In the eighties, I loved getting these pamphlets at Big Boy. Back then, our family was going to Platte Lake every summer, and I always had a radio and earphones with me.
This was how I learned that 1000 watts up north was worth 50 watts downstate.
Interesting that they included "WFXZ" on 1030. That callsign was obviously never spoken on that frequency. They first appeared in the very hot summer of 1988, with a loop tape of recent pop hits and using the WDRQ callsign (93.1 had relinquished that callsign to become WLTI).
Those pamphlets also named the AM stereo stations, which came in handy when I bought my Sony SRF-A100.
IMHO, these were the greatest days of radio. Adult Standards: Check. Rock Oldies: Check. Top 40: Check (this was the Second British Invasion!).
I could happily listen for hours on end
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Old WJR Radio Guide
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Re: Old WJR Radio Guide
In the eighties, I loved getting these pamphlets at Big Boy. Back then, our family was going to Platte Lake every summer, and I always had a radio and earphones with me.
This was how I learned that 1000 watts up north was worth 50 watts downstate.
Interesting that they included "WFXZ" on 1030. That callsign was obviously never spoken on that frequency. They first appeared in the very hot summer of 1988, with a loop tape of recent pop hits and using the WDRQ callsign (93.1 had relinquished that callsign to become WLTI). After a brief silent period, WUDT signed on with religion, had been weak at Cadieux/Harper, though WUDT would rearrange the towers to improve their coverage greatly.
Those pamphlets also named the AM stereo stations, which came in handy when I bought my Sony SRF-A100.
IMHO, these were the greatest days of radio. Adult Standards: Check. Rock Oldies: Check. Top 40: Check (this was the Second British Invasion!).
I could happily listen for hours on end
This was how I learned that 1000 watts up north was worth 50 watts downstate.
Interesting that they included "WFXZ" on 1030. That callsign was obviously never spoken on that frequency. They first appeared in the very hot summer of 1988, with a loop tape of recent pop hits and using the WDRQ callsign (93.1 had relinquished that callsign to become WLTI). After a brief silent period, WUDT signed on with religion, had been weak at Cadieux/Harper, though WUDT would rearrange the towers to improve their coverage greatly.
Those pamphlets also named the AM stereo stations, which came in handy when I bought my Sony SRF-A100.
IMHO, these were the greatest days of radio. Adult Standards: Check. Rock Oldies: Check. Top 40: Check (this was the Second British Invasion!).
I could happily listen for hours on end
Re: Old WJR Radio Guide
In the 43 years that I've lived in Metro Detroit, the 80s was my favorite radio time too. A wide variety of pop and rock stations. Full-time jazz and classical stations. Great jazz and blues shows on WDET (Ed Love, Famous Coachman). Strong local talk (David Newman, Mark Scott). Great syndicated shows like Bruce Williams. Paul and Ernie calling the Tigers of Morris, Trammell, and Gibson. All that and Holy Hubert Lindsey on WMUZ.innate-in-you wrote: ↑Sun Aug 30, 2020 5:13 pm
IMHO, these were the greatest days of radio. Adult Standards: Check. Rock Oldies: Check. Top 40: Check (this was the Second British Invasion!).
I could happily listen for hours on end
Re: Old WJR Radio Guide
[ Great jazz and blues shows on WDET (Ed Love, Famous Coachman).
Ed Love is still on the air, (Sunday nights at ten.)
Ed Love is still on the air, (Sunday nights at ten.)
Re: Old WJR Radio Guide
With all the duplicate formats in town and AM not doing well, wonder if a non-political product could do well? WJR back in the 80-90 did well.
Re: Old WJR Radio Guide
Like, put "The Breeze" format on WJR as your "At work radio station" with local TOH newscasts and office music for the weekdays and save the syndicated crap for weekends, overnight at most.