cd637299 said:I'm still waiting for *one* station to try this all-female format and make it work. I am not holding my breath (not that I'd listen anyway).....
cd
This station has been around for awhile in Minneapolis.
http://www.mytalk1071.com/
cd637299 said:I'm still waiting for *one* station to try this all-female format and make it work. I am not holding my breath (not that I'd listen anyway).....
cd
There are the stations that use a letter to identify themselves, and most of them aren't associated with a format (B, V, and X are the only ones I see an association with a format)michael hagerty said:The problem is that very few of the station names are really descriptive of a station or type of music.
"Mix" is, to a degree. "Wild" implies an attitude that the station hopefully lives up to. "Movin'" suggests motion and rhythm.
But "My" is nebulous, "Wolf", "Fox", "Camel" and the like as well as "The Peak", "The Mountain", "Mega", "Jack", "Bob" or "Mike" have no meaning until we hear the station tell us what it means.
anotherguy said:Froggy is a licensed name used by several stations, mostly in the Eastern US, including WOGY 104.1 in Jackson, TN: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Froggy_(brand)
firepoint525 said:WABC's temporary name change to WA "Beatle" C during the British invasion, while an attempt to cash in on Beatlemania, was still ill-advised, but then again, I am discussing it 50 years later, so....
cyberdad said:firepoint525 said:WABC's temporary name change to WA "Beatle" C during the British invasion, while an attempt to cash in on Beatlemania, was still ill-advised, but then again, I am discussing it 50 years later, so....
Not to be confused with KGB in San Diego, which frequently planed the KG"Bealtes", and for that matter the KG"Beach Boys".
This would imply that their call letters were actually KGBB.michael hagerty said:They actually referred to their jocks as the "KGBeach Boys".cyberdad said:Not to be confused with KGB in San Diego, which frequently planed the KG"Bealtes", and for that matter the KG"Beach Boys".firepoint525 said:WABC's temporary name change to WA "Beatle" C during the British invasion, while an attempt to cash in on Beatlemania, was still ill-advised, but then again, I am discussing it 50 years later, so....
This would imply that their calls were actually KHOJ. Also misleading.LARadioRewind said:Some of the mid-1960s KFWB Fabulous Forty surveys showed a certain British group as the KFW-Beatles...and some of the mid-1970s KHJ Thirty folders showed an r&b band as the KH-O'Jays. Now that was really reaching for it!
Since posting this message, I have received confirmation that their call letters have now been officially changed to KYTN. They have used "KYTN" as a nickname off and on since 1987, as I said above, but they have been country continuously since then, despite using the "Y-105" name there for a while. The "KY" in their logo is wildcat blue, while the "TN" is Vol orange. Only difference is that now, these are their official call letters, not just a nickname. Confirmation of this on the Tennessee statewide board here at RD.firepoint525 said:Another in a list of (at least) misleading names is "KYTN" of Union City, TN. They first adopted the nickname "KYTN" when they went country (this time for good, apparently) around 1987-1988. Their official call letters were changed at that time to WKWT, which stood for West Kentucky, West Tennessee. At some point, apparently following a call letter change to WYVY, they became known locally as "Y-105." But for whatever reason, that nickname didn't stick, and they reverted back to being "KYTN," apparently after Thunderbolt took it over in 2005.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KYTN
The nickname is misleading, because they are east of the Mississippi River, yet give out what seem like call letters beginning with the letter "K."
Here is the link:cd637299 said:Whoa! About KYTN----
How in the world did they allow a K-call there, east of the Mississippi? I can't find a thread about it---if it can be linked, I'd appreciate it. I saw the coverage map---it's not like the transmitter is west of the Mississippi---or is it?
Is the FCC getting lax about this now?
michael hagerty said:cyberdad said:firepoint525 said:WABC's temporary name change to WA "Beatle" C during the British invasion, while an attempt to cash in on Beatlemania, was still ill-advised, but then again, I am discussing it 50 years later, so....
Not to be confused with KGB in San Diego, which frequently planed the KG"Bealtes", and for that matter the KG"Beach Boys".
They actually referred to their jocks as the "KGBeach Boys".