Production Boy....what a great time I had reading your entries!!...it took me back to those great days of KSFO...I was particularly interested from the mid-60's to the mid 70's, when I left City College for my first job at KROW in Dallas, Oregon ( Solid Gold KROW )...I would fall asleep to John's shows every night, and I believe it was Gene Nelson playing the old-time shows before John...if I remember right, Jim Lange would occasionally throw in some songs that I had no idea how he came to hear them - The Court of the Crimson King by King Crimson & At the Feet of the Master by Blue Aquarius, a band made up of devotees of some Maharajee(?)...they were great songs that got me interested in those groups...I'd miss class at St. Mary's College just to hear Dan Sorkin's show and wait for Wilma Banky (or was it Emily Latella?) to fall off her organ bench!!!...Remember the charity softball games that were played at the Cow Palace each year?..think it was celebrities vs. radio guys..never forget watching Dan "leg out" or jump in a side car of a motorcycle to "leg out" a hit...compared to now, it just seems like radio mattered back then, that talent really was developed and treasured...that a 14 or 15 year old could listen to an "adult" station (KSFO) and be throughly entertained & grow up to wanting to emulate those guys...I always said that once radio became a job, I would get out of it...that was in 1978 in Las Vegas when the push was on to hire women for on-air...I had a run-in with one who didn't want to power down the transmitter when she was supposed to during her shift and expected me to do it an hour later when I started mine...She was obnoxious, had a New Jersey accent and decided one night to leave an hour early from her shift to go on a dinner date at the Sahara...I told the boss I wasn't going to take any more of her crap and to pick either her or me and I lost...the ironic thing was a month later, my boss was fired...radio had become a job and I knew if I was going to work a job, I could make a lot more money..well , ANYWHERE!!...enough griping...the way radio has turned out, I wouldn't want to be 55 and in the industry now...I admire you "oldtimers" who were a part of the good times and still hang in there...we always have our memories....And thank you all for this refreshing line of thoughts and memories, instead of the usual talk of ratings, spanish radio, and cute call monikers for corporate radio.