Friday, March 3, 2017

March 3 Radio History


In 1847...Alexander Graham Bell, inventor of the telephone, was born. He died Aug. 2, 1922 at 75.


In 1885...American Telephone and Telegraph (AT&T) was incorporated



In 1922...WWJ-AM, Detroit, Michigan began broadcasting.

WWJ first signed on the air on August 20, 1920 under the call sign 8MK, and was founded by The Detroit News; the mixed letter/number calls were assigned to the station by the United States Department of Commerce Bureau of Navigation, the government bureau responsible for radio regulation at the time. The 8 in the call sign referred to its location in the 8th Radio Inspection District, while the M in the call sign identified that the station operated under an amateur license. It is not clear why the Detroit News applied for an amateur license instead of an experimental license. As an amateur station, it broadcast at 200 meters (the equivalent of 1500 AM).

8MK was initially licensed to Michael DeLisle Lyons, a teenager, and radio pioneer. He assembled the station in the Detroit News Building but the Scripps family asked him to register the station in his name, because they were worried this new technology might only be a fad, and wanted to keep some distance.

The Scripps family were also worried radio might replace newspapers if the medium caught on, so the family financially supported Michael. In fact, most early radio stations were built, for the same reason, by families who owned newspapers – out of concern that radio would put them out of business, on the basis that newspaper readers would find it more timelier to tune to listen to the headlines on radio at any given time than wait to read them in a daily newspaper the next day.

On October 13, 1921, the station was granted a limited commercial license and was assigned the call letters WBL. With the new license, the station began broadcasting at 360 meters (833 AM), with weather reports and other government reports broadcast at 485 meters (619 AM).

On March 3, 1922, for reasons that are not known, the call letters, 'WWJ, were assigned to the station. Some believe the new call letters are an abbreviation for stockholders William and John Scripps, but on page 82 of a book published by the Detroit News in 1922, WWJ-The Detroit News, it stated that "WWJ is not the initials of any name. It is a symbol. It was issued to the Detroit News by the government in connection with the licensing of this broadcasting plant."

Ty Tyson was the original “voice” of the Detroit Tigers was 39 years old that first radio summer of 1927.

Today Newsradio WWJ 950 AM is owned by CBS Radio.


In 1925...KFWB Los Angeles signed-on.

The station was launched by Sam Warner, a co-founder of Warner Brothers. The station launched the careers of such stars as Ronald Reagan and Bing Crosby. The station was the first to broadcast the annual Rose Parade in Pasadena, California.

Although some think its call letters stand for Keep Filming Warner Brothers or (K)-Four Warner Brothers, actually the callsign was sequentially issued by the Department of Commerce, predecessor to the FCC (March 1925) at the same time as KFWA in Ogden, Utah (Feb 1925) and KFWC for San Bernardino (also Feb 1925).


On February 8, 1937, KFWB opened a new facility on the south end of the Warner Brothers lot. It included six large studios, one of which was a 500-seat theater, and a "multi-manual pipe organ, built especially for broadcasting."

In 1946, KFWB imported two disc jockeys from New York City: Maurice Hart of WNEW, whose drive-time show Start the Day Right was described as "Words and Music Straight from the Hart," and Martin Block, who coined the phrase "Make-Believe Ballroom," which was later used by Al Jarvis when Block returned to New York. In those days, disc jockeys selected their own music, either from KFWB's extensive record library, or new songs brought to them by "song pluggers." Old and new, vocal and instrumental were mixed together to the disc jockey's choice.

KFWB was sold to its long-time general manager, Harry Maizlish, in 1950, and soon after moved off the Warner Brothers lot to join Maizlish's FM station, KFMV, on Hollywood Boulevard.

In 1958, the original "Seven Swingin’ Gentlemen" took Rock and Roll into its first major market, at KFWB.



Also in 1958, under new owners Crowell-Collier Broadcasting, program director Chuck Blore transformed the station into a Top 40 format called Channel 98 Color Radio. The station became one of the most highly listened to stations in the Southland and in the nation. The air staff during the glory days included Bill Ballance, B. Mitchell Reed, Bruce Hayes, Al Jarvis, Joe Yocam, Elliot Field, Ted Quillin. and Gene Weed. Their staff of highly respected newscasters included Cleve Herrmann, Charles Arlington, John Babcock, Beach Rogers, Mike Henry, Hal Goodwin, Al Wiman, Bill Angel, J. Paul Huddleston and Jackson King. But times changed, and in the mid-60's, KFWB was overtaken by rival KRLA.

Then KRLA was put in second place by the launch of Boss Radio at 93/KHJ, and this relegated KFWB to the position of the third-place pop music station in the L.A. market.

KFWB was later purchased by Westinghouse in 1966. On March 11, 1968, the station was relaunched as an all news radio station. The station promoted itself with its slogan, "You give us 22 minutes, we'll give you the world," as first used by New York Westinghouse station WINS, although the station's format used a 30 minute news cycle.



Until spun off into a trust, KFWB was owned by CBS Radio, a subsidiary of CBS Corporation, formerly known as Westinghouse, which also owns KNX, the only all-news station in Los Angeles. KFWB and KNX famously feuded as all-news rivals for years, both on radio and in television advertising. Like its former sister stations (and fellow all-news stations) WINS in New York and KYW in Philadelphia, KFWB had a running Teletype sound effect in the background during regular newscasts.

On Sept. 22, 2014, KFWB became "The Beast 980", an all-sports format...and on March 1 2016, The Beast ended operations as an all-sports station after the station’s asset trust sold the business to Universal Media Access KFWB-AM LLC headed by Charles W. Banta of Buffalo NY. for $8M.

Universal Media Access launched a South Asian format branding as “Desi 980“, on March 1, 2016.


In 1945...mystery fans remember this day when they gathered around the radio set to listen to the Mutual Broadcasting System as Superman encountered Batman and Robin for the first time. POW! ZING! BONK!


In 1952...“Whispering Streets” debuted on ABC radio, remaining on the air until Thanksgiving week, 1960. The end of that show brought down the curtain on what is called “the last day of the radio soap opera” (November 25, 1960).



Whispering Streets was a romantic soap-opera drama old time radio serial with a special twist.  The stories are told in a somewhat serial format with the next week's story using a minor character's point of view.  It is a highly unusual format and quite enjoyable, especially trying to guess which minor character will be the major character in the next week.

Whispering Streets had multiple well-known hostesses/narrators throughout the show's run including Bette Davis, Cathy Lewis, Hope Winslow, Ann Seymour, Gertrude Warner.  The most dramatic narrator of the show's run is Bette Davis who begins each show with a "Hell-low" and ends with "Goohdd-bye."


In 1956...Elvis‘ first single for RCA Victor “Heartbreak Hotel,” entered the Billboard top 100 at #68.  Just weeks later it would be #1 for almost two months, becoming the best-selling single of the year.


In 1993...the Howard Stern radio show debuted in Boston on WBCN-FM.

Jack Kelk, Ezra Stone of 'The Aldrich Family'
In 1994...the star of The Aldrich Family for most of its 14 year run on radio, Ezra Stone(who played Henry Aldrich), was killed in a New Jersey automobile crash at age 76.


In 1997...the Howard Stern Radio Show debuted on WRCQ-FM in Fayetteville, North Carolina.


In 2008...The Beatles’ engineer Norman Smith died at the age of 85. Smith who worked on every studio recording the band made between 1962 and 1965, was nicknamed “Normal Norman” by John Lennon.


In 2014...Scott Shannon launched "The Big Show" mornings on NYC's Classic Hits WCBS 101.1 FM.

Thursday, March 2, 2017

Report: Rhythmic Is The Difference Between CHR, HotAC

As Hot AC has become more and more current-hits-driven, the line between it and the Top 40 format has become less and less clear, with some folks wondering just what exactly the difference is – other than teens. Where is the line now? According to data to be released today from the Burns/Strategic Solutions Research “What Women Want” study, it’s still rhythmic music tastes, which are significantly higher among Top 40 listeners.

“The top two music styles with both formats is the same – Current Pop and Pop-Adult,” says Burns Associates Pres/CEO Alan Burns. “But rhythmic music tastes fall significantly, ranking at the bottom among Hot AC P1s. They’re less than half as likely (27%, to Top 40 P1s’ 65%) as Top 40 fans to say they love the sound of Pop Rhythmic songs like 5th Harmony’s ‘Work from Home’, Flo Rida’s ‘My House’, or Weeknd’s ‘Can’t Feel My Face’. “

Also, while the two formats’ demos overlap in adult women, the ages at which their core listenership peaks are widely separated. Strategic EVP Hal Rood noted that, “In the study, Top 40’s highest P1 cell was women 20-24, while HotAC’s listenership peaked between 35 and 39. Each format has a very strong base with fairly clear lines of demarcation.”

Burns and Strategic will focus on Top 40 and Hot AC in today’s free webinar from the “What Women Want-2017” series.

The data from the study of 2000 women who cume Top 40 or AC will include music preferences, listeners’ top artists, their most-desired content in morning drive, propensity to cooperate with rating services, and what drives greater TSL in the two formats.

You can register for the 2pm Eastern/11am Pacific webinar by clicking What Women Want 2017 Webinar or the What Women Want icons at www.burnsradio.com or www.strategicsolutionsresearch.com.

Chuck Wicks Recovering From Fractured Skull, Vertebrae

Chuck Wicks is feeling lucky to be alive — and not paralyzed — following the car accident he and his America’s Morning Show co-hosts were in on Monday.

In a Facebook post on Wednesday, Wicks recounted the accident, and offered fans an update on his condition.

A Tuesday (Feb. 28) statement from Nashville’s WKDF NashFM 103.3, America’s Morning Show’s home station, reported that Wicks and co-hosts Ty Bentli, Kelly Ford and producer Glenn Johnson were headed from Columbus, Miss., where they were visiting Afffiliaite WKOR, to New Orleans, La., where they were scheduled to serve as grand marshals in a Mardi Gras parade, when their car accident occurred, according to The Boot.com.

While driving through a major rainstorm, the vehicle the four radio personalities were in hit a puddle and hydroplaned; the vehicle rolled over twice and came to a stop in a ditch.

“Talk about slow motion … It was if the world literally stopped,” Wicks remembers. “When the vehicle did finally stop, I immediately heard Ty say, ‘Is everyone OK … Is everyone OK.’ Then, for some random reason, I just starting checking my teeth and body and checking where everyone was. At this moment, it was safe to say I was in shock.”

Wicks goes on to explain that he, Bentli, Ford and Johnson crawled out of their vehicle, “which is completely totaled at this point,” and soon, a number of emergency personnel arrived at the crash site.

Chuck Wicks - Hospital Selfie
“Throughout the entire process, I remember my neck just getting stiffer and stiffer, and between the shock of everything and being soaken [sic] wet from rolling through the water-filled ditch, I couldn’t stop shaking,” Wicks shares. “I told the paramedic I had neck and head pain, and they immediately put me on the backboard / stretcher. As my head got stiffer through the ride and I knew everyone else was OK, I started to panic a bit … and honestly I was scared.”

Following the crash, Wicks, Bentli, Ford and Johnson were transported via ambulance to a Hattiesburg, Miss., hospital. Bentli, Ford and Johnson were all treated and released, but Wicks was held overnight “for some additional observation,”

Nash FM’s statement explains. In his Facebook post, Wicks writes that he was sent to the emergency room and set up for a CAT scan and an MRI.

“When the doctor looked at my results and said I was lucky to be walking and talking, then I knew something wasn’t right,” Wicks admits. “So here’s the deal … I fractured my skull and I also have a cervical vertebrae fracture in my C2 region. What does this mean? It means I’m lucky I’m alive and not paralyzed.”

Wicks will be in a neck brace for “about three months, with a lot of discomfort for a while,” he writes, adding that when he’s not “jacked up on morphine … it’s pretty painful."

Oprah Rethinks 2020 Presidential Bid

Oprah
Matt Drudge issued a rare tweet Wednesday imploring Oprah Winfrey to launch a presidential bid against President Trump in 2020 after the talk-show star indicated she had reconsidered whether she could be president.

"Trump vs Oprah would be the most epic race in American history. MAKE THIS HAPPEN..." Drudge, the founder of the conservative Drudge Report, wrote in a tweet to his nearly 500,000 followers.

According to The Hill, The "Queen of All Media" had suggested that Trump made her rethink whether she could win a presidential race.

"Have you ever thought that, given the popularity you have — we haven’t broken the glass ceiling yet for women — that you could actually run for president and actually be elected?" Bloomberg Media's David Rubenstein asked Oprah in an interview.

Winfrey paused before answering, prompting laughter from the audience.




Winfrey said during an appearance on "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert" in January that she would never run for president.

“Is there any other charismatic African-American woman that both sides of the political aisle really love?” Colbert asked after a reference to Michelle Obama, prompting applause from the show's audience.

“Never,” Winfrey said. “No, no, it’s not my thing.”

Meanwhile, Trump has in years past floated Oprah as his own potential running mate, saying in 2015, "I think we'd win easily."

Biden Defends Media, Courts

Joe Biden
Former Vice President Joe Biden offered a strong defense of the media and judicial branch on Wednesday night, calling attacks on both institutions "corrosive" and "dangerous," according to ABC News.

While not mentioning President Trump by name, Biden's remarks at the Newseum in Washington, D.C. -- where he was accepting the Patriot Award for political courage and leadership from the Bipartistan Policy Center -- were a thinly veiled reference to the new president's comments and the current state of politics.

Biden aid he was "saddened" to feel compelled to defend the free press while standing at the Newseum, a museum dedicated to the press and the First Amendment.

"To question the actual legitimacy of a free press is one of the most dangerous things out there. The degree that we depart and denigrate our institutions and the fourth estate, I think we really, honest to god, honest to god, weaken our ability for self-government," said Biden. "We undermine it and become weaker and not stronger."

The former vice president said that while he has certainly been on the bad end of press coverage, unencumbered journalism was nonetheless indispensable to democracy.

"I have taken my fair share of hits from the press, being covered by the very best and some of the worst. Some of you press guys are lousy just like some senators are lousy, doctors are lousy, lawyers are lousy. But it doesn't matter," he said. "We should never challenge the basic truth that an independent and free press is the fundamental element in functions of our democracy."

Snap Raises $3.4B During IPO

(Reuters) -- Snap Inc's in-demand shares are set to start trading in New York on Thursday after the owner of the popular Snapchat messaging app raised $3.4 billion in its initial public offering (IPO) on Wednesday, above its price expectations.

Snap's IPO was oversubscribed by more than ten-times, indicating a hunger for the shares that might produce a pop on the first day of trading.

The New York Stock Exchange carried out a trial run last week to make sure the third-biggest ever technology IPO goes smoothly.

Facebook Inc's eagerly awaited market debut in 2012 was marred by a technical glitch at rival exchange Nasdaq.

After pricing its IPO at $17 a share, the owner of the popular disappearing-message app has a market value of roughly $24 billion, more than double the size of rival Twitter Inc and the richest valuation in a U.S. tech IPO since Facebook five years ago.

The share sale was the first test of investor appetite for a social-media app that is beloved by teenagers and people under 30 for applying bunny faces and vomiting rainbows onto selfies, but has yet to convert "cool" into cash.

Despite a nearly seven-fold increase in revenue, the Los Angeles-based company's net loss widened 38 percent last year. It faces intense competition from larger rivals such as Facebook's Instagram as it grapples with decelerating user growth.

Snap priced 200 million shares on Wednesday at $17 each, above its expected range of $14 to $16 dollars a share.

The sale was well timed, as investors look for fresh opportunities after 2016 marked the slowest year for IPOs since 2008. The launch could encourage debuts by other so-called unicorns, tech startups with private valuations of $1 billion or more.

Investors bought the shares despite them having no voting power, an unprecedented feature for an IPO at odds with rising concerns about corporate governance over the past few years from fund managers looking to gain influence over executives.

Although Snap is going public at a much earlier stage in its development than Twitter or Facebook, the five-year-old company is valuing itself at nearly 60 times revenue, more than double the 27 times revenue mark Facebook fetched in its IPO.

To justify its relatively high valuation and fend off concerns about slowing user growth, Snap has emphasized how important Snapchat is to its users, how long they spend on the app and the revenue potential of the emerging trend for young people to communicate with video rather than text.

Snap is set to begin trading on Thursday on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol SNAP.

Nielsen: 48M Watched Trump Address

According to Nielsen, an estimated 48 million people tuned in to watch Donald Trump’s first address to a Joint Session of Congress (the traditional first-term equivalent of the State of the Union) in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2017.

While coverage varied by network, 11 aired live coverage from approximately 9:00 p.m. ET to 10:15 p.m. ET.

In terms of the social nature of the address, the most-Tweeted minute of the night was at 10:04 p.m. ET when 21,000 Twitter interactions occurred after the audience applauded the widow of a fallen Navy SEAL.

The chart below highlights the sum of the average audience for these networks.



Fox News was the most-watched on all of TV for the speech, drawing 10.765 million. According to TVNewser, NBC was second (first among the broadcasters) drawing 9.144 million. Among the younger news demo (A25-54) NBC was first, followed by Fox News. NBC had The Voice as its lead-in. As these are Nielsen numbers, this only includes TV viewing and not viewers who watched on streaming services.

9:15-10:15 p.m. ET | Total Viewers / A25-54 demo

Fox News: 10,765,000 / 2,784,000
NBC: 9,144,000 / 3,286,000
CBS: 7,156,000 / 1,897,000
ABC: 6,065,000 / 2,074,000
CNN: 3,944,000 / 1,517,000
FOX: 3,076,000 / 1,383,000
MSNBC: 2,683,000 / 669,000
FBN 593,000 / 118,000

By comparison, President Obama’s first address to a joint session of Congress on February 24, 2009 averaged 52.4 million viewers.

Milwaukee Radio: Drew Olson Goes Solo On WOKY

Drew Olson
Drew Olson, who has been co-hosting a show in afternoon drive-time on iHeartMedia's WOKY 920 AM, is getting his own midday show on the sports station.

"The Drew Olson Show, Powered by OnMilwaukee.com" is debuting Wednesday. According to a statement from WOKY, the show, airing from 1 to 3 p.m. weekdays, "will feature guest appearances from OnMilwaukee.com writers and Olson's longtime friends, including Milwaukee Journal Sentinel baseball writer Tom Haudricourt and Fox Sports Wisconsin commentator Bill Schroeder."

Olson spent four years as an editor and columnist with OnMilwaukee.com from 2006 to 2010. He joined WOKY in August 2016, where he has been co-host of "The Mike Heller Show" from 3 to 6 p.m. Before that, Olson, a former Milwaukee Journal Sentinel sports reporter, spent 12 years at WAUK-AM (540).


Atlanta Radio: Melissa Carter Exits WSB-FM's Morning Show

Melissa Carter
Longtime Atlanta radio DJ Melissa Carter, the first openly gay morning radio host in Atlanta, is no longer on the air with WSB B98.5FM’s morning show. Carter leaves the show after three and a half years.

The popular Atlanta personality gained major notoriety during her decade on Q100’s The Bert Show. She left that show in 2011 and joined B98.5 in the summer of 2013.

According to gavoice.com, the morning host veteran reportedly has nearly six months left on her current contract. Norm Schrutt, her agent, said Carter wanted to give the adult pop station time to find a replacement while staying on air but the station decided otherwise. Carter will remain employed with the station through August but it’s unclear if she will have any active role.

Carter, who declined to comment on the move, was open with listeners about various aspects of her personal life, from suffering through chronic kidney disease that led to a transplant in 2002 to her longtime relationship with partner to the couple’s journey to becoming parents to their breakup in 2015.

Carter’s former co-host Tad Lemire will remain on the show and the station is actively looking for Carter’s replacement.

WWOne To Air Final Four In Spanish

In a first for both Westwood One and the NCAA, the network today announced it will broadcast the 2017 NCAA® Men’s Final Four® in Spanish, the Championship’s first-ever Spanish language broadcast on any platform.

Westwood One Sports will present full play-by-play Spanish action from the NCAA® Men’s Final Four® on Saturday, April 1, and the National Championship Game on Monday, April 3, live from the University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Arizona. Coverage can be heard on more than 40 Hispanic radio stations nationwide, WestwoodOneSports.com, and SiriusXM radio. Additionally, the broadcasts will be available for fans on mobile devices via NCAA.com/MarchMadness, TuneIn.com, and the free TuneIn app.  

“One of our strategic priorities is to continue to diversify the fan base for college basketball, and a Spanish-language broadcast of our championship on a platform of this magnitude goes a long way towards accomplishing that goal,” said Dan Gavitt, the NCAA’s senior vice president of basketball. “We are appreciative of our partnership with Westwood One and grateful for their efforts in expanding the audience for the Final Four.”

“We are both honored and excited to be the first media platform to broadcast the Final Four in Spanish,” said Suzanne Grimes, President of Westwood One and EVP of Corporate Marketing for Cumulus Media. “This is an amazing opportunity to showcase our mass reach medium doing what it does best – connecting fans and brands to one of the country’s most spectacular sporting events. We are proud to partner with the NCAA and Werner Ladder for this historic event.”

NCAA, First Four, Final Four, and Selection Sunday are trademarks of the National Collegiate Athletic Association.

Beasley Media Names Brian Kalinowski EVP/Digital

Brian Kalinowski
Beasley Media Group, Inc. has appointed Brian Kalinowski to the position of Executive Vice President of Digital. He will be based in Beasley’s Charlotte, NC office.

Kalinowski is a digital media professional, who joins Beasley from XMark Consulting, a full service Digital Strategy firm he founded in 2015. Prior to XMark, Brian served in numerous senior executive roles in pure play digital, traditional media, and high tech markets. During his 20-years in business, he has built start-ups, transformed established digital organizations, and developed profitable, award-winning digital  strategies for large public media companies.

“I’m looking forward to starting immediately with the team at Beasley Media Group, a company with a truly exceptional portfolio of stations and talent,” commented Brian. “It’s a fantastic opportunity to be joining a company committed to creating a world class digital experience for their 19 million weekly listeners, while also being completely focused on growing their audience nationally through digital channels.”

“Brian’s track record for growing and developing profitable businesses within the digital landscape makehim the ideal person for this new role,” added CEO Caroline Beasley. “As we expand Beasley’s national reach, a progressive digital strategy will be imperative for our company. We are confident Brian will lead that charge.”

March 2 Radio History





In 1897...Marconi was granted the first wireless patent.

Marconi travelled to London in early 1896 at the age of 21, accompanied by his mother, to seek support for his work; Marconi spoke fluent English in addition to Italian. Marconi arrived at Dover and at Customs the Customs officer opened his case to find various contraptions and apparatus. The customs officer immediately contacted the Admiralty in London. While there, Marconi gained the interest and support of William Preece, the Chief Electrical Engineer of the British Post Office.

The apparatus that Marconi possessed at that time was similar to that of one in 1882 by A. E. Dolbear, of Tufts College, which used a spark coil generator and a carbon granular rectifier for reception. A plaque on the outside of BT Centre commemorates Marconi's first public transmission of wireless signals from that site. A series of demonstrations for the British government followed—by March 1897, Marconi had transmitted Morse code signals over a distance of about 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) across Salisbury Plain. On 13 May 1897, Marconi sent the world's first ever wireless communication over open sea.


In 1942...Hall of Fame rock 'n' roll singer, guitarist, and songwriter Lou Reed was born. He died Oct. 27, 2013 at 71.


In 1950...Singer Karen Carpenter, one half of the duo The Carpenters with her brother Richard, was born.

She died Feb. 4, 1983 at 32 from heart failure caused by chronic anorexia. Karen's death brought media attention to anorexia nervosa and also to bulimia and it encouraged celebrities to go public about their eating disorders, among them actress Tracey Gold and later, Diana, Princess of Wales.  Medical centers and hospitals began receiving increased contacts from people with these disorders. The general public had little knowledge of anorexia and bulimia prior to her death, making the conditions difficult to identify and treat.




In 1974....Super WCFL 1000 AM Chicago Survey From March 2, 1974


In 1981...Howard Stern started broadcasting on WWDC radio, Washington DC. It was at this station that Stern came into his own as a ‘shock-jock.’


In 1983…Compact Disc recordings (CDs), developed by Phillips and Sony, were introduced in the United States.


In 1984...Throwback Thursday...From R&R March 2, 1984...




In 1999...British singer Dusty Springfield, who recorded such 1960s hits as “Son of a Preacher Man” and “Wishin’ and Hopin’,” died at her English home after a long battle with breast cancer.  She was 59.

In 2004...the talented radio actress Mercedes McCambridge (I Love a Mystery, Abie’s Irish Rose, CBS Radio Theatre) died of natural causes just days short of her 88th birthday.  For 35 years she guested in episodic and anthology TV. Her non-broadcast achievements included an Oscar for “All the King’s Men,” and providing the demonically-possessed voice in the movie “The Exorcist.”


In 2004...95-year old Alistair Cooke retired from BBC Radio after 58 years of hosting the weekly “Letter From America”.  He had become a US TV star as host of the PBS Sunday fixture “Masterpiece Theatre.”  He would be dead within a month.


In 2014…Pittsburgh radio legend (WKFB, WLSW, WWSW, WNRZ, KQV, WAMO, WHOD)/Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Craig "Porky" Chedwick died at the age of 96.

He began his career at WHOD in Homestead (which took the call letters, WAMO — an acronym for the Allegheny, Monongehela and Ohio rivers — in 1956), when the low-power AM signed on, August 1, 1948. When he responded to an ad in a local paper, advertising for on-air talent at the new radio station, his popularity as a play-by-play announcer won him a 10-minute Saturday sports and music show. The music portion was gradually expanded, in response to the public's reaction. WHOD, known as "The Station of Nations," was created to serve the diverse European and eastern bloc immigrant population that worked the Pittsburgh area mills. Most of his young listeners, who turned an ear toward Chedwick's music and off-the-cuff rhymes and patter (he may have been the first white rapper), had no idea that he was Caucasian. Years later, when the fact became apparent, the outcry from some parents, religious and civic leaders made him a local anti-hero. and he was banned from appearing in some neighborhoods. The suggestion that he was trying to corrupt the (white) youth of America was put to rest when he was commended by Senator Estes Kefauver for his work organizing youth baseball teams to combat juvenile delinquency. He even had a few youths remanded to his custody from juvenile court.

In spite of WHOD's low wattage, Chedwick became Pittsburgh's "Pied Piper of Platter". By the early 1950s, black music record labels were hearing about the noise Chedwick was making in Pittsburgh with old R&B stock, so they began inundating him with new material. He introduced the new material to his "movers and groovers," never accepting payola though payola was the norm at the time. Still, oldies would dominate his playlist. Shortly after being honored by WAMO for his years of service in 1984, he was let go by the station. He would work at various other stations in the Pittsburgh market until executives from Sheridan Broadcasting (WAMO's parent company) asked him to come back in 1992