Axman278 said:does anyone remember y100 prior to 1997, if I remember it was more hot ac or adult top 40. I hardly remember them playing any rap or dance hits. Sounded more like the coast sounds today. Can anyone confirm my memory?
Muzikboyfl said:Finally, if I recall, a guy named Casey Keating came in and flipped to the "New sound of Y100" slowly bringing in the top 40 hits around 1995/96 -- then boom -- ClearChannel came on board and now, like every other ClearChannel Top 40/CHR station (i.e) Y100, Z100, XL 1067, FLZ, all the same hits, all day long.
Muzikboyfl said:That's awesome to know Stuart. There are some of these guys still around. LOL. I remember hearing you on air "South Florida's only Station for the best hits without the hard rock and rap, fun every morning with Bobby and Footy this is 100.7 FM" LOL -- Gosh, it was awful.
What ever happened to Stevie Knox, Paul Webber, Tia Maria? I know Doug Dunbar went to TV in Texas. Jade Alexander is on CBS 4.
Muzikboyfl said:That's awesome to know Stuart. There are some of these guys still around. LOL. I remember hearing you on air "South Florida's only Station for the best hits without the hard rock and rap, fun every morning with Bobby and Footy this is 100.7 FM" LOL -- Gosh, it was awful.
What ever happened to Stevie Knox, Paul Webber, Tia Maria? I know Doug Dunbar went to TV in Texas. Jade Alexander is on CBS 4.
Muzikboyfl said:Yes, Y100 flipped to an adult -- "South Florida's only station for the best hits without the hard rock and rap" format from like 92 to 94. It was horrible, all you heard was Gloria, Elton and Billy all day, while you had Lite FM, Coast, WRMF for all the same music.
Finally, if I recall, a guy named Casey Keating came in and flipped to the "New sound of Y100" slowly bringing in the top 40 hits around 1995/96 -- then boom -- ClearChannel came on board and now, like every other ClearChannel Top 40/CHR station (i.e) Y100, Z100, XL 1067, FLZ, all the same hits, all day long.
I think Y sounded the best from 97 - 2000 -- when they actually played a variety of Top 40 hits within a 5-7 year span of hit music.
Ahh well...That's what ipods and Sirius is for now. LOL
markoni said:I think another thing that made the Y pop so well back then was that the music was programmed by the DJs. It took about an hour to lay out, on paper, all the songs before your show, I also planned where my bits would happen and when my contests played.
We really thought about what our first song would be when we began our show. Today that would all be luck of the draw, since now a computer plays the songs according to the way it is set-up by the programming dept. Today the computer generated play list is often tweaked a bit by a Program Director or Music Director, but that's nothing like selecting each song, knowing you are about to go on the air with it.
Until around 1985 all the jocks programmed their own music except the Tanner In The Morning Show, which was programmed by 10PM-2AM DJ Earl The Pearl Lewis in the early morning hours before Tanner arrived. Of course Pearl got plenty of direction from Tanner on how he wanted the music set-up.