Author Topic: Talk radio I listened to working mid-night shift.  (Read 92 times)

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Offline Bob Riebe

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Talk radio I listened to working mid-night shift.
« on: January 06, 2025, 01:22:52 PM »
For several years I had a night shift at a cabinet shop, where they had a radio to listen to at work.
These were were the people I listened to at work and for years later, both of us,  at night.
These were the years when Talk Radio first started to hit its stride, and most shows were not heavily biased one way or another.
When NBC got out of the radio business, it was a loss.

NBC Talknet was a nighttime programming block on the NBC Radio Network from the 1980s to the 1990s. It comprised several advice-oriented call-in talk shows, the most notable personalities being Bruce Williams and Sally Jessy Raphael. At a time when talk radio was a mostly local format, Talknet, among similar services, brought the format to a national level.
History

Prior to the late 1970s, AM radio was still largely dominated by all-music formats. Many individual radio stations had introduced some talk programming to their lineups, but it was almost universally locally produced. The concept of national talk radio, broadcast over a radio network, had not been tried. In 1975, Herb Jepko pioneered the first nationwide late-night call-in radio program heard on the Mutual Broadcasting System. Jepko was briefly succeeded on Mutual by Long John Nebel and Candy Jones in 1977. In January 1978, Larry King began broadcasting six hours of talk programming nightly on Mutual; King's program rapidly gained a large following, and his success proved to radio programmers that there was an audience for both late-night talk programming and national talk radio programming. NBC and ABC were quick to follow Mutual into the late-night talk radio market. ABC launched a nightly block of programming called TalkRadio and NBC launched Talknet.
Programming

At the time when Talknet was introduced, the Fairness Doctrine was still in place, requiring radio and television stations, among other things, to give equal time to both sides of controversial issues presented on the air. As a result, most radio stations avoided opinion programming and instead opted for call-in shows such as those featured on Talknet that were advice-oriented, with listeners calling in to ask questions and receive help with various issues and problems in their lives.

Talknet premiered on 21 stations nationwide on Monday, November 2, 1981. Early affiliates included WRC Washington; WIOD Miami; KXL Portland, Oregon; WJW Cleveland; KFBK Sacramento; WLW Cincinnati; KOB Albuquerque; WDAY Fargo; WOOD Grand Rapids; WCAR Detroit; and WSTV Steubenville, Ohio. Maurice Tunick was creator and executive producer.

    Tunick: "I came up with the name 'Talknet' and created and developed the 'Dear Abby' format for Sally Jessy Raphael which I tested earlier that year on NBC's WRC in Washington D.C. Prior to Talknet the only radio advice shows were hosted by clinical psychologists. My idea for Sally was 'a friend.' Over the back fence advice. Someone to talk to, someone who cares (as the theme music said). A daring, revolutionary idea at the time. Sally was a well-traveled but unknown broadcaster at the time. Sally's TV show would start a couple of years later (1983), a direct result of her Talknet success. Much forgotten is that Bruce Williams originally aired at 10 PM Eastern to Midnight, and Sally Jessy Raphael aired Midnight to 3 AM Eastern time. That quickly changed, I'm not sure how long, maybe a couple of months, to 7-10 PM and 10-1 AM. The shows were a hit out of the box and stations asked for earlier feed time. Weekend programming was added a year later with Bernard Meltzer and Dr. Harvey Ruben."

Bruce Williams answered questions from listeners on issues related to money, personal finance, investments, business, and other similar topics.

On December 5, 1982, Williams crashed while attempting to land his airplane in Princeton, New Jersey. Tunick: "He was critically injured and nearly clinically dead when he arrived at the Medical Center of Princeton. One week later Bruce was back on the air from his hospital room and did his show from there for a week before he was released and originated his program from home for the next three months. We were told at the time this was the first national radio show to originate from a hospital." (Williams later said he was in a coma for 20 days following the crash, making his return to radio more like a month after the crash.)

Williams was a tentpole of the Talknet lineup and continued with the service until its demise. Raphael, however, remained as host for a total of six years, from 1981-1987. Following her departure, several other hosts filled the 10 p.m.-1 a.m. slot, dispensing personal and relationship advice. These included Myrna Lamb, Lee Mirabal, Dara Welles and Neil Myers.

Bruce Williams retired from broadcasting on March 29, 2013.
Demise

Tunick: "I left Talknet in late 1985 after being recruited by ABC Radio where I became Vice-President of Programming for the failing ABC Talkradio Network. I stayed close to Sally during the next year, knowing she had one year remaining on her contract. In late 1986, the radio world was shocked to learn Sally Jessy Raphael was jumping to ABC Radio. I also hired the legendary Tom Snyder to make Sally (7-10) and Tom (10-1) the new bookends of nighttime listening." Neither show achieved the success of NBC Talknet. Both Snyder and Raphael left ABC Radio to focus on television projects. Deborah Norville joined ABC shortly after her stint on the Today Show.

In 1986, NBC, along with its parent company, RCA, was purchased by General Electric. GE absorbed RCA primarily to acquire the NBC television network, and shortly thereafter liquidated most of RCA's various other divisions. The NBC Radio Network was sold to Westwood One. NBC radio continued as a programming service of Westwood One through 1989. After that date, the NBC brand name continued to be used on some programming, but NBC radio no longer existed as a separate programming service. Westwood One continued the "Talknet" programming through the mid-1990s, but eventually dropped the "Talknet" name as well as the 10 p.m.-1 a.m. personal advice programming. The time slot was later held by Jim Bohannon, who succeeded Larry King on the Mutual Broadcasting System (Westwood One acquired Mutual in 1985 and retired the Mutual name in 1999), until Bohannon’s death in 2022.[1]

Bruce Williams remained with Westwood One hosting his own individual program from 7-10 p.m. for some years more, but eventually moved to the Talk America Radio Network (then owned by IDT) on June 25, 2001, and later Business Talk Radio Network until 2008. From 2008 to 2010, he self-syndicated the show, which included a relay on the Sirius-XM channel also called "America's Talk" as well as on the Cable Radio Network.

Raphael focused her efforts on television, but after her TV show was canceled, relaunched her show as "Sally JR's Open House", originally an Internet-only effort, but later transferred to radio syndication. Raphael's last radio show aired July 7, 2008.

Offline ironglow

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Re: Talk radio I listened to working mid-night shift.
« Reply #1 on: January 07, 2025, 03:03:33 AM »
  Giving away my age..  I always liked Paul Harvey..a man who was very intelligent, ghracious and full of good old common sense.  However the one I consider his predecessor was popular when there was ONLY radio..long before TV was around.

  This nan was named Galen Drake..same style and wisdom sharing style as Paul Harvey, but only during the years when radio was king..

   One of the intriguing things about the age of radio, was the "sound effects", which made the stories really "come to life".

  I remember as a youngster, when my mother going about her daily choes had Galen Drake and the old time "soap operas' on the radio.

  Curiously, those old time radio soap operas, in contrast to the soaps of the TV era, strove to promote decency in life..the hero/heroine struggling
  through trials and difficulties, trying to reach a noble ideal.. A far cry from today's TV soaps !

  Below see photo of Galen Drake..an dyes, the cigarette was not considered "offensive" back then. Note the room decor..

  https://www.gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/american-radio-presenter-galen-drake-presenter-of-radio-news-photo/1319321391

   
If you don't want the truth, don't ask me.  If you want something sugar coated...go eat a donut !  (anon)

Offline Bob Riebe

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Re: Talk radio I listened to working mid-night shift.
« Reply #2 on: January 07, 2025, 08:54:20 AM »
I read his bio on the Wiki, interesting fellow.

Radio theater , which I loved, was still around until the early nineties. It was part of when there were multiple broadcast networks on radio as there were on TV.
Up here when the networks started abandoning privately owned radio or buying them outright, it started to  go away.
It was when stations were taken over as just part of a conglomeration rather than being an individually owned station competing for listerners against other singular network stations, that radio theater started to disappear.

You have made me yearn for the days past; now, if one can get AM, and the local station has not been swallowed by a conglomeration,  late night radio still has spurts of the  old days, but that is slowly going away.
The half hour, or more TV shows that are nothing but looong commercials are irritating, now that the same disguating cancer has infestsx AM radio, it is asininely pathetic. :-\ :-\ :-\

Offline ironglow

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Re: Talk radio I listened to working mid-night shift.
« Reply #3 on: January 07, 2025, 04:58:39 PM »
  Yes..my radio is AM..talk shows.  If I were more musically inclined, I may tune in FM..but a couple Christian programs is all I choose on FM.

  They say AM may soon be made completely obsolete...sad..

   My son travels a great deal during the day..going from assignment to assignment, so he has a subscription to Sirius radio in all his vehicles.

  Those stations have some good programming, but one has to pay for it.
If you don't want the truth, don't ask me.  If you want something sugar coated...go eat a donut !  (anon)
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