"John Byrns" <
byr...@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message
news:byrnsj-65DC1A....@news.giganews.com...
It was typical for stations to sign off at midnight on
most nights and sign back on at 6 or 7 AM. The reason was
simple; not enough overnight audience to justify the cost.
Some larger stations operated later especially on Saturday
night carrying band remotes until perhaps 2AM. A few,
mostly big city stations, stayed on 24 hours a day but were
usually off on Sunday night for maintenance.
The change came at the time Conelrad got started since
a "key" station in each Conelrad area had to be on the air
at all times. In Los Angeles, the key station was KFI and
the back-up KMPC. KFI began to operate 24 hours a day and
when off for maintenance on Sunday night KMPC would be on.
Most other stations continued to sign off at fairly early
hours. The exception as KGFJ, a 250 Watt station in downtown
L.A. KGFJ had an unlimited license and operated 24 hours a
day, except Sunday night, for many years. They served the
small but significant audience that was up all night. KGFJ
had astonishing coverage for its low power and flat top
antenna (which is still up although not used) on top of a
building.
When KFI went on the air overnight they originally
intended to just play records but AT&T had just come out
with telephone couplers so that phone calls could be put on
the air. I am not certain how it started but the overnight
man, Ben Hunter, began to take calls from listeners and
developed what I am sure was the first "talk" show. He
called it the Nightowl program and KFI copyright the name.
Ben Hunter stayed on the air until he began to have heart
problems. He later was an afternoon host on KTTV
television. I met him a couple of times but never knew him.
Since TV has come up in this thread, most early TV
stations ran very limited hours, mostly when they thought
they could get the maximum audience. In Detroit, where I
come from, there were only three TV stations (CKLW TV was
not on the air until years later) and none came on before
about noon or else came on for a couple of hours in the
morning and then broadcast a test pattern until early
afternoon when programming began.
I don't know about Detroit radio since I was a little
kid and was in bed asleep before any of them signed off.
These days the philosophy is to keep people tuned in to
a particular channel all the time. That's the reason for
the late-late-late shows on the networks; the idea is that
when people turn their sets on in the morning they will
still be tuned to whatever they were on the night before.
Broadcasting is primarily in the business of selling the
audience to advertisers and the expansion of both radio and
TV has now diluted the audience so much that they are all
struggling.
--
--
Richard Knoppow
Los Angeles
WB6KBL
dick...@ix.netcom.com