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Monday, February 16, 2015

February 16 In Radio History


In 1929...KID-AM in Idaho Falls, Idaho, went on the air. Today the station airs a News/Talk format at 590 AM.

The station was first licensed under the call KGIO, and began broadcasting on December 3, 1928 on a frequency of 1320 kHz.  On February 16, 1929, the call was changed to KID, and the station began broadcasting under this call.  The station had moved to 1350 kHz by 1942 (likely in the March 29, 1941 changes, pursuant to the North American Radio Broadcasting Agreement, that saw many stations raise frequency by 10 to 30 kHz), where it stayed for several years.  In 1950, the station changed from 1350 to its current 590 kHz frequency.


In 1935...Republican Rep. Sonny Bono of California, who went into politics after first catching America's attention as half of the married singing and TV comedy duo Sonny & Cher, was born. He died in a skiing accident on Jan. 5, 1998 at 62.


In 1955...In Odessa, Texas, Elvis Presley performed two shows at the senior high school. Local singer Roy Orbison was in the audience and remembered, "His energy was incredible. His instinct was just amazing."


In 1989...Investigators in Lockerbie, Scotland, declared that a bomb, concealed inside a radio-cassette player, was to blame for the destruction of Pan Am Flight 103 the previous December. 259 aboard and 11 on the ground died.


In 2010..Voice-Over artist and former WHTZ 1003. FM /Z100 personality.creative J.R. Nelson died from cancer at age 60.

J R Nelson
He started in 1965, WFOB in Fostoria, Ohio,  "I did everything the usual kid does, run the gospel tapes and all that kind of stuff. By the time I was a senior in high school, I was hired to do mornings at a station in Toledo."

Nelson worked at Top40 CKGM in Montreal in 1970-71. He also worked at KAKA Tulsa, KBEZ Kansas City, WGCL Cleveland, followed by stints at WGAR, WHK/WMMS.

Working for KAKC in Tulsa, is where he started my production company. "I did novelty songs for a car dealer, and these songs ended up being his advertising campaign. I did that same package for about ten car dealers across the country. I think the first station I ever did sweepers for was a little station in Clyde, Ohio."

In '80, he worked with Malrite and helped them set up KNEW in San Francisco, According to a 1993 with Radio&Production magazine, 'By this time, I was your basic, full-fledged cocaine addict. Then I had a mild heart attack. My parents had a little winter home down in Tampa, Florida, so I went down there, dried out, and went to work for a little recording studio there.

After a while, I got a call from an old boss of mine, Gil Rosenwald, saying they were buying this station in Livingston, New Jersey. The studios were in Livingston, New Jersey, but the transmitter was in Newark, and they were going to move to the Empire State Building. He wanted to know if I wanted to go work for them. I said, "Who's your PD?" He said, "Scott Shannon." Well, I knew Scott from Tampa, and Scott and I were two people just alike -- two stubborn, bull-headed people. The station was Z100, and we had a lot of fun."



"We were there for about three months before we actually signed the thing on, going through tapes, building the studios, etc.. I didn't want to be on the air. I was just going to do creative for them. Then, about a week before we were going to sign on Scott said, "Well, did you ever read news?" And I said, "I've never read news in my life!" and he said, "Well, you're going to start now." Oh, it was nice. It's your first time trying to be a news person, and where are you? In New York City. It's a humbling experience, but I only had to do news until we hired someone. Anyway, everybody did everything they had to do in the beginning. The production part to me was the most fun because we had a ball at that station."

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