firepoint525 said:
I'm guessing that all of the stations mentioned so far have been AM stations, so it's time to add an FM station into the mix. WCMT-FM of Martin, TN. Up until about 1992, they were still automated with reel-to-reel tapes, and may have used those tapes for even longer than that! That may have made sense back in the '60s and '70s, when listenership on AM radio far surpassed that of its FM counterparts. But to continue to program the AM live while automating the FM (which is what WCMT was still doing as recently as the early '90s) didn't make any sense at all. Martin is a college town, so it isn't like Tinkle couldn't have found jocks to work the station for cheap! :

To make matters worse, they were still playing '50s and '60s oldies on that station (again, remember, it's a college town!) on the weekends until as late as at least 1992! We would get requests from as far away as southern Illinois (for the FM station, of course), but since the FM was automated, we couldn't play them! :

Meanwhile, we were live on our AM station pumping out a whopping 54 watts at night! :
My first commercial gig (after a brief, but pivotal appearance on WUTM-FM, the 10-watt wonder) was at WCMT, B.T. (before Tinkle). It was 1973 and Tinkle was at U.T.M., working on what was then WALR-FM, on the Highway between Union City and South Fulton.
J.T. Sudbury of Blythville, Ark. owned it but rarely came to town. Duke Drumm was the G.M. The A.M. was old-style block programming with Country in mornings with engineer Herb Cathey and in the middays with Gary Tuck, who switched to pop music in the afternoons. A variety of UTM kids rotated throughout the afternoon and nighttime dayparts.
The AM was a daytimer then and the FM was mostly automated with truly bad elevator music. The automation system was a box (about the size of a big microwave" that contained several reels that repeated. We called it the "fairy box". In those days, the FM would sign off at 11pm. There was no provision for playing spots while on the fairy box, even if they HAD sold any. The place was full of memorable and colorful people.
It was the perfect place to allow a complete beginner (me) the opportunity to be truly bad on the radio...and slowly improve. Yeah, the place sucked...but it was RADIO, man. I would have worked for free.