
Walker was on top of his game in 1978, as you can hear in this unscoped aircheck from March, 1978.
I was there. I watched. I listened. This is a compilation of video and audio from the places I've lived, when I lived there.
News and audio clips from Atlanta (1988-1991), Miami (1980-1988, 1991-1995), London (1999-2002), New York (1956-1979), Richmond (1995-1999), Syracuse (1975-1979), and Tampa (2001-present).
Date: Friday, March 11, 2005I've always wondered where Curry went, and this is the best I can do, from FMBQ:
Kid Curry is approaching his 15th year at WPOW (Power 96), having risen to PD in 1996 after arriving in 1990 as a DJ. What's even more impressive is that since 1990, WPOW has changed its tune several times. "We've gone from freestyle to dance to hip-hop," Curry says. "We change to what our target is into."
He calls working with new talent one of the highlights of his career. "I get to program a legendary radio station with the best GM in the business [Greg Reed] and the most talented group of fresh radio people I've ever worked with," he says. "As of today, I only have one person on my on-air staff that has ever worked at a radio station. For all but him, it's their first radio job, so there are none of the ghosts of past PDs. They've only learned one style?ours."
Curry isn't concerned about satellite radio. "There's a billion radios out there in America," he says. "It's going to take some time for satellite to catch those kind of numbers. There's 4 million satellite subscribers, but there's about 275 million of us. And remember, content is king!"?
August 15, 2006
Tom Calococci emerges as OM of Rhythmic/CHR WPOW (Power 96)/Miami. Calococci, most recently PD at KKBT/Los Angeles, fills the nearly year-long void left vacant when Kid Curry exited for health issues.
By the way, the aircheck is actually from 9/18/1984, not '83, since Cox was actually fired from Y-100 in October 1983, and was hired by I-95's Keith Isley soon after.Yeah, I'm back. Another summer vacation to transfer all my cassettes to a digital format. I hope I can finish by August.
I-95 was hot from late 1981 until about 1983. It caught Y-100 off guard, but the mighty WHYI successfully fought off a station that took advantage of the demise of 96X.Here's an article about Cox.
I-95 went back to Zeta after WSHE exploded in the ratings with a Hot Rock format.
I-95 could have stayed in the CHR fight, but it was really a flash-in-the-pan station with a mountain to climb against “America’s Megastation” in a market about to rapidly change with the arrival of Cuban immigrants and a whole generation of high-school age offspring from those who fled Cuba in the early 1960s.
The result? Hot 105 shot to No. 1, and then Power 96 took over.
Y-100 stumbled in the mid 1980s because it suddenly had an identity crisis, and by 1988 eventually failed in its valiant effort to be the “everything” station Z100 was in New York.
But a white rock n roll jock (Sonny Fox) anchoring mornings on a Top 40 station balancing Erotic Exotic records with Heart and Van Halen – even with Miami Vice the hottest thing on TV – just couldn’t compete with Power’s dance music and “She’s Only Rock n Roll.”