I worked at WDSG when it was Oldies under JoAnn Ward in the early 90s.WTRO 1330 (Top 40) and WDSG 1450 (Country) in Dyersburg, TN where I grew up. Later as a teen I discovered WHBQ and WMPS in Memphis and WLS.
Last edited:
I worked at WDSG when it was Oldies under JoAnn Ward in the early 90s.WTRO 1330 (Top 40) and WDSG 1450 (Country) in Dyersburg, TN where I grew up. Later as a teen I discovered WHBQ and WMPS in Memphis and WLS.
That would have been right before she passed away and the family shut the station down. WTRO bought the station, moved to 1450, and shut down 1330.I worked at WDSG when it was Oldies under JoAnn Ward in the early 90s.
Hadn't it signed off by then? I was working at WHDM by then, and my mother used to listen to me when she would drive to visit her sister in Dyersburg about that time. Had WDSG still been on the air, that would have been almost impossible for her to do.I worked at WDSG when it was Oldies under JoAnn Ward in the early 90s.
A much smoother transition than what later happened with WCTA under similar circumstances. (But I'm not sure if they could still do it now.)That would have been right before she passed away and the family shut the station down. WTRO bought the station, moved to 1450, and shut down 1330.
Yeah, it may have been just a bit earlier. There was a period of time when my Dad and I were at odds and I came back home from Florida to escape and worked for Joann. She was a mess. I was loaning them my record library for their use and when I quit over pay I took everything I owned with me. They had like 100 45's of their own. She also had taped my shows and used me as the automation for the 10a-3p shift for a while after I was back in Florida. I know this because my Mom was shopping there one day and called me to say I was still on-air. I called them and informed them if the tapes weren't burned immediately I'd call the FCC and drop every little violation I had on them. They had a bonfire that afternoon.Hadn't it signed off by then? I was working at WHDM by then, and my mother used to listen to me when she would drive to visit her sister in Dyersburg about that time. Had WDSG still been on the air, that would have been almost impossible for her to do.
I remember someone on here saying something similar to that. I just wonder how someone could make tapes of air shows and still make them sound "fresh." It seems like very primitive "AI."Yeah, it may have been just a bit earlier. There was a period of time when my Dad and I were at odds and I came back home from Florida to escape and worked for Joann. She was a mess. I was loaning them my record library for their use and when I quit over pay I took everything I owned with me. They had like 100 45's of their own. She also had taped my shows and used me as the automation for the 10a-3p shift for a while after I was back in Florida. I know this because my Mom was shopping there one day and called me to say I was still on-air. I called them and informed them if the tapes weren't burned immediately I'd call the FCC and drop every little violation I had on them. They had a bonfire that afternoon.
It retained elements of a block-programming format into the early 1980s, by which time I had grown up, graduated from the University of Missouri, and ended up becoming KFRU's news director.
Yes, I was - thanks. It was a very competitive environment post-Watergate. It got pretty intense from time to time.Mark -- if you don't wish to answer, that's okay. But were you part of the School of Journalism at University of Missouri? That's probably the #1 journalism program in the nation, next to Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern. Congratulations on all your accomplishments.
Same here, WOWO was always on at the breakfast table, other times and the car in Indiana, and later when we moved to Ohio.As I recall, it was WOWO. That's the first one I remember. We lived in Michigan and then Indiana at that time.
Later, WBZ.
On a mildly similar note, when one of my brothers was approaching puberty, he started listening to KBPI. Back then, KBPI was Rockin' The Rockies with a more Heavy Metal style of Rock which I wasn't crazy about & my parents didn't really approve of but didn't know how to deal with itEarly/mid 1980s: I remember hearing Casey Kasem's American Top 40 on "Hot Hits!" 96 WHYT, Detroit. I remember being a big fan of songs like "Gloria," "Mickey," and "Flashdance... What a Feeling," which leads me to believe WHYT must have been played quite a bit in my household. However, the first station I actively remember listening to regularly was a Beautiful Music station - Joy 97, WJOI (now 97-1 The Ticket). My parents played it to calm me at night and help me fall asleep, and I ended up developing quite an attachment to the music.
Other favorite stations during that time: AC 100.3 WNIC (especially with Pillow Talk at night), Classical 105.1 WQRS, and 91.7 WUOM from U of M when they played classical. At the age of 10, my music taste was already that of a 45-year-old of the era.
Eventually I grew more attached to contemporary pop music, but the Hot AC of WKQI (Q95), circa 1991-94, was about as hip as I dared to get... until I began to appreciate some R&B, hip-hop and alternative rock as well.