michael hagerty said:Chuck Blore is a genius if ever there was one. But KFWB lost its dominance to a much less creative, not as freewheeling KRLA in just five years. And KRLA, in turn, had the crown taken by the machine-like precision of KHJ in just two years.
Since stations started finding out what the typical listener the advertiser wants most wants to hear, and delivering on expectations, stations have had longer, more successful runs. KIIS-FM is at 32 years and counting.
It's a shame David's posts bore you, because they're an accurate reflection of how people use radio. If he hadn't written a single one of them, oldies radio wouldn't be any healthier.
There is one thing that even David the Magnificent (and I use that term in admiration) hasn't covered (to my knowledge) and that is that an audience, no matter what type or age, sooner or later tires of the same old stuff and moves on to a different presentation. The sole exception to that, AFAIK, was Johnny Carson on The Tonight Show. No one ever seemed to tire of him personally or his schtick. Many of the top DJ's of the day came very close.
I lived in SoCal during the early 60's and remember KRLA, KFRC and KHJ but today I couldn't tell you the difference between them. They were all Top-40 and played pretty much the same music and their DJ's sounded a lot alike. I lived in the Long Beach area and didn't travel around the metro area much so don't know about their station's coverage having anything to do with their popularity. All three were pre-set and pretty much selected by the like/dislike of specific songs.