thirdendorsed said:A sign of the times, I guess, that they spent money on talent for the AM and used La Machine for the FM -- and this was after RKO General, Blair, Fairbanks and CBS awakened their sleepy automated FMs with live formats aimed at a demographic younger than those who had been listening to their FM signals in the late 60s and early 70s (average age: dead) and did relatively well. I do recall hearing the tale that The New Q was intended to make it possible to eventually dump the properties without having some transplanted hillbilly file against the transfer on the ground that the buyer would dump the fiddlin' banjo crap. There had been a challenge elsewhere over a country music format, in the back of my hed I think it was Chicago (and no, I'm not confusing it with WNCN.) IF I recall correctly, right before the switch to TTK, WCOP-FM had been either oldies or a really sappy happy music format they tried for a while that was targeted at (and delivered) nobody in particular.
Well, by 1970, WCOP-FM was pretty much 50% //with WCOP-1150. The other half was dentist music in Stereo for the remainder. By '72, it was 100% beautiful music with "your Yankee Weatherman" twice hourly "where your dial is set at 100 point 7". The late Gus Saunders' "Boston Kitchen" was on every weekday on the FM side. All that would change. In October of 1973. WCOP-FM switched to "Drake/Chenault's Solid Gold", all oldies all the time. WROR (also playing oldies at the time) was in the midst of being sold to Summit Broadcasting, who planned to switch WROR to beautiful music. This seemed like a good opportunity for WCOP-FM to get on the "oldies bandwagon". However, the WROR sale to Summit was delayed and eventually was rescinded due to RKO General's license issues with the FCC, Which eventually cost co-owned WNAC-TV Channel 7 to lose its' license. By December '73, WROR was no longer for sale (for the time being) and John Long (an excellent radio programmer) revitalized WROR to become "The Golden Great 98!", with a home-brew all-oldies format which did very well for many years. With WROR not leaving the oldies arena after all, WCOP-FM dumped the oldies almost a year to the day they started. Obviously, the Drake/Chenault contract was for only one year. In spite of WCOP-FM's very good ratings with oldies, they decided to do something else. For the next two years, WCOP-FM went automated Country music playing the same music that WCOP-AM was, but without jocks and very little interruption. It was cheap and they already had the music to do it. You could say that Plough was already getting ready to make the big exit from the Boston market. Personally, I think Plough should have put WACQ on 100.7 and let WCOP alone and maybe sold the AM to a company who would supported the country format. WACQ was a good live oldies/Top-40 hybrid which IMHO could have done well in the market on FM. Who knows?