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Saturday, April 19, 2025

Radio History: April 19


➦In 1924…A year before the "Grand Ole Opry" hit the airwaves from WSM Radio in Nashville, "The Chicago Barn Dance" aired on WLS Radio in Chicago. The country music show was later renamed "National Barn Dance" and continued on the air – on WLS, simulcast on the ABC Radio Network, simulcast on the NBC Radio Network, back to WLS only, then Chicago's WGN Radio – until 1968.

According to Edgar Bill, the first WLS station manager: "We had so much highbrow music the first week that we thought it would be a good idea to get on some of the old time music.  After we had been going about an hour, we received about 25 telegrams of enthusiastic approval.  It was this response that pushed the Barn Dance!"  Indeed, Sears-Roebuck management was aghast by this "disgraceful low-brow music" that was being broadcast on their new station.  When Bill and Agricultural Director Samuel Guard were confronted by the angry executives, they pointed to the audiences overwhelming approval.

The Barn Dance served two distinct audiences.  It targeted the rural farm audiences as well as city listeners that had come from rural communities or those whom had been told about the "good old times."

In November 1925, WLS claimed to be the first to build an audience studio when it moved to larger quarters on the 6th floor of the Sherman Hotel in downtown Chicago.  The theatre was designed to hold 100 people as well as technical and control room facilities. (WLS History)

National Barn Dance continued for more than two decades on WLS.  WLW Cincinnati became the flagship from 1950-60, and Chicago’s WGN took over as host station from 1960-68.


In 1934..The Communications Act of 1934, signed into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. This landmark legislation established the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), consolidating oversight of radio, telegraph, and telephone communications. The act replaced the Federal Radio Commission and set enduring regulations for licensing and managing radio stations, shaping the growth of commercial broadcasting in the U.S. It addressed the chaotic expansion of radio in the 1920s, ensuring orderly use of the spectrum and fostering innovation, including the eventual rise of FM radio.

➦In 1943...'Theater of Romance' anthology debuted on the CBS Radio Network as a filler show between 1943 and 1957. It substituted from time to time for such shows as Gunsmoke, Life with Luigi, Lux Radio Theater, and many others. Producers, directors, and actors changed constantly through the years. Even the locale changed from New York to Los Angeles in 1945.

Romance featured such stars as Henry Fonda, Humphrey Bogart, Gregory Peck, Shirley Temple, and many other Hollywood stars, often binding the story lines with the films in which the stars were currently being featured. The themed stories often revolved around historical fiction as well, and broadcast before a live audience.






➦In 1965..WINS 1010 AM in New York City flipped from Top40 to become the first All-News radio station.  Two months earlier, personality Murray The K departed WINS...


Billboard Article 2/5/1965

Before 1010 WINS in New York City was “All News, All the Time,” it was one of the country’s first rock-and-roll stations.

WGBS signed on in 1924, owned by Gimbel’s Department Store.  William Randolph Hearst bought it in 1932, changing the call letters to WINS, which referred to Hearst’s “International News Service.”

Crosley bought WINS in 1945, then sold it in 1953 to Gotham Broadcasting Corporation.  WINS started playing rock music. Legendary broadcasters like Alan Freed and Murray “the K” Kaufman were some of the early WINS disc jockeys.  Here’s a sample of WINS from 1960:

Westinghouse bought WINS in 1962.  By that time, WINS was fending off three other stations for New York City’s rock audience.  WMCA, WMGM and WABC all were airing Top 40 and rock music.

WMGM bailed on Top 40/rock in 1962 and flipped to a beautiful music format under its former WHN call letters.

By 1963, WMCA became New York’s No. 1 Top 40 station.  WINS’ ratings slid below WMCA and WABC.

On April 19, 1965, Westinghouse pulled the plug on the Top 40 format at WINS.  The final song was “Out in the Streets” by The Shangri-Las.  WINS became the nation’s third all-news radio station.

Many observers predicted WINS would fail as other early all-news stations had. Westinghouse poured resources into the format and succeeded,  It flipped two other stations, KYW in Philadelphia and KFWB in Los Angeles, to a similar format.

Soon, CBS decided to complete in the all-news arena.  It flipped WINS rival WCBS toward an all-news format in 1967, eventually becoming a full-time all-news station in 1970.  CBS expanded the all-news format to other owned stations around the country, including KNX in Los Angeles and WBBM in Chicago.  NBC tried an all-news approach in the mid 1970s called “News and Information Service,” but it shut down after two years.

In 1995, Westinghouse purchased CBS, making sister stations out of longtime rivals WINS and WCBS in New York.  For many years, the two stations continued their separate all-news formats, but geared them toward different audiences.

On February 2, 2017, CBS Radio announced it would merge with Entercom (now Audacy, Inc.). The merger was approved on November 9, 2017, and was consummated on November 17, 2017.

The all-news format and WCBS call letters were retired when 880 AM shifted to sports radio and relaunched as ESPN New York and WHSQ-AM effective August 26. 2022. Under an LMA, Audacy leases airtime on 880 AM to Good Karma Brands.

On October 10, 2022, it was announced that Audacy would flip sister station WNYL (92.3 FM) from its alternative format to a simulcast of WINS effective October 27; Audacy also concurrently announced that, after a deal was reached with the SAG-AFTRA union, it was planning on combining the separate staffs and newsrooms of WINS and WCBS. Along with the launch of the simulcast, WINS' simulcast on WNEW-FM's HD3 sub-channel was dropped. (H/T: Faded Signals)

➦In 1971...MLB Giants announcer Russ Hodges suffered a fatal heart attack at age 60. Hodges began his broadcasting career in 1934. He was sports editor of WBT, Charlotte, North Carolina until October 1941, when he moved full-time to WOL in Washington, D.C., where he had already been doing play-by-play for the Washington Redskins. He worked for the Chicago Cubs, Chicago White Sox, Washington Senators, and Cincinnati Reds before landing in New York City with the New York Yankees and New York Giants, who during much of the 1940s only broadcast home games and shared the same radio team — lead announcer Mel Allen and No. 2 man Hodges.

In 1949, Hodges became a No. 1 announcer when the Giants and the Yankees separated their radio networks to each broadcast a full, 154-game schedule. He would be the voice of the Giants for the next 22 seasons on both coasts.  On October 3, 1951, Hodges was on the microphone for Bobby Thomson's famous Shot Heard 'Round the World.

➦In 2017...Fox News terminated their biggest prime time star Bill O’Reilly over allegations of sexual harassment.

Elinor Donahue is 88
🎂HAPPY BIRTHDAYS
  • Actor Elinor Donahue (“Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman,” “Father Knows Best”) is 88. 
  • Keyboardist Alan Price of The Animals is 83. 
  • Actor Tim Curry is 79. 
  • Singer Mark “Flo” Volman of The Turtles is 78. 
  • Actor Tony Plana (“Ugly Betty”) is 73. 
  • Actor Tom Wood (“The Fugitive,” “Ulee’s Gold”) is 62. 
  • Death Row Records co-founder Suge Knight is 60. 
  • Country singer Bekka Bramlett of Bekka and Billy is 57. 
  • Actor Kim Hawthorne (“Greenleaf”) is 57. 
  • Actor Ashley Judd is 57. 
  • Singer Luis Miguel is 55. 
  • Actor Jennifer Esposito (“Blue Bloods”) is 53. 
  • Actor Jennifer Taylor (“Two and a Half Men”) is 53. 
  • Singer Madeleine Peyroux is 51. 
  • Actor James Franco is 47. 
  • Actor Kate Hudson is 46. 
  • Actor Hayden Christensen (“Star Wars Episodes II and III”) is 44. 
  • Actor Catalina Sandino Moreno (“Che,” ″Maria Full of Grace”) is 44. 
  • Actor Ali Wong (“American Housewife”) is 43. 
  • Actor Victoria Yeates (“Call the Midwife”) is 42. 
  • Drummer Steve Johnson of Alabama Shakes is 40. 
  • Actor Courtland Mead (“Kirk”) is 38.
✞REMEMBRANCES
  • In 1971..Russ Hodges, Sportscaster (NY Mets, SF Giants; Wednesday Night Fights), dies at 60
  • In 2005..Rick Lewis, American doo-wop tenor (The Silhouettes - "Get A Job"), dies at 71
  • In 2121..Jim Steinman, American Grammy Award-winning songwriter and record producer (Meat Loaf - Bat Out of Hell; Bonnie Tyler - Total Eclipse of the Heart), dies of kidney failure at 73

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