WKNR CONTACT NEWS: THE AWARD-WINNING NEWS TEAM circa 1967

WKNR CONTACT NEWS 1967 [A] Brochure

WKNR CONTACT NEWS 1967 [B] Brochure

WKNR CONTACT NEWS 1967 [C] Brochure

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A special THANK YOU to a Detroit radio friend (who expressed personal anonymity) for recently having donated this original (not a scan) WKNR Contact News brochure from 1967 for the site’s archive.

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The featured WKNR brochure was digitally restored in its entirety by Motor City Radio Flashbacks

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WKNR CONTACT NEWS 1967 [D] Brochure

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KEENER GOLD! THE WKNR ‘TOP 31’ MUSIC GUIDE: MAY 15, 1967

THE WKNR MUSIC GUIDE May 15, 1967

THE WKNR MUSIC GUIDE May 15, 1967

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The above WKNR chart was digitally restored by Motor City Radio Flashbacks

ON YOUR PC? To fully appreciate this WKNR Music Guide for the week of May 15, 1967 chart feature click on image 2x and open to second window. Click image anytime to return to NORMAL image size.

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A SPECIAL THANK YOU

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A sincere, thank you, Mrs. Patti Griggs. This featured presentation would have not been possible without your generosity, dedication, and your continuous support.

Above WKNR music chart courtesy of Mrs. Patti Griggs and the George L. Griggs estate.

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NEW! WKNR ‘KEENER 13’ BACK ON THE RADIO: BOB GREEN

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Audio recording was digitally remastered by Motor City Radio Flashbacks

Bob Green 1966

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NEW! A special thank you to site senior contributor Greg Innis, of Livonia, Mi., for having recently contributed the above featured WKNR audio memory to the Motor City Radio Flashbacks airchecks collection.

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NEW! WKNR KEENER 13 BACK ON THE RADIO: J. MICHAEL WILSON

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Audio recording was digitally remastered by Motor City Radio Flashbacks

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The featured audio presentation is two WKNR airchecks combined — as one — noted as dated.

WKNR J. MICHAEL WILSON 1965

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NEW! A special thank you to our senior contributor Greg Innis, of Livonia, Mi., for contributing the above featured WKNR audio memory to our Motor City Radio Flashbacks airchecks collection.

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FROM THE ARCHIVE | 50 YEARS AGO: WKNR SIGNS OFF INTO DETROIT RADIO HISTORY

WKNR TURNED OFF ON THE DIAL. WNIC TURNS ON. THIS DAY, APRIL 25, 1972

 

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DETROIT (April 25, 2022) — WKNR-AM, once the dominate radio station in Detroit in the 1960s, signed-off the 1310 AM frequency for the last time on this day, April 25, 1972.


WKNR AM-FM studio facility at 150001 Michigan Ave., Dearborn.

Formerly WKMH-AM, the station made the switch to “the new Radio 13” on October 31, 1963. By early 1964, WKNR was by then the most popular radio station in Detroit and remained No. 1 in the market, still holding that status throughout the first six months through 1967.

WKNR, affectionately known as “Keener 13,” began it’s eventual slide from Detroit radio dominance in April, 1967. It was during this time WKNR saw their challenge met head-on by their other rival located across the Detroit river, CKLW.

CKLW, during that time, was totally being restructured into a formidable radio powerhouse the Canadian station would become by year’s end.


WKNR: No. 1 in 1965, according to this trade article.

RKO radio consultant Bill Drake and Paul Drew were the two people responsible for the major changes at the “Big 8.” Paul Drew, the newly-appointed program director at CKLW, patterned the same “Boss Radio” format Bill Drake and Ron Jacobs had programmed on 93 KHJ in Los Angeles. By 1965’s end, Jacob’s KHJ was by then the No. 1 radio station in L.A.

But WKNR would not easily go down without a fight. While going against the “Big 8” giant, the legendary Detroit radio station’s ratings were found inside a downward decline, all the while battling against two major fronts.

CKLW officially became the No. 1 radio station in Detroit by November, 1967, according to a Radio Response Survey published in Billboard on November 4.

CKLW, with it’s massive 50,000-watts of transmitted radio power covered 3 Canadian provinces and at times, their night-time signal spanned across 28 States. In contrast, after sundown, WKNR’s 5,000-watt signal was commonly known to be absent from the radio dial in areas east of Detroit and, more so, deficient in night-time coverage and strength.

By now, major changes had begun at WKNR both in the management and personnel level. In January of 1968, J. Michael Wilson was by then doing mornings on Keener. Dick Purtan had left WKNR for Baltimore. By the first week of April 1968, WKNR radio greats Bob Green, Jerry Goodwin, Ted Clark and Scott Regen were no longer there. Sean Conrad, Edward Alan Busch, Tony Randolph, Ron Sherwood, and Dan Henderson were to be the new voices on Keener 13.


WKNR Music Survey chart, February 07, 1972

Despite the many changes in the Detroit radio market scene at the time, WKNR’s battle for survival against CKLW and FM’s “free-form” radio would drag on for five years.

Near the end of 1971, according to a Detroit Arbitron radio rating for the period Oct./Nov., WKNR-AM had a 6:00 a.m. to 12:00 a.m. cume of 377,300 in total listenership during a given broadcast day. For WKNR, those numbers represented a reduction down to a 15 to 12 total market share. In comparison, WABX-FM ranked just under in total rank, with a cume of 330,000 during those same hours.

WKNR, who by then revamped its playlist to include some album-oriented tracks, also made much of their attempt to pull away from the “same as” CKLW all-pop music format. No longer were the top 31 songs part of the playlist rotation. Slashed in half, WKNR’s new playlist focused primarily on the top 15 hits instead, while “previewing” the other 16 songs or so for the week.


WKNR ‘TOGETHER’ logo from 1970–1971.

By late 1971 and early 1972, WKNR now was promoting itself as the new “American Rock and Roll” radio station. An obvious affront towards the dominance that was CKLW located in Windsor, Ontario.

On the 100.3 FM side, the album rock-oriented ‘underground” format that was WKNR-FM was dropped after an unsuccessful run against WABX-FM. In it’s place, Stereo Island, an easy-listening music format, now found it’s place competing against WLDM-FM in Detroit.

But the changes were not enough, and ultimately, it was not to be.

In the end, WKNR became the former on a brisk, chilly but sunny morning that was Tuesday, April 25, 1972. Just before 8:00 a.m., WKNR deejay John McCrae’s voice breaks but regains composure as he announced the inevitable —

“…This is John McCrae, I’d like to take it upon my, myself to speak on behalf of all the people who made Keener what it, was and is. You know, Pete Seeger, with a little help from his cosmic friend, wrote it much better than I could, and the Byrds sing it, much better than I, could ever say it. So this time Detroit, we’d like to thank you, for making nearly a decade — a Keener season.”

THE LAST WKNR TOP 30 record the station played — before the 8:00 hour on the morning of April 25, 1972.

As the last few bars of the Byrd’s “Turn, Turn, Turn” began to fade, the magic that was once WKNR faded away with the song. But the memories, the events, the music, the great names, the faces and voices who crafted the Keener legacy a long time ago, remain in many a hearts and minds yet even still, to this day.

In 2002, thirty years since WKNR was last on the air, Scott Westerman and Steve Schram decided it was time someone gave WKNR it’s long due, with honors. Working together they packaged an incredibly amazing WKNR tribute site, aptly named, keener13.com.

This coming June, 2022, will mark two decades since the website’s creation. And the phenomenal story about this great Detroit radio legacy is still being told, remembered, and celebrated there on the world-wide web.

“Keener” was a radio station that went on to impact nearly a decade the many lives of a community it once served. It knew its listeners. And if only but for a short time, WKNR also was the station that, in all essence, knew the city of Detroit well by way of its prestigious award-winning news department.  Informing and staying “on top of the news” during the station’s Top 40 reign here during the 1960s and early-1970s.

As WKNR legend Bob Green previously commented on Scott Westerman’s keener13.com tribute page, quote, “The WKNR experience provided some of my happiest radio memories.”

We agree.

WKNR STATIONARY logo.1965

To a generation who grew up listening to top 40 radio in Detroit during the 1960s, one may actually say many of those “happiest radio memories” we recall having heard on Keener 13 belongs to many of us today, just the same.

WKNR. Those call letters would come to embody a sensational story.  Of a Detroit radio station’s historic top 40 rise to number one status — within 9 weeks — after having first signed on, October 31, 1963.

And it was a phenomenal Detroit radio story. Its legacy reverberates — again — still remembered and recalled, incredibly, to this day. Fifty years after having signed-off into Detroit radio history. April 25, 1972.

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Audio digitally enhanced by Motor City Radio Flashbacks

This article was initially published on Motor City Radio Flashbacks, ten years ago, April 25, 2012. View it HERE

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KEENER GOLD! THE WKNR TOP 31 HITS: MARCH 9, 1966

THE WKNR MUSIC GUIDE March 9, 1966
THE WKNR MUSIC GUIDE March 9, 1966

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The above WKNR chart was digitally restored by Motor City Radio Flashbacks

ON YOUR MOBILE DEVICE? Tap over WKNR chart image. Open to second window. “Stretch” image across your device screen to magnify for largest print view.

ON YOUR PC? Click on chart images 2x for largest print view.

 

A SPECIAL THANK YOU

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A sincere, thank you, Mrs. Patti Griggs. This featured presentation would have not been possible without your generosity, dedication, and your continuous support.

Above WKNR music chart courtesy of Mrs. Patti Griggs and the George L. Griggs estate.

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BROADCASTING | WKNR, KTHI-TV ARE SOLD FOR $7.5 MILLION . . . JUNE 24, 1968

Knorr Broadcasting Corp. Sale Of Dearborn WKNR 1310 Ends 22 Year Ownership Era in Motor City

 

 


 

Two station sales were reported last week for an aggregate of almost $7.5 million. Sold were WKNR Dearborn, Mich. (Detroit), by Knorr Broadcasting Corp. to Mission Broadcasting Co. for a price in the neighborhood of $6 million and KTHI-TV Fargo, N.D., by Fuqua Communications to the Morgan Murphy station group for $1.4 million.

Also last week the FCC approved, by a 4 to 1 vote, the transfer of WASH (FM) in Washington from Everett L. Dillard to Metromedia Inc. and the sale of  Metromedia’s WCBM-FM Baltimore to the A.S. Abell Co.

Included in the WKNR package is the purchase of WKHM-TV which holds a construction permit for channel 18 in Jackson, Mich., and an option to buy WKNR-FM Dearborn, at a later date.

WKNR, founded in 1946, is principally owned by Mrs. Fred Knorr of Bloomfield Hills, Mich., who also has controlling interest in Jackson Broadcasting Corp. (WKHM-AM-FM) Jackson. Other principals of the selling corporation include Walter Patterson, executive vice president, Charles J. Sitta, vice president, Robert M. Booth Jr., assistant secretary, and (renown veteran Detroit sportscaster) Van Patrick. Mr. Booth owns 33% of WSAL-AM FM in Logansport, Ind., and Mr. Patrick is a 50% owner of WSRF-AM-FM in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

WKHM-TV is owned by Jackson Broadcasting Corp. (51%) and Southern Michigan Broadcasting Corp. and Knorr Broadcasting Corp. (each 17%). Southern Michigan Broadcasting Corp. is the licensee of WKFR-AM-FM (also known as ‘Keener’ 14) Battle Creek, Mich.

Mission Broadcasting Co., controlled by Jack Roth and family, already owns KONG and KRRY-FM, both San Antonio, Tex., WRIZ Coral Gables, Fla., and is an applicant for an FM in Miami. The sale of Mission’s only television station, KSAT-TV (formerly KONO-TV) San Antonio to The Outlet Co. for $10.5 million was approved by the FCC last November (see BROADCASTING, Nov. 27, 1967).

WKNR is a daytimer on 1310 kc with 5kw. WKNR-FM, which Mission has an option to buy, is on 100.3 mc with7.1 kw. WKHM-TV is authorized to telecast with 1,084 kw visual from an antenna that is 1,050 feet above terrain.

KTHI-TV (ch.11), founded in 1959, is principally owned by J.B. Fuqua, president of Fuqua Communications Inc., a subsidiary of Fuqua Industries Inc. Other Fuqua holdings are WROZ and WTVW (TV), both Evansville, Ind., KXOA Sacramento, Calif., and WTAC Flint, Mich. Mr. Fuqua personally own 100% of WJBF (TV) Augusta, Ga.

The Morgan Murphy stations are controlled by Mr. Murphy, who also has interests in the Superior Evening Telegram, Manitowoc Herald Times, Two Rivers Reporter, Ashland Press, all Wisconsin, and the Virginia (Minn.) Mesabi News. The Murphy stations are WISC-TV Madison, Wis., KXYL-AM-FM-TV Spokane and KAPP (TV) Yakima, both Washington.

KTHI-TV has 304 kw visual and operates from an antenna 2,063 feet above ground. Both WKNR and KTHI-TV sales were handled by William T. Stubblefield, mediabroker.

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Note: The original article was edited and condensed by the author.

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Information, credit and news source: Broadcasting; June 24, 1968

 

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HAPPY NEW YEAR! WKNR TOP 113 HITS OF 1966: YOUR SOUVENIR EDITION

WKNR SOUVENIR EDITION Keener 113 Hits of 1966

WKNR SOUVENIR EDITION Keener 113 Hits of 1966

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The 113 records and 13 albums and their positions on this “Keener Hits of 1966” Music Guide were determined by mathematical computation, considering each record’s and album’s position and duration on each of the WKNR Music Guides during the past 52 weeks and does not necessarily reflect the comparative sales of these records and albums.

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ON YOUR PC?To fully appreciate this special WKNR Souvenir Edition chart feature, published in December 1966, click on image 2x and open to second window. Click image anytime to return to NORMAL image size.

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The above WKNR music chart was digitally restored by Motor City Radio Flashbacks

A SPECIAL THANK YOU

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A sincere, thank you, Mrs. Patti Griggs. This featured presentation would have not been possible without your generosity, dedication, and your continuous support.

Above WKNR music chart courtesy of Mrs. Patti Griggs and the George L. Griggs estate.

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THE ’67 KEENER KEYMEN OF MUSIC! ‘A WISH’ FOR THE NEW YEAR

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A special thank you to Keener legend Bob Green (Bob Green Productions) of Houston, Texas, for contributing this WKNR December 1967 audio memory with Motor City Radio Flashbacks 🙂

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Recording audio remastered by Motor City Radio Flashbacks

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WKNR TOP 30 ROCK ‘N’ ROLL HITS: DECEMBER 20, 1971

WKNR ROCK ‘N’ ROLL SURVEY GUIDE December 20, 1971

WKNR ROCK ‘N’ ROLL SURVEY GUIDE December 20, 1971

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The above WKNR chart was digitally restored by Motor City Radio Flashbacks

NOTE: During the course of WKNR’s nearly nine year charts run, there had been four appearance modifications in the chart’s designs. Last week, we featured the third (and final week) of that chart’s design run (December 13; see it here). The above December 20, 1971 chart debut’s the new look for the week’s survey. The “new look” ultimately would be the final template altogether for WKNR’s chart playlists. The Keener story bears noting the station would cease publication of their music charts by the end of March, 1972.

A MCRFB VIEWING TIP

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In Memory of George Griggs

A SPECIAL THANK YOU

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A sincere, thank you, Mrs. Patti Griggs. This featured presentation would have not been possible without your generosity, dedication, and your continuous support.

Above WKNR music chart courtesy of Mrs. Patti Griggs and the George L. Griggs estate.

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