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- From: wdp@airwaves.chi.il.us (William Pfeiffer)
- Subject: Re: Changes at WLUP (was What happened to Brandmier?)
- Message-ID: <1992Nov16.034423.24867@gagme.chi.il.us>
- Followup-To: rec.radio.broadcasting
- Originator: wdp@gagme
- Lines: 160
- Sender: wdp@gagme.chi.il.us (Bill Pfeiffer)
- Organization: airwaves
- Distribution: chi
- Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1992 03:44:23 GMT
-
- In article <1992Nov11.224027.9804@gagme.chi.il.us> wdp@gagme.chi.il.us (Bill
- Pfeiffer) writes:
- x sdc!kenk@uunet.UU.NET (Ken Konecki) writes:
-
- >[AM-1000] was bought with the current format in mind, to be anchored by
- >S&G, who already had substantial success at WLS for 10 years. S&G did
- >indeed put AM-1000 on the map, and did wonders for the viability of
- >the entire band.
-
- [Ken]
- x Were they really at WLS for 10 years? That long? I thought it was a
- x much shorter timespan. I still disagree with your statement that Steve
- x and Garry put AM-1000 (back) on the map. They have a loyal bunch of
- x listeners who followed them everywhere they went. However, before
- x Kevin Matthews and Johhny B's simulcast few people, if any, listened to
- x AM-100 from the time they got up till the time they went to bed. It
- x was only *after* the arrival of Kevin Matthes did the Loop AM gain any
- x significant inroads in popularity.
-
- [Bill]
- Ken, I am not attempting to pit Mathews against S&G. Mathews is a fine and
- hilarious (genius?) talent. But here is a bit of history.
-
- When S&G were re-hired by the LOOP, after their dismissal from WLS (and a
- several month waiting period, enforced by their WLS contract) the 'LUP
- mamagement folks, decided to purchace the ailing WCFL which was failing as a
- Christian station, folowing several format changes since they dropped the
- legendary 'Super 'CFL' top-40 format. Actually it was not officially a
- purchace, but a 'merger' of the existing owners with Evergreen Media, with
- Evergreen being the controling entity. That move was designed to give Steve
- and Garry a permanent home and to create a new format of hip/comedy/rock/talk
- in which S&G would be part owners and anchors.
-
- Immediately upon the aquisition of control over WCFL, and before the calls
- were changed to WLUP-AM, the LOOP began to simulcast the FM programming,
- including Johnathon Brandmeier's morning show. The remainder of the day would
- later consist of 'Beth & Tim' mid-days and Steve/Garry in PM drive. It was
- S&G who recomended Kevin Mathews, who was then working on a small FM (WLAV)
- in Grand Rapids Michigan, to be hired as evening host.
-
- In the following months, Beth and Tim were experiencing slumping ratings, and
- their style was not fitting the 'attitude' that the LOOP team (including
- S&G) felt the station should have, especially in the critical mid-day slot.
- So Beth & Tim swapped places with Mathews and he became mid-day host.
- Later, B&T were canned totally, in favor of the carnival sportsman Chet
- Coppick who was able to maintain the 'feel' of the AM LOOP while doing a more
- than credible job of covering sports.
-
- Larry King was brought in to fill the late evening slot, until the
- re-broadcast of S&G took the station through the overnight. Later, as we
- know, King was ditched in favor of the bizzare Ed Tyll, who was recently
- bumped by Schwartz, and then canned in favor of a Brandmeier re-broadcast.
-
- People listen to the LOOP-AM because there was/is a chemistry between the
- various personalities. From Brandmeier through Coppick, and then on through
- Tyll, the continuity was there. The LOOP had created a totally new and
- unique format, and it was working. Obviously, Mathews and the others are an
- essential part of that recipe. All I am saying, and history backs me up, is
- that it was S&G's proven track record, previous mega-success and ratings
- draw, that prompted the LOOP management to aquire AM-1000 and to turn it into
- a station that is revered and respected throughout the nation. Mathews,
- Coppick, etc, were added as extensions of the format. No doubt that they
- are much more than that today, but in the beginning, it was S&G who prompted
- the aquisition of the AM, and it's format direction.
-
- >After firing S&G, WLS went so far in the toilet, that they went
- >to all-talk, where they continued their chicken-poop policies and wound
- >up losing their heaviest hitters, and a good deal of their ratings as
- >well.
-
- [Ken]
- x Steve and Garry were fired years before WLS went to all talk. It was
- x quite clear that management was changing direction for the big 89 away from
- x top-40 music toward something else when the bought out Larry Lujack's
- x contract. It was the direction they chose to go that dropped WLS into the
- x toilet not the firing of Steve Dahl and Garry Meier.
-
- [Bill]
- True... and also false. It was, indeed, management bungling that brought
- down the former radio giant WLS. Among the worst bungles, though, was
- getting rid of S&G. WLS-am was already pretty much washed up as a viable
- force in the pop/rock music world. Defection to FM, and a drifting
- format were sending listeners away in droves. Steve & Garry, during
- their tenure at 'LS, were unequivicaly the biggest draw the station had,
- including Lujack. S&G's ratings were several times Lujacks. Brandmeier, on
- the Loop-FM was also blowing Lujack away. In short S&G were, in effect,
- subsidizing the whole operation. However, they were treated not like heros,
- but as liabilities, suspended often, forced to play too many (bad) records,
- and saddled with restrictive censorship. Still, they were the most popular PM
- show among listeners under 45. WGN still maintained the edge, but it was S&G
- who led the masses BACK to the AM band, for entertainment they could not get
- anywhere else.
-
- After WLS suspended S&G permanently (they were not fired, they were
- suspended. Thus they could not work for a competitor for a period of months),
- .. they (WLS) continued to flounder around aimlessly until they landed on
- their 'Hot Talk' format. Later, it typical ABC-Cap Cities style, they fired
- their heaviest hitter, Bob Lassiter, for doing what they hired him to do, and
- lost another heavy hitter (Stacey Taylor) who saw the writing on the wall and
- quit. But this article is about S&G, not WLS.
-
- >As for WGN, they had a 'unbeatable' winner with Wally Phillips in the
- >mornings. NOBODY could touch him. He moved to afternoons and guess
- >what? The chemistry was altered and he is gone, WGN's morning lock is
- >gone forever and the station is worse off for it.
-
- [Ken]
- x Except it wasn't WGN's decision. Wally Phillips was tired of doing the
- x morning show. It was either move him to afternoons or lose him
- x altogether.
-
- [Bill]
- True enough. But it was also Brandmeier's (not the LOOP's) decision to
- switch HIS show from AM to PM drive. I only brought this up to illustrate
- what can happen when a station's chemistry is abruptly altered. As you point
- up, Ken, people listen to the LOOP from morning till night. They listen, not
- for music, but for the personalities. Air personalities on pop music
- stations can move about the schedule with minimal effect upon listener
- loyalty. However, people get into a routine with their personalities at the
- LOOP. They feel like they know these guys personally. Same thing is/was
- true of WGN. Phillips was not only a Chicago institution, but to hundreds of
- thousands of people, he was more like a friend with whom they woke up each
- morning. He was a habit with them. A habit that did not translate to the
- afternoons. WGN and Phillips never regained what they lost, and I wonder if
- something similar might happen to the LOOP-AM.
-
- I'll never understand why some managers and personalities in radio insist on
- mucking with a winning situation. All I can imagine is that they get too big
- in the head and feel that the listeners will follow them anywhere. In many
- cases that does not happen, like the WGN example. Once you force the people
- to change their habits, a good many of them will develop different habits and
- drift away to a competitor. I still remember the billboard for WJJD-AM after
- Wally Phillips moved away from his mammoth morning slot to afternoons. It
- read "LOST YOUR WALLY? -- FIND OUR CLARK". An ad for Clark Webber, 'JJD's
- morning man who began to sound a lot more like Wally after the switch.
-
- I am sure the AM-LOOP will survive and prosper anyway, the core fans will not
- leave, but I feel these changes will hurt them in the long run as some of the
- fringe 'habit' listeners use this as an excuse to look elsewhere. And, yes I
- do think that S&G are getting the short end of a stick that they were
- instrumental in creating. Again, their core listeners may follow them to the
- other end of the day, and another band, but many will not. Those who live
- outside the limited FM coverage area will have no choice. To add insult to
- injury, they are being replaced, not by an up-and-coming local personality,
- but by a satellite feed. I say that this adds insult to injury, not because
- I feel Howeird Stern is inferior to S&G, Mathews and the rest (although I DO
- feel that way), I say it because I think it stinks to replace a consistant
- local winner with a non-local satellite feed. I think Howeird SHOULD be on
- the air here, I just think he should have been put on the FM, and that S&G
- should have remained on the 50,000 watt AM. I hope all this 'meddling with
- success' does not backfire. It would be a real shame.
-
- William Pfeiffer
- Moderator - rec.radio.broadcasting - Internet Radio Journal
-
- --
- x Ken Konecki
- x e-mail:kenk@sdc.com -or- ...!uunet!tellab5!sdc!kenk
- x "Getting an inch of snow is like winning 10 cents in the lottery"
-
-