Chris was in radio that was run by radio lovers, not money lovers. Miss those days!
A M E N Dutch...there are a few bastions of love for radio left in the small markets, but they're a vanishing breed.Flying-Dutchman said:Chris was in radio that was run by radio lovers, not money lovers. Miss those days!
Keith Kidd said:Oh, and let's not forget how great corporate america is. That may be another reason why he won't work in the Biz anymore. Big business is so fun to be a part of. He may not feel he can handle the joys of it.
ChiefEngineer said:By 1980-81
WENS "Let their Music do the Talking"
Kiss 99 was WIKS, later "The new WIKS" trying to kill the disco era use of the station using the same calls but using only the calls.
Chris Conner and Ron Belo were doing mornings followed by Dave Dugan then Freddie Fever was on afternoons and Boomer Dinkens Nights followed by Thom Christi overnights.
Shortly after this
Belo took a great new job promoting a theme park "Old Indiana" shortly before Emily and her family were in the horrible accident that ultimately closed the park.
Dugan was working on comedy and left town for awhile. Was on Dick Clark's Rockin New years eve.
Freddie Fever (Steve Knight formerly of lafayette and WAZY fame) left to who knows where?
Boomer Dinkens packed his pickup, doghouse, and hound and went back South.
Station went after WENS to protect WIBC. Got really lame for awhile then the call letters switched to WKLR next???
[email protected] said:I did want to at least thank you for your interest in the station that will not fade away - it seems that WNAP is as strong today in the minds of those who survived the era as it was in it's hazedaze.
hipporadio said:[email protected] said:I did want to at least thank you for your interest in the station that will not fade away - it seems that WNAP is as strong today in the minds of those who survived the era as it was in it's hazedaze.
You’re right Chris... It never seems to fade away. “Freakdom” may no-longer fly live, but it survives on near-ancient Memorex. WNAP was the FIRST FM station I ever heard [early in 1969] and most-likely the final one I will think of right before the flat-line. Your station was really very “large” in my young life... ‘Just ask me what I first listened to it on - [a late-50s McIntosh FM tuner my Grandfather passed down to me for bringing up a math grade] - and how I managed to receive your signal from “high-atop the Merchants’ National Bank building” over 60-miles away - [I hand-fashioned an FM antenna from coat-hangers and a photo in an Allied Radio catalog, then hoisted it, on a freezing early-March afternoon, up the 40-foot TV tower outside my bedroom window]. My mother was so afraid [and mad] that she nearly grounded the “Mac” [and my ‘NAP listening] for a month.
Thanks for being a trailblazer [and salvation from WLS fade-out]... Thanks for S.R.C. and R.E.O. – even The Shocking Blue’s “Mighty Joe”... And THANKS for the last thing that was really NEW in radio!
BobOnTheJob said:SHOCKING BLUE - MIGHTY JOE... yet another great song that the mainstream top 40's didn't let see the light of day.
BobOnTheJob said:With WAKW 93.3 a whopping 4 blocks away, my WNAP listening was after WAKW's 11PM sign off.
And I was probably behind the mic at WAKW at the time...that was the first station I worked for...but yes, even I waited for WAKW sign off to hear The Buzzard. WAKW was 4.8KW horizontal only until the late 60's, then 10KW circular until well into the 70's...after I left in 74 or so, they upgraded to their current 50KW directional.93.3 WAKW was an utter bane to every WNAP fan living in southeastern Indiana... Wasn’t the ERP on 93.1 only about 5-or-10kw from its perch on MNB at that time? Hearing it clearly was no problem for the mighty ’57 Mac with its dozen tubes glowing. I remember that old mono “hi-fi” being the envy of my friends who became hooked on ‘NAP. They’d run home to their mother’s Magnavox console stereo; move the pointer between 92 and 94; and there was that Godly WAKW playing “Onward Christian Soldiers”an unacceptable substitute for Chris Conner!
BobOnTheJob said:I want to say WNAP was a full 50KW from MNB... The Harris 20KW transmitter fed a 5 or 6 bay pole mounted circular antenna...only thing I don't know is the power output.
Timewarp said:QUOTE-Last I heard of Cris Conner he was marking down sale prices with his sticker gun at the Meijer store.
Wow! Seems like such a waste of talent! But stay in this line of work long enough and you will
understand why one of the best dropped out.
[email protected] said:If you aren't screaming for deregulation or reduced property ownership now then you are part of the problem facing radio as an art form and shame on you.