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You're favorite thing in Providence radio in 2006 was....

My number one choice has to be "BUDDY-FM". This stunt was carried out by the Brown students without a flaw and had everyone convinced Providence finally had a "JACk" format.

My second favorite sort of comes from the north a little is WKLB moving to 102.5 giving WCTK a little compitition and almost a perfect signal to most of RI.

Any thing else from you guys.
 
At least the Bru Crew exhibited a sense of humor missing in RI radio and actually had a few gullible people thinking it was for real.As far as WKLB I could care less but what does it say about the Providence market when one of the best things that happened is a stronger out of market signal?
 
brown students and one URI student!!!
I remember getting like 9 voicemails at once because they put one of my breaks in the 11 o clock news and a section of me telling the reporter waiting in front of the door that "management wouldn't let me comment" in the most rediculously fake-serious voice I could muster while trying not to laugh. and let me tell you, the 2 hours of britney spears, christina aguilera, avril lavign and pop techno I played that friday night felt so great ahaha. I also remember trying to figure out how I would get myself to cry for my "last break" of AM drive, I watched the bridge scene from saving private ryan while listening to elliot smith its a fantastical forumla.
 
I'm voting for the Buddy FM stunt too.

I hadn't listened to BRU in a while before that (got stuck feeling old and listening to sports talk radio).

Anyway, then I got phone calls from a friend who was convinced it was legit. Nothing was better than to call him up when the "struggle for the station" began. Told him to listen and proved him WRONG...
 
My favorite radio thing in Providence was when Providence stations started getting their traffic reports from Boston. It's awesome when they try to act like Aaron Sawyer is live and local....."here's Aaron...pause......push button......whoops already 5 seconds in before listeners hear it......and then "thanks Aaron".......Hellooooooooooooooo we know he's not there and it's pre-recorded :p
 
WBRU's "Buddy" stunt WAS a hoot...BUT...

The best thing I heard on RI radio -- and among the better bits I heard ON RADIO last year -- was Matt Allen's show, the-Saturday-morning-before-Christmas, when kiddos called-in and spoke with Santa on-air.

It was Salty Brine-quality radio.

For those from other markets who are virtually-visiting this board, the quick back-story on WPRO-AM...

If you live in Atlanta, think WSB. If you’re in Chicago, think WGN. Seattle? KIRO. Miss a day, and you miss something.

Like many of today's News/Talk AMs, WPRO previously played music. At one point, in the 70s, as many as 4 other stations -- two of 'em FMs -- played the same songs. WPRO won because the other stations played more music.

For 50+ years, WPRO's morning host was Salty Brine, no less than a local folk hero. He wore a sea captain’s hat, did a kids’ show on TV, brought his dog to work, talked like Santa Claus, had about a 40 share, and had lost a leg when he was 11. When an injured child had a limb amputated, the doctor, or the bishop, would call Salty, who would show up at the hospital, quietly, without cameras. Salty’s show was like breakfast with dad. He always gave the next DJ an enthused introduction, but he himself didn’t have a sign-off line. You just expected him there again tomorrow. Salty died on Election Day 2004, and – before telling us who our president would be – teary local TV anchors broke it to us gently.

Special stations earn a place in listeners hearts (and diarykeepers’ memory); and can lose it, if they stop connecting-with people, and become just another station talking-at them. Do sound-alike radio, and you place mid-pack. And you’re hearing that from a consultant!

Christmas was a Monday. The Saturday morning before, I couldn’t get out of the car. I sat there with the key on Accessories, listening to WPRO weekend host Matt Allen invite tykes to call Santa Claus, on-air. I hope he saved the aircheck, because everything clicked.

The stage had been set, for generations. Parents of the children who called Santa are young-enough to have called-in themselves, for this same durable bit, on WPRO a generation ago. When their GRANDPARENTS were young, they’d listen to hear Salty call off school on snowy mornings. Being homey, not slick, has always been the essence of this station.

And get this: Somehow, WPRO managed to get the REAL Santa Claus in-studio that Saturday morning. Not just a Central Casting baritone trying to fool small fry. THE Santa. Imagine? Then, of all weekends, when Santa’s up-to-his-keester getting ready for the big night?

How I knew he was the real Santa, a la “Miracle on 34th Street?” The voice munchkins were calling that morning knew things about his callers that only Santa could have known. I heard one little guy gasp when Santa asked him, “Are you practicing your violin lessons?” Another tot sounded utterly enchanted when Santa recalled what he had brought her two Christmases earlier. Being in radio yourself, YOU might assume that WPRO screeners got the inside scoop from Mom and Dad before the child came on the line. But anyone, of any age, listening that morning BELIEVED.

Imagine hearing THAT on the radio?

Although 40-shares are now radio history, the weekday morning drive daypart Salty hosted is still what radio considers prime time. But there are NO unimportant hours; and one Saturday morning last month, a host young-enough to be Salty’s grandson ran Salty’s playbook, and did a corny, hokey show that lots of Rush-wanna-be’s wouldn’t abide. It would have been the only radio station some listeners remembered hearing all week...or for the rest of their lives.

APPLAUSE!
And Happy NEWS Year,
HC
www.HollandCooke.com
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6FonOwlry9I
 
My favorite thing that happened in Providence radio in 2006 is that nobody in radio got arrested.
 
I wish I could say the same thing about speeding violations ahahah
 
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