WJR HOLDS NO. 1 SPOT IN A.M. OVER NO. 1 CKLW . . . JUNE 6, 1970

From the MCRFB news archives:

HOOPER RADIO RATINGS REPORT MARCH/APRIL 1970

 

 

 

 

Detroit WJR-AM morning ace J.P. McCarthy. (Click on image for larger view).

DETROIT — The March/April Hooper has these total rated time figures: CKLW 19.4; WJR 12.2; WWJ 10.2. It’s to early to tell what WKNR will do, but in this rating WABX-FM has a 6 between 7-11 p.m. Sunday through Saturday, while WKNR had a 4.4. As for WCAR, which is the Ken Draper-consulted station, it’s still pretty far back, except for being second each Sunday during midday. WDEE is already fairly far ahead of WEXL, it’s new Detroit country competition. But the market seems to belong for the moment to Paul Drew, program director of CKLW, except when J.P. McCarthy is on the air mornings over at WJR. McCarthy has a 20.9 in the morning slot over CKLW, who holds a very close second during that same time-frame at 20.1. McCarthy is undoubtedly one of the best morning air personalities anywhere because there are few men indeed who could beat the Drake-consulted formula anywhere in the RKO radio chain. McCarthy, incidentally, is one of the speakers slated to make a presentation at the Billboard Radio Programming Forum to be held at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel June 18 – 20 in New York. END.

 

(Information and news source: Billboard; June 6, 1970).

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ED BUSCH TALK SHOW – 1983

Ed Busch Talk Show Aircheck – 1983.mp3

Resume of Ed Busch

1968 – Present

Self-employed by Ed Busch Productions, Inc.

  • 2004 – 2005 – Producer, writer, interviewer for Black History Month television features for Cadillac and Chevrolet.  Identified subjects to be profiled within the African-American community, conducted interviews, wrote scripts for profiles and voiced the segments.  Aired on CBS 11 and channel 21 in Dallas/Fort Worth.
  • 1992 – 2003 – Voice, writer/producer of audio newsletters for Frito-Lay, Interstate Batteries and La Quinta Inns.  This consisted of interviews with the public, experts, authors and employees.
  • 1986 – 1993 KLIF-AM Dallas.  Talk show host and fill-in host.
  • 1986 – 1988 Consultant to KLIF-AM Dallas.  Responsible for helping change the station from a country music format to a talk format.
  • 1984 – 1986 Host/producer of the “Ed Busch Talk Show” national call-in talk show in joint venture with the Associated Press and carried by their network.
  • 1982 – 1983  “America Overnight” programmer/host of national call-in talk show.  Joint venture with RKO Networks and carried on 100+ stations.

1976-1982 WFAA-AM               Dallas                           Talk Show Host

1975-1976  KNBR (NBC O/O)  San Francisco                  Talk Show Host

1980s – 1990s freelance work:  Talk program consultant to WPLP-AM Tampa, WCKY Cincinnati, KFJZ –AM Fort Worth, KTBB-AM Tyler and KOA-AM Denver.  Hosted daily mid-day movie on Channel 27 (“Ed Busch and the Movies”) and a weekly TV version of my radio show on WFAA-TV Channel 8 with audience.

Recognition/Civic Highlights: San Francisco Bar Association media award for staging a trial on my program with the audience as the jury.  Dallas Independent School District award for swapping jobs with the Superintendent.  Dallas Observer voted Best Talk-Show Host.  Elected on the first-ever ballot to Texas Radio Hall of Fame.  Two-term president SPCA of Texas.  Mabank ISD bond committee member.

So adding to the earlier line up, it brings us to early  1968:  WTTO-AM Toledo

1968 WKNR FM

1969 WKNR-AM

1970, 1971: WCAR

1972 WWWW-FM

1973 (my first talk gig) WERE-AM Cleveland

And then to WFAA-AM…

Okay, I think that’s my whole life George.

Ed

PS, Dick Purtan once told me I was talented but my problem was  I’d go across the street for another $50 a week.  I guess he was right.

Ed graduated From Lincoln Park High School

W X Y Z Jingle – Lincoln Park High School.mp3

 

 

 

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UPDATED: WCAR DUMPS MOR FOR ROCK… NOVEMBER 6, 1971

From the MCRFB news archives:

WCAR DUMPS MOR CONSULTING SERVICE; NEW PROGRAM MANAGER NAMED

 

 

 

UPDATED: MCRFB has added three 1971 WCAR airchecks to the May 17, 2012 WCAR related post: Scott Regen, Ray Otis, Scott Regen.

In the left menu column, go to CATEGORIES and click under WCAR for quick access.

 

mcrfb.com

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WCAR DUMPS MOR FOR ROCK… NOVEMBER 6, 1971

From the MCRFB news archives:

WCAR DUMPS MOR CONSULTING SERVICE; NEW PROGRAM MANAGER NAMED

 

 

 

 

DETROIT — WCAR, the 50,000-watt station here, was revamped in a surprise move last week as the firm consulting the station, Programing db, was replaced by a full-time program manager, C. J. Jones. Neil McIntyre, the previous program director, resigned.

First move by the new program manager Jones was to chop the playlist to 30 records, while adding five new hitbounds. In addition the station will be playing selected cuts from two to five albums, The firm of Programing db had consulted the station for more than a year and only recently switched the format from MOR* to rock. Jones said that when he took over the station Monday (November 1), there were more than 70 records on the playlist. “The air personalities had format clocks that had no real direction and the station paid very little attention to mechanics.”

1130 WCAR-AM Detroit, with overnight shift personality Jim Keene in 1970. (Click on image for larger size).

Under Jones, WCAR air-personalities (and he plans to retain them all, if possible) will be allowed to rap between records to some extent — “say three seconds… or even 25 seconds… but I can’t visualize anything so super important that it needs 25 seconds to say it,” as Jones reiterated. Basically, the station will be a “more music” station, “but with personality, we’ve got some great radio professionals on the air here.” Air personalities include Dan O’Shea 6-10 a.m., Dave Prince 10-2 p.m., Scott Regen 2-6 p.m., Ron O’Brien 6-10 p.m., Ed Busch 10-2 a.m. and Jim Keene 2-6 a.m.

 

From the MCRFB Aircheck Library, featuring:

(Note: three airchecks when WCAR was MOR before the format switch).

WCAR.Scott.Regen.mp3

WCAR.Ray.Otis.1971.mp3

WCAR.Scott.Regen.9.8.1971.mp3

 

“WCAR is a real rarity–the best radio opportunity in the nation. It has a good frequency, 1130 on the dial, 50,000 watts day-timer and 10,000 watts during nights, and it’s well financed. The major station in the market, CKLW, is more or less a time and temperature station. I feel we can succeed by playing a hell of a lot of music per hour.” And he felt that the ruling calling for Canadian radio stations to play a hefty percentage of Canadian product would be to the advantage of WCAR.

Jones is actually a consultant himself. He took responsibility for taking over WFDF in Flint, Michigan, on October 1, 1970, and took it to No. 1 in the market. Currently, he also consults WJIM in Lansing, Mich. He will continue to serve these two stations as consultant, but his major priority at the moment will be focused on WCAR.

WCAR has acquired a semi-custom set of jingles from TM Productions in Dallas–a set using the basics as the jingles package featured on the Pacific & Southern Broadcasting stations.

Jones will be doing the music chores at WCAR himself. The rotation pattern at the station “will concentrate on the top 10 selling records, plus the up-and-coming records (meaning: the records going up the station’s playlist rather than those dropping down). Oldies will be will be programmed fairly heavily in the morning drive period and in the mid-day, “but the format is by no means an oldies format. We will be willing to break a new record if we feel it’s going to be a hit, but not five in a week,” he said, regarding the new records added each week. Both WFDF and WJIM has a playlist of 40 records, plus five new records per week. Each station’s music is picked separately — the other two stations have their own program and music directors. END.

 

(Information and news source: Billboard; November 6, 1971).

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AIRCHEX OF THE WEEK WITH JIMMY HAMPTON

Jimmy Hampton (Taylor) on WAAM-AM (Flint), 1965; Jimmy Hampton on WXYZ AM 1270, 1966; Jim Hampton on WJBK AM 1500, 1969; Jim Hampton on WCAR AM 1130; 1970

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jimmy Hampton 1270 WXYZ radio personality profile brochure from 1966  (Click on image for larger view)

… “What happened to the record? Ladies and Gentleman, did you see this? The record is warped. What do I do now? Should I just, can we shut the station off?”….

 

In 1958, the legendary call letters WXYZ made an abrupt transition to swing into a new Top 40 music station for Detroit. The 5,000-watter station, new in its concept, did quite well early on battling in head-to-head competition with its rival, WJBK 1500, another Top 40 formatted station. Both WXYZ and WJBK became a dominate force in Top 40 radio in the Motor City then, as both calls would go on to impact further the local pop music scene. Both stations fared very well in their respective broadcasting community service and, it was then that WXYZ grew in radio popularity, for the most part early on during the early 1960s.

During the time WXYZ (“it’s easy to remember”) had ushered in their Top 40 era in the late-1950s through the early 1960s, by now affectionately known as “Wixie,” the station gifted the Motor City in hiring some of the best radio personalities that ever graced the radio airways in the city’s history. Some of the legendary 1270 notables at the time included these great names: Fred Wolf, Paul Winters, Lee Alan, Dave Prince, Joel  Sabastian, Steve Lundy, Fred Weiss, Don Zee; and, for a short time in 1966, Joey Reynolds and Jim Hampton.

A native of Michigan, Jim Hampton grew up in Farmington and attended Farmington High School. Hampton honed in on his deejay skills early on by emceeing record hops at Farmington High, as added entertainment right after the school’s basketball games.

Jim Hampton on WXYZ 1270 “Personality Plus” radio in 1966 (Click on image for larger view)

Immediately after graduating high school, Hampton was hired at WXYZ as a ‘record spinner,’ spinning records and filling in commercials while assisting as board-op for Paul Winter, Lee Alan, Joel Sabastian and Dave Prince. According to Jim Hampton, that given opportunity ultimately became “such an amazing experience having to work with some of the best talents in broadcasting. All of them became my mentors, particular Dave, Joel and Lee.”

While greatly appreciative of his limited capacity in radio at WXYZ with a sense of purpose and desire to go well beyond, he landed his next radio job as a deejay “weekender,” which Jim described was located  “in the middle of a cow pasture,” at Ypsilanti’s Top 40 station WYSI (presently WSDS).

Having gained further radio fortitude and experience while at WYSI, Hampton’s next stop will be Flint’s own WTRX. In November of 1963, he ultimately was hired as a full-time deejay there by the station GM, who was also responsible giving him the name Jim Taylor as well.

A great studio shot of Jim Hampton on WXYZ radio in Detroit

According to “Jim Taylor,” eventually, Hampton’s tenure “at night was the number one” show during the evening hours he was on WTRX. Ever so popular in the Flint area, Terry Knight was already there at the Top 40 station when Hampton was hired at the time. Hampton’s and Knight’s popularity came to full prominence during the times they both shared together on WTRX.

In 1964, Jimmy prematurely left WTRX, having quit by having thought he had a new position lined up with his former first radio love, WXYZ in Detroit. The position open at WXYZ was granted to someone else instead, and Jim found himself without work. WTRX immediately filled his position there with Larry Morrow, who later would come to prominence as Duke Windsor on CKLW.

Moving on to Jackson, Michigan. Jimmy applied and was offered a radio position with WKHM, another Knorr Broadcasting station in Michigan at the time. According to Jim, that was short-lived, as he decided to make that daily long travel there from Farmington to Jackson, a travel prospect having proved difficult, as he recently described to mcrfb.com.

And so it’s back to Flint one more time. But this time it’s on WAMM with the afternoon drive. Now with dual duties there, Jim accepted the initial offer to be the station’s music director as well.

A year goes by. By early 1966, Jimmy Hampton finally gets that call he was waiting for. Lee Alan, program director at WXYZ radio at the time, was on the horn with Jim. That call, as Hampton related, for him, “it was a dream come true.” And Jim Hampton was only every bit nineteen-years of age.

WXYZ Sound Survey; September 12, 1966 (Click on image for larger view)

When that call was made, the ABC-owned radio station was the gold standard for broadcasting here in Detroit. Very prestigious in the field, WXYZ also was a television-affiliate and, as Jim Hampton had disclosed, the pay was above respectable for those who were hired to work for “Broadcast House,” located in Southfield. He disclosed his pay in 1966 at $165.00 a week, roughly $60,000 in today’s inflated money standards. In contrast, Joey Reynolds, the anticipated radio star WXYZ also hired in 1966, earned roughly “$325.00 per week” during the few months he was briefly there. Not bad.

But unfortunately, the “good times” would suddenly come to an abrupt end at “Wixie” radio. While still serving in the U.S. Army reserves, Hampton was called for active duty in late 1966, and would serve into the early months of 1967. During the six months he was away, changes were on the horizon that year for WXYZ. By the time he returned from the reserves, WXYZ dumped the Top 40 format for middle-of-the-road “beautiful music” instead, aptly christened as “The Good Life.” Lee Alan was gone by then, and while Joe Bacarella was now at the helms, Johnny Randall was hired to fill the void Hampton had left open during the time he was on reserve active duty. In the meantime, Jim filled the rest of his time on WXYZ-FM for the “obligatory six months after doing service.”

All in a row: Dave Prince, Danny Taylor, Pat Murphy, Jim Hampton, Lee Alan, Marc Avery; WXYZ 1966 (Click on image for larger view)

Once again in search for higher ground, in late 1967, Hampton was introduced by a fellow radio acquaintance to John Detz at underground-rocker WABX-FM in Detroit. He was hired for the afternoon drive. About the same time, Jim recalled he got a call from KQV in Pittsburgh. He was offered an on-air position from Mike McCormick, who was the program director at the ABC-owned Top 40 station there. “I couldn’t see myself in Pittsburgh,” Hampton recalls, “but I ultimately got off the air and instead became co-manager of sales at WABX-FM.”

Having set up the new sales department for WABX, Hampton was instrumental in hiring Jim Irrer and Richard Golden for the sales team. Jim went on to say, that, “they became legends and made the station very successful with advertising.”

During his stay at WABX, another radio opportunity was left open for Jim. Late in 1968, there had been talk in the trade that WJBK was soon dropping it’s “beautiful music” format, planning it’s return to Top 40 radio in 1969 for the 50,000-watt daytimer (WJBK’s transmitted-power dropped down to 10,000 watts at night).

Detroit radio broadcasting legend Jim Hampton, photo taken several years back . . .

The new 1969 WJBK lineup were to include Marc Avery, Conrad Patrick, Hank O’Neil, K.O. Bailey and Tom Dean. Jim Hampton was asked to join the team. He became the music director while doing the all-night show once again. But the format would bomb within a few months after its inception on WJBK. Instead, WJBK decided to go with country. As the rest the lineup goes, Jim found himself out of radio one more time.

But Jim’s radio career was far from over. Ken Draper, the legendary radio programmer who created WCFL in Chicago, was coming to Detroit’s WCAR. Jim’s meeting with Draper went well. He was hired as WCAR’s Production Director. It was a first for Jim, as he said this opportunity “really honed my skills as a producer and writer, which helped me later when I went to LA to become a producer for syndication. WCAR was an amazing station at the time with names like Ray Otis, Specs Howard, Dave Prince, H.B. Phillips, Dan O’Shea, Warren Pierce, Edward Alan Busch to name a few.”

Now nearing the end of 1969, Jim was getting a little restless with the Detroit radio market. The news director at WLS in Chicago, Phil Hayes, an old friend of Jim’s, decided to give him a call. He said Mike McCormick, the new PD, who previously invited Jim over to Pittsburgh’s KQV a few years back, was now looking for a new Production Director for the legendary Windy City station. Jim and his wife decided to leave Detroit that weekend and headed straight for Chicago. After having met Mr. McCormick during an outdoor social event, and “after a few drinks,” that same night, Jim agreed to accept the offered opportunity to work for WLS.

Jim Hampton today

In the ensuing years after his last radio stint at WLS in Chicago, Jim Hampton’s career in broadcasting excelled to greater heights with syndication marketing. While in LA perfecting his craft in production writing and radio syndication, Jim produced over 1,000 specials for the ABC Radio Network and has interviewed many musical stars for radio affiliates across the nation and around the globe as well. Many would include various recorded specials for national distribution home and abroad, including The John Lennon Story, The Bob Seger Story, The Beach Boys Story, The Eagles Story, Michael Jackson, Super ’70s and much, much more.

Today, Jim Hampton resides in the Los Angeles area. But his heart never abated no less the love he always held for the city he affectionately still calls home. A winner of the Aegis and Telly Awards, currently he is CEO of Greenhouse Marketing Group, a marketing and sponsorship sales company that represent many organizations, events and broadcast properties across the United States and worldwide.

 

MCRFB would like to express our sincere gratitude to Jimmy Hampton for contributing to this exhibit. All photos courtesy of Jim Hampton. We also would like to thank Jim for permitting this website to exhibit his sensational twelve-hour radio special “Radio Recall,” which Jim locally produced for WPON-AM in Pontiac, Michigan for the 2009 Memorial Weekend.

On behalf of George Griggs, Scott Westerman and mcrfb.com, Jim Hampton, thank you so much for sharing once again those wonderful Detroit radio memories you gave us all.

From the MCRFB Aircheck Library, featuring:
(Click on name for audio)

WAMM-AM 1420 (Flint) Jim (Taylor) Hampton 1966

WAMM-AM 1420 (Flint) Jim (Taylor) Hampton w/Stevie Wonder 1966

WXYZ-AM 1270 Jimmy Hampton August, 1966

WXYZ-AM 1270 Jimmy Hampton 1966

WJBK-AM 1500 Jim Hampton 1969

WCAR-AM 1090 Jim Hampton 1970

Addendum (Update): Special thanks once again to Jimmy Hampton for sharing with MCRFB the photos below, added to this exhibit September 8, 2012.

Jim Hampton on stage for a WABX-FM benefit event at the Grande Ballroom circa 1968 for The Salvation Army.
Two WXYZ-AM Detroit radio greats: Jim Hampton and Marc Avery circa 1969
Two WXYZ-AM Detroit radio greats: Jim Hampton and Marc Avery circa 1969.

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