Thursday, September 19, 2013

Book: Howard Stern Killed Boston’s WBCN

Carter Alan
As it turns out, radio ratings king Howard Stern was the man who killed WBCN, according to The Boston Herald.

So says longtime ’BCN jock Carter Alan in a new book, “Radio Free Boston: The Rise and Fall of WBCN,” which chronicles the station’s journey from oddball, lefty broadcast free-for-all to Rock of Boston domination and eventual death after an incredible 41-year run.

“Howard Stern made a lot of money for a lot of stations and gave ’BCN huge ratings,” Alan said. “But ultimately, the addition of Stern in the morning created a schizophrenic station. People tuned in in the morning to hear Howard, then they were gone. People who listened to ’BCN for the music, it was hard to get them back if other stations were doing music better.

“’BCN became the Howard Stern Station, a music station, then a football station and it was very difficult to determine what ’BCN was.”

For years, 104.1 FM (Now HotAC WBMX Mix 104.1) was the city’s dominant rock signal, a station that invented album-oriented music programming in the Top 40 era and launched or helped launch musical acts including Aerosmith, Led Zeppelin, Bruce Springsteen, The Clash and U2.

It had a crazily creative morning guy, Charles Laquidara, who surrounded himself with a cast of compelling characters, pioneering a morning show format that has been emulated by nearly every morning DJ in the country — including Stern. It was the voice of the counterculture in Boston and for a long time the hippest place on the dial.

But it was only a matter of time until competitors began emulating ’BCN’s format and ratings declined. CBS bought ’BCN and, as radio became more corporate, ratings were all that mattered. When Stern eventually left CBS to go to satellite radio, ’BCN’s fate was sealed.

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