Ready to have more fun than you've ever had in radio? Join our morning show at We're looking for a fun and energetic co-host for one of radio's most creative and visible morning shows. You must be intelligent, outgoing, out-spoken, street-credible, quick witted, enthusiastic, team oriented, determined, detail oriented, a pop culture fanatic and fun.
You will need to be social media fluent and PPM friendly. You must be ready and willing to share your life with our growing audience. You should be brilliant at the basics of great radio and have some production and web skills. You'll have plenty of opportunities for endorsements and appearances.
If you live the lifestyle of a year old woman, you watch the shows, love the music, see the movies and have no secrets on the air, and love to work to no end to continue our winning streak, we are meant for each other. Note to candidates applying: When faxing, mailing or emailing your resume, please state where you heard about this job opening.
Show us you've got a strong personality and send us your resume, mp3 aircheck, photo required and philosophy e-mail preferred to cohost kdwb. Song Charts Airplay Add Board. All Access 10 Questions.
It broadcasts in 5. The station is owned by Clear Channel Communications. The big station began as a collaboration between three brothers who named it WCOW , and it played country western and old-time music. In the early days, WCOW, South Saint Paul original city of license and former home to one of the world's largest volume stockyard and slaughterhouses at the time , signed on with a cowbell.
The application was approved and on the 15th of March , WAVN, Stillwater signed on the air as a watt non-directional day-timer with watt pre-sunrise authority in Stillwater , Minnesota. The Tedesco brothers attempted to get into television on channel 17 the next year, but financial backing fell through.
The channel 17 allocation was taken by Twin Cities Public Television in The owner, Midcontinent Media, sold the property. Paul - Minneapolis", began its long uninterrupted run as a pop music station. Brock, Machine Gun M. Aired Sunday evenings and for over ten years the highest rated program in the Twin Cities market.
American Top was hosted from by Jamestown, North Dakota born, Shadoe Stevens, who encouraged a University of North Dakota classmate that he should give radio a try. On "Star Jim Ladd's Innerveiw.
Douglas, Michael J. Elston, Scott Harris and Bill Allard. After two years of wrangling and obtaining start-up funds, WPBC officially signed on the air on October 18, The station in the early years played a variety of MOR pop music and standards, and was even considered an innovator in the concept of singing jingles.
Fairchild subsequently dismissed the entire staff and overhauled both stations. When the oldies format of WYOO started to slide in the ratings, more middle of the road MOR music was added, but ratings slid even further. Fairchild contemplated selling the station. Station management decided to flip to a Top 40 format. The new station was christened "U" and debuted on August 26, during a remote broadcast from the Minnesota State Fair. The new U quickly became the topic of conversation throughout the area with its rowdy, outrageous mix of Top 40 and hard rock.
The music played was "carted" recorded onto magnetic tape on U. A amongst Top large or major market outlets. Though neither station's frequency had anything to do with the number , the placement on the dial at AM and Rob Sherwood assembled a talented air-staff composed of very smart, energetic, dedicated disc jockeys that ate, breathed and dreamed radio when they slept.
The Twin Cities were reeling from the impact of the year "official involvement" August in The Vietnam War. The O. Senate,the legal overseeing authority, were televised live on all broadcast networks month after month, pre-emting all "normal, regular schedule broadcasts", years before any cable TV in the Twin Cities resulting in the first resignation of a sitting U. Spiro Agnew ] and Nelson Rockefeller after Nixon resigned never elected, they were appointed.
Unemployment and runaway inflation during the Nixon-Ford era recession As hippy-dippy weatherman comedian George Carlin said what the country needs is a good high. For many Twin Cities teenagers and young adults , the twin cities top radio battle played out before their eyes and ears during the otherwise less turbulent mid's, was that "high".
The owners of the four stations maybe didn't pocket much money due to high cost promotions, but they gained loyal, active and involved radio listeners. During the next two years, U quickly became one of the most talked-about radio stations in the Twin Cities. U and the others in the four horse Top race were talked about, watched, listened to air-checks were being mailed, so-called listen line numbers were being leaked out analyzed and scrutinized by almost all radio and record professionals coast-to-coast.
Ownership of the U was not to last forever. AM music stations also desired to transition to the increasingly popular FM dial. In early , Fairchild Industries decided to put both stations on the market. The P. The group of engineers from competing stations worked well enough together that some are still working together today February at the Shoreview, Minnesota Tower Facility.
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