And if you go back and listen to airchecks from the 60s you'll find successful L.A. stations were running mostly national and regional spots then.
Banks, airlines, automakers, beers...local spots were rare...and a chunk of the ones that did air were businesses with multiple locations throughout L.A. (Wallach's Music City).
Individual car dealers were sparse, too...Hillcrest Motors on KHJ (whose owner, Willett Brown, was a major RKO stockholder), Martin Cadillac on KMPC, Felix Chevrolet, and Longo Toyota on Lohman & Barkley's show on KFI. In fact, Longo Toyota was probably the pioneer of the modern big dealer trying to attract sales from outside their neighborhood through radio (Felix, Ralph Williams Ford, Cal Worthington Dodge and Cormier Chevrolet had been doing it on TV since the early 60s).
I remember being shocked at hearing a local spot for a one-location business on KHJ in 1973....about the time Robert W. Morgan guested on Don Imus' show on WNBC and remarked about how nice it was to hear nothing but national spots...meaning "your sales guys aren't blowing three hours at lunch trying to lure some flower shop onto the air".
Banks, airlines, automakers, beers...local spots were rare...and a chunk of the ones that did air were businesses with multiple locations throughout L.A. (Wallach's Music City).
Individual car dealers were sparse, too...Hillcrest Motors on KHJ (whose owner, Willett Brown, was a major RKO stockholder), Martin Cadillac on KMPC, Felix Chevrolet, and Longo Toyota on Lohman & Barkley's show on KFI. In fact, Longo Toyota was probably the pioneer of the modern big dealer trying to attract sales from outside their neighborhood through radio (Felix, Ralph Williams Ford, Cal Worthington Dodge and Cormier Chevrolet had been doing it on TV since the early 60s).
I remember being shocked at hearing a local spot for a one-location business on KHJ in 1973....about the time Robert W. Morgan guested on Don Imus' show on WNBC and remarked about how nice it was to hear nothing but national spots...meaning "your sales guys aren't blowing three hours at lunch trying to lure some flower shop onto the air".