I hope whatever happens at WEMR is successful. As I said much earlier, I spent 6 years and it was one of the few stations where I would end my airshift and immediately start planning what I was going to do the next day. The place was close to going dark when I took over mornings as the money hose was about to be turned off. Jim Petrie had much to do with keeping it going as well. Norm Werkheiser was a really great guy but, as other posts say, he wasn't a radio guy. When Jim took over, there was a mountain of past dues. Norm didn't know which bills were important and which weren't, so he didn't pay any of them. I think in the end I had developed the best format and mix(God I hate that word) of old and new country. I would have loved it if we had done what was in the wings until Citadel took over and that was to simulcast the AM. I would have loved to go head to head with FROGGY. But we would have also have needed a generator at the transmitter that would work. The AM always made money, or at worst, broke even. The FM never made money and, in fact, lead to EMR's demise to Citadel. If the FM hadn't been so badly cobbled together in the beginning, it too might have made a few bucks. But when it goes off for hours while Ronnie Schact has to leave 16 and climb the mountain in his Harley (life in hand in Jan and Feb) just to flip the breaker, the station bacame a joke very quickly. To try to save the FM, Jeff Laird would actually undercut the cost of remotes on the AM and actually tell clients that they didn't want to do an AM remote (Got that from a client who was actually told that), that FM remotes would bring in more traffic. The 60 second cutaway's became 5 minutes of "bloviating" (thank you O'Rielly). Then Laird brought in Carol Guild who was a Legend in broadcasting. Only problem was, she didn't know a thing about how to operate a board so I got stuck babysitting her bizarre programming. (first song was Nat King Cole-kind of hard to take coming out of Toby Keith). I had to pick her music, and waste an hour of production time on my own stuff to do this schtick. And it was painful to listen to, but she was out there selling spots for next to nothing for her show, to hell with the station. She was supposed to be selling the station and was just selling her show. Then, when Citadel took over, I had one chance to save the AM and that was to kick up the billing. Without a sales staff that was not an option as I never liked sales. The two times I tried it I was moved to programming within a week. I got Bill Betz to let me get Carol to sell the station, which she did for a week. Then she contacted Betz to bring back her "show", which he agreed to. So, instead of billing the 1000 a week I needed to crack the nut, she is back doing buck a holler for her show and no sales for the station. It wasn't long before Cat was simulcast, but she was still doing her show even after that. I was supposed to stay in Tunkhannock for, at the most 2 weeks while they got FCC approval to move studio location to Baltimore Drive. It took almost a YEAR due to airmiles from studio to transmitter which actually is slightly over the 25 mile limit at the time. it's actually 25.3 according to FAA sectional charts). I kept getting thanks for sticking it out, and don't worry, we'll make it up to you, so I didn't cover my bets and have an aircheck standing by. The day the studio relocation was approved, they brought in an automation system that they had for 8 months that would have possibly saved us, and the next day (Good Friday) I was called in, offered WARM sales, and when I turned that down, was hastily fired because Regina Todd had to run out to make the Good Friday Service. So if anybody wonders why I have disdain for Citadel, there you have it. I decided it was time to hang up my spurs. WEMR was the best place I ever worked from a professional standpoint (And I've worked some big ones, including a 150 KW D/N known as AFN-Europe-Actually, although we were licensed for 150KW, we powered down to 67 KW at night because we blasted Radio Moscow off the dial-in Moscow. I had a captive audience of over 500,000 active duty military. and countless Europeans who found us a good way to learn English. That number was estimated to be over 20 million, although no way to measure) At EMR I was able to experiment to fine tune what I think became the perfect format. But that's water under the bridge. I just hope that the Phoenix will rise from the alleged Indian Burial Grounds (supposedly the AM towers sit on it)