imhomerjay said:
And to the list of great personalities already mentioned, I would add the underrated or underappreciated Stevens & Seneca, who took over afternoon drive near the end.
Wow, I can't believe anyone actually remembers Bruce Stevens and me, our tenure at WIP was so brief. It was around '83, I believe. Thank you imhomerjay for your kind words.
A little background on WIP at that time (based on what I was told, since I wasn't a Philadelphian and hadn't listened to the station before coming there). The station had, for at least the preceding 5 or 6 years, been playing adult contemporary music in a effort to compete with the growing FM's. I was told that the music wasn't working - the ratings were in a decline. Today, with the advantage of 25-year hindsight we all see, of course, that the problem wasn't WIP or its choice of music, it was just part of the inevitable on-going decline of AM stations playing music.
Cary Pahigian, the PD who hired Bruce Stevens and me, was attempting to craft a new music format for this heritage AM station, combining the current AC artists with the giants of the standards. James Taylor and Sinatra. Lionel Richie and Tony Bennett. This music was complemented with high-profile guys on the air and a huge, credible news department. Evenings and overnights were telephone talk with Jack Ellery and Steve Martorano.
I thought it was a pretty decent sounding station with an excellent workable formula for an early 1980's heritage AM. Bruce and I had come down from Maine, and although we hadn't grown up listening to WIP, we were certainly aware of the extraordinary market heritage of Ken Garland and Wee Willie Webber. In fact, we were probably a little bit in awe of them! (Two wonderful gentlemen, I must say and superb old school broadcasters! Ken, by the way, had had his first on-air job in Portland).
But, things change and people move on. Pahigian got a career offer he couldn't refuse as PD of WBZ in his hometown. When he left, Metromedia, in its infinite wisdom, replaced him with a guy named Mikel Hunter Herrington as PD. Mikel had had success as a "progressive rock FM" PD in California and to this day is spoken of as a near-deity among those who worked with him in that format. Unfortunately, those skills left him absolutely ill-equipped to run a full-service AM gasping it's final breaths. I left, and Bruce did too shortly thereafter.
I've always thought that Cary Pahigian's format for WIP would've worked given more time and some promotional heft. I don't know what the numbers were back then, but I know the station and it's personalities still had a high-profile in Philadelphia. It certainly would've evolved into a talk station eventually, but given the opportunity and a good hand on the tiller, WIP's music and personality format might have lingered a few years longer.
I've got great memories of the place and treasure that small part of my career at 19th and Walnut.
Nick Seneca