to WGR & 97 Rock around 1990-1994 or 1995. Ahhh, the Super Bowl years!Bob1370 said:Of course we got the Bills back in '78, with Stan, Van and Murph to keep everyone updated on them, and kept them, IIRC, until well into the '90s.
I also recall the "editor's desk" tags, but thought they were during the Buffalo Evening News-WBEN-AM-FM-TV era.The "editor's desk" credits died out when the anchors took on the job of writing and editing their own newscasts--saved money and physical space, but also meant the newscasts always reflected the personal style of the person who aired it because he or she had written it as well as voiced it.