MikeStandardsFromIndiana said:
brian_stevens said:
hipporadio said:
WGGR was but another example of Bill Shirk's "humor"... They often referred to themselves as "Greater Greenwood Radio".
Didn't Bill inherit those calls with the LMA from Mary Hotopp?
WGGR was Owned by Mary HoTopp with an LMA To Bill who then bought WGGR. WGGR Started as a Country Station Rebel 106.7. then When Emmis flipped then WKLR to WNAP. Bill Shirk one week later took the WKLR Calls and Oldies format till Emmis filed a Cease and Desist on the WKLR Calls. Bill Kept the oldies format reverting back to the WGGR calls till Shirk finally ditched Oldies in early 97 before Gold came on the air when he flipped 106.7 to Urban AC/Jammin Oldies as Kiss 106.7 WBKS. Then sold off WHHH, WBKS and WYJZ a couple years later if i recall right to Radio One. In Fact i remember hearing Brian Do Traffic when he was working for Metro on 106.7 filling in for now WXIN's Joni Michaels
THANKS Mike--you brought back my experience on 106.7. I remember many times driving on 465-south listening to WGGR as an oldies station (Greater Greenwood Radio), and hearing Shirk liners in the 90s at the same time he operated "Hoosier 96-3". Then WNAP came back on 93.1 (GOD--that was wonderful--but they blew it)... Didn't last long [SAD]. I was in Indy later in the '00s and 106.7 was a classic soul station later replaced by the flip with 105.7 WTLC.
I do remember the "flack" over the WKLS calls (my father mailed me the Indy Star report on it)... Didn't 'KLS try Howard Stern for a short time?
Of course we love WIBC and it's heritage, but my favorites were WNAP, WIFE, WXLW (giving away toilet paper), and later WNDE (Ron Jorden and "Marvelous" Mark Zentel nights in the mid-70s)... I have talked myself "blue in the face" promoting those stations as the VERY BEST in their time to out-of-towners. MANY OTHERS from far away have agreed (but the Louisville radio geeks WON'T conceed) that Indy "had it goin on in the 70s". WNAP especially--considering its FM first status--that "fast add" Top-40 format with those awesome Heller jingles in the late 60s-'70. MUCH discussion has occured on this board in other areas of the country regarding 'NAP's "pioneer" status... Indy has SOOOO much to be prould of! It WAS a great radio town!