japman said:
Wasn't it Commander Hutch, the first morning show host on Indy's Apple .... they played a lot of Leo Sayer back in those days.
I don't know. IIRC, that frequency probably hadn't played a lot of Sayer in a couple of years. For the 18 months prior to the switch to the "Apple," that frequency was "99 the new WIKS." C.C. Mathews programmed and E. Alvin Davis consulted "chicken rock" trying to copy the success they'd had with Louisville's KJ-100. It never quite played out as well at WIKS. No matter how great C.C. and E's WIKS sounded, the disco programming that launched WIKS into the Indpls market was too well remembered. The signal from that Greenfield tower was way too scratchy. Besides that, E. and owner Cecil Heftel wanted C.C. to move to Cincinnati to launch "95 the new W-Lite."
WIKS/WZPL GM Ken Wolt and newly hired PD Gary Hoffmann don't get anywhere near the credit they deserve for that change to the "Apple." Simple but masterfully executed rollout and pure Hoffmann promotional genius. That bumper sticker promotion was the best ever witnessed for a new launch in Indpls radio. In just a few months those stickers seemed to appear on every car, truck, bicycle, toy wagon and motorcycle bumper. All backed by the mighty power of Papa Heftel's money.
The air staff was mostly held over from WIKS including Commander Hutch in mornings. Hoffmann got them focused on the new goal. They were tight, bright and compelling. As I recall, the only new hire was in middays with the addition from Lafayette of Don Payne. Don was also chief engineer and had the daunting task of not only first moving the frequency from the old Greenfield tower to Post Road, but also to then move the studios from a converted chicken hatchery in Greenfield to the old home of WISH TV and WIFE radio on Indy's North Meridian Street. I so miss Don Payne.
The hidden weapon in that rollout was the tower site move. You could finally drive that stretch between the north and south splits on I-65/70 downtown without 99.5 fading completely. You could finally hear it near that northwest side Washington and Pike township tower farm. 99.5 was finally a fully competitive Indianapolis signal. And did it ever scare the pants off the rest of us. They may have never topped Gary's Place and 10-7-Oh, but WZPL skyrocketed none the less. Even though I worked elsewhere, I was proud of the success my Greenfield hometown frequency was having. And at the same time I wanted to find the way to beat those ZPL numbers back down to reality.
I'm maybe the only person who has jocked for all three sets of calls on the 99.5 frequency...WSMJ, WIKS and twice at WZPL. I am so proud to have been part of that WZPL heritage and history. Happy 30th.
And by the way, J.R. Ammons has ZPL sounding great right now.