Indielover said:"Gee... LA radio only had Robert W Morgan, The Real Don Steele, Casey Kasem, Gary Owens ...all nobodies apparently".
I think the reference was to Howard Stern, Imus...etc.."cutting edge" personalities...New York area personalities first.
As for classic DJ's both cities have had their share of greats...WABC overall was in a class by itself...nothing equaled it in the 60's and 70's including great stations like WLS, WCFL, CKLW, etc...KHJ was a great station with legendary DJ's, WABC with Harry Harrison, Ron Lundy, Dan Ingram, Cousin Brucie, Chuck Leonard, etc..were equaly as good as anyone on KHJ, but WABC was a huge and very powerful force in music..the station itself reached a good part of the US plus at night...KHJ was a much smaller station by comparison.
Big E said:Gee... LA radio only had Robert W Morgan, The Real Don Steele, Casey Kasem, Gary Owens ...all nobodies apparently.
Indielover said:By 1974 FM was taking hold...so WLS and KHJ dictating the nation's music direction for "several years"??.........the heyday of AM was as over as Hillary Clinton's bid for the WH...
Indielover said:WABC was the most famous station overall of the AM top 40 era which was beginning to succomb to FM by the mid 70's.
Howard did NOT play music his entire time at WNBC, by 1984 he no longer played music. Yes he did play music in afternoon drive at K-Rock for the 2 months he was on in afternoon drive...once he moved to mornings in early 1986 the music was gone. Obviously he did cutting edge humor since Hartford (which you are forgetting) or there would have been no career. However it wasn't until mornings at WXRK that his career really began to flourish....and no I am not using the motion picture version. New York is where his career took off, all the brief stops prior were just steppingstones...the goal was NYC..
Texaz said:I vote for L.A.
Indielover said:WABC reached well into the midwest and was known thoughout most of the country, KHJ on the other hand was weak in LA during the night time hours...
Howard's career flourished in New York, (not DC where he still played music) that is after all the point of this thread...