User:Levdr1lp/sandbox
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chad_Zumock&direction=next&oldid=416169698
May not meet WP:BASIC. Only five sources are both independent of subject and cover him in any detail. Three are from The Plain Dealer (arguably counts as single source), all along the lines of "local comedian performs at local venue" or "local comedian hired as cohost for local radio show." Two sources cover subject's OVI arrest (& subsequent acquittal) which resulted in local radio station opting not to renew his contract. Four sources are from college student newspaper (which subject formerly wrote for), mostly some combination of "local comedian & Kent State alum performs at local venue" or "local comedian & Kent State alum hired for local radio show".
All remaining sources either mention subject only in passing, or have professional connection to subject: website for radio show where subject served as cohost; a promotional website for book subject contributed to; online schedules for comedy clubs where subject has perform; links to subject's own website and/or podcast; etc.
Does not meet WP:ANYBIO -- subject has not won or been nominated for a "well-known or significant award". Has not made "widely recognized contribution" to fields of comedy, radio, etc.
Does not meet WP:ENTERTAINER -- subject has not had "significant roles in multiple notable films, television shows, stage performances..." Does not have "large fanbase or 'cult' following". Has not made "unique, prolific or innovative contributions" to comedy, radio, etc.
Callsign | Frequency | Band | City | State | Network status |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
WTAM | 1100 kHz | AM | Cleveland | Ohio | Flagship |
WMMS | 100.7 MHz | FM | Cleveland | Ohio | Flagship |
WAKR | 1590 kHz | AM | Akron | Ohio | Affiliate |
WCMI | 1340 kHz | AM | Ashland | Kentucky | Affiliate |
W227CI | 93.3 MHz | FM | Catlettsburg | Kentucky | n/a (WCMI simulcast) |
WFUN | 970 kHz | AM | Ashtabula | Ohio | Affiliate |
WZOO-FM | 102.5 MHz | FM | Ashtabula | Ohio | Affiliate |
WHBC | 1480 kHz | AM | Canton | Ohio | Affiliate |
WCSM | 1350 kHz | AM | Celina | Ohio | Affiliate |
WCSM-FM | 96.7 MHz | FM | Celina | Ohio | Affiliate |
WCKY | 1530 kHz | AM | Cincinnati | Ohio | Affiliate |
WSAI | 1360 kHz | AM | Cincinnati | Ohio | Affiliate |
WVKO | 1580 kHz | AM | Columbus | Ohio | Affiliate |
WXZX | 105.7 MHz | FM | Columbus | Ohio | Affiliate |
WJER | 1450 kHz | AM | Dover-New Philadelphia | Ohio | Affiliate |
WEOL | 930 kHz | AM | Elyria-Lorain | Ohio | Affiliate |
WFOB | 1430 kHz | AM | Fostoria | Ohio | Affiliate |
WRVC | 930 kHz | AM | Huntington | West Virginia | Affiliate |
W231BS | 94.1 MHz | FM | Huntington | West Virginia | n/a (WRVC simulcast) |
WCIT | 940 kHz | AM | Lima | Ohio | Affiliate |
WWSR | 93.1 MHz | FM | Lima | Ohio | Affiliate |
WRGM | 1440 kHz | AM | Mansfield | Ohio | Affiliate |
W247BL | 97.3 MHz | FM | Mansfield | Ohio | n/a (WRGM simulcast) |
WMOA | 1490 kHz | AM | Marietta | Ohio | Affiliate |
WJAW-FM | 100.9 MHz | FM | McConnelsville | Ohio | Affiliate |
WLKR-FM | 95.3 MHz | FM | Norwalk | Ohio | Affiliate |
WABQ | 1460 kHz | AM | Painesville | Ohio | Affiliate |
WLEC | 1450 kHz | AM | Sandusky | Ohio | Affiliate |
WQKT | 104.5 MHz | FM | Wooster | Ohio | Affiliate |
WNCD | 93.3 MHz | FM | Youngstown | Ohio | Affiliate |
temp
[edit]I recently reopened a sockpuppet investigation that dates back to 2013. Multiple socks were uncovered as a result of that original case, including at least two contributors to this article. One of the confirmed socks repeatedly removed biographical information about creators Jerry Siegel & Joe Shuster, specifically that they were high school students living in Cleveland, Ohio, when the pair first created Superman in the early 1930s. I am not a member of the comics WikiProject, nor do I make a habit of editing comic book content-- I tend to focus on radio & rock music articles, and how they intersect with Cleveland content. But the New York Daily News ran a story in April 2013 about Superman's "Cleveland roots", coinciding to the 75th anniversary of Action Comics #1 (Superman's debut in a major publication). That's basically what first brought me to this article in 2013, and later led to the original 2013 SPI case.
Fast-forward to a few weeks ago, and I notice that what little content on Cleveland there was had been removed from the article. I immediately suspected that the original sock-master from 2013 was back, and so I reopened the 2013 SPI case. And that's where I went wrong. Let me be clear: the case was closed for insufficient evidence because I acted in haste. Sock accusations are serious, and they require serious evidence (I thought the apparent connection to past socks at this article was sufficient, but I was wrong- lesson learned).
Which brings us to today. Personally, I think it's remarkable that two high school students from depression-era Cleveland, Ohio, created such an iconic and enduring character. But I'm biased. I'm from Northeast Ohio, and I'm also a member of the Cleveland WikiProject. I get it if most other contributors around the world aren't impressed by the Cleveland connection. At the same time, this article is meant to be a comprehensive overview about of a fictional character. Details can be added to Publication history of Superman. I really do think, however, that a simple reference to the fact these two guys were in high school in Cleveland -- and not adult professionals working for a publisher in New York City, the traditional media capital -- is entirely appropriate for this main article, too. The last relevant discussion apparently was Talk:Superman/Archive_3#Lead_change. Based on that discussion, I restored the information to the "creation and conception" subsection. That was also before I reopened the SPI case.
Just days ago Rolling Stone noted that the character was "dreamed up by two Jews from Cleveland".
After a case I recently reopened at SPI was closed for insufficient evidence, I'm hesitant to take action without input from an experienced editor, ideally an admin or clerk familiar w/ SPI cases. Please share your thoughts, if any.
Once again, an editor ("User1") has removed a specific part of the creators' biographical (high school) info from the Superman article. As an admin rightly pointed out, that alone means nothing, and I would've ignored it the last time around had socks not been uncovered in 2013 for similar edits. However, I did notice that the editor who removed the content recently had a redlink to his user page last week. Now the user page exists, and it was created and then blanked by a different user. It continues on from there:
- User page for User3 is created by User4 (marked as vandalism, but still odd).diff
- User2 & User3 have used similar edit summaries at 2016 Brussels bombing- capitalized first word, ending in period.[4][5]
- User2 & User3 have
blocked editor - last edit 24-April
nfl temp
[edit]Season | AFL Champions | NFL Champions |
---|---|---|
1960 | Houston Oilers (Tennessee Titans) | Philadelphia Eagles |
1961 | Houston Oilers (Tennessee Titans) | Green Bay Packers |
1962 | Dallas Texans (Kansas City Chiefs) | Green Bay Packers |
1963 | San Diego Chargers | Chicago Bears |
1964 | Buffalo Bills | Cleveland Browns |
1965 | Buffalo Bills | Green Bay Packers |
Season | AFL Champions | NFL Champions | Super Bowl Champions |
---|---|---|---|
1966 | Kansas City Chiefs | Green Bay Packers | Green Bay Packers |
1967 | Oakland Raiders | Green Bay Packers | Green Bay Packers |
1968 | New York Jets | Baltimore Colts (Indianapolis Colts) | New York Jets |
1969 | Kansas City Chiefs | Minnesota Vikings | Kansas City Chiefs |
1966
- Green Bay Packers (WIN 1966 & 1967) ---> NFL: 1929 · 1930 · 1931 · 1936 · 1939 · 1944 · 1961 · 1962 · 1965 · 1966* · 1967* · Super Bowl: 1966 (I) · 1967 (II) · 1996 (XXXI) · 2010 (XLV)
- New York Jets (WIN 1968) ---> AFL: 1968* · Super Bowl: 1968 (III)
- Kansas City Chiefs (WIN 1969 & LOSS 1966) ---> AFL: 1962 · 1966* · 1969* · Super Bowl: 1969 (IV)
- Oakland Raiders (LOSS 1967) ---> AFL: 1967* · Super Bowl: 1976 (XI) · 1980 (XV) · 1983 (XVIII) ·
- Baltimore/Indianapolis Colts (LOSS 1968) ---> NFL: 1958 · 1959 · 1968* · Super Bowl: 1970 (V) · 2006 (XLI)
- Minnesota Vikings (LOSS 1969) ---> NFL: 1969*
media cle temp
[edit]Call sign | Virtual channel | Resolution | Network |
---|---|---|---|
WKYC | 3.1 | 1080i | NBC |
3.2 | 480i | Justice Network | |
3.3 | 480i | n/a (local programming) | |
WEWS-TV | 5.1 | 720p | ABC |
5.2 | 480i | Cozi TV | |
5.3 | 480i | Laff | |
WJW | 8.1 | Fox | |
8.2 | Antenna TV | ||
W16DO-D | 16.1 | Retro TV | |
WDLI-TV | 17.1 | TBN | |
17.2 | The Church Channel | ||
17.3 | JUCE TV / Smile of a Child TV | ||
17.4 | Enlace USA | ||
17.5 | TBN Salsa | ||
WOIO | 19.1 | CBS | |
19.2 | Me-TV | ||
WVPX-TV | 23.1 | Ion Television | |
23.2 | Qubo | ||
23.3 | Ion Life | ||
23.4 | ShopTV | ||
23.5 | QVC | ||
23.6 | HSN | ||
WVIZ | 25.1 | PBS | |
25.2 | The Ohio Channel | ||
25.3 | World | ||
25.4 | Create | ||
25.9 | n/a (local programming) | ||
WEKA-LD | 41.1 | Newsmax TV | |
41.2 | SBN | ||
41.3 | Buzzr | ||
41.4 | Liquidation Channel | ||
41.5 | QVC | ||
41.6 | The Country Network | ||
WUAB | 43.1 | MyNetworkTV | |
43.2 | Bounce TV | ||
43.3 | Grit | ||
WCDN-LD | 53.1 | Daystar | |
WBNX-TV | 55.1 | The CW | |
55.2 | n/a (local programming) | ||
55.3 | Movies! | ||
55.4 | Heroes & Icons | ||
WQHS-DT | 61.1 | Univision | |
61.2 | UniMas | ||
61.3 | GetTV | ||
61.4 | Escape |
temp 516
[edit]- M-F
- 5 hrs talk - Rover
- 4 hrs talk - Alan Cox
- 4 hrs rock - Maria
- 5 hrs rock - Corey Rotic
- 6 hrs rock - Premium Choice
- 9 hrs talk (x5) ---> 45 hrs talk
- 15 hrs rock (x5) ---> 75 hrs rock
- Sa
- 2 hrs talk - Rover
- 22 hrs rock
- 2 hrs talk
- 22 hrs rock
- Su
- 2 hrs talk - Alan Cox
- 1 hr public affairs
- 21 hrs rock
- 2 hrs talk
- 1 hr public affairs
- 21 hrs rock
- Weekly -- 49 hrs talk, 118 hrs rock, 1 hrs public affairs
- Annually 364 (Weekly x52) -- 2548 hrs talk, 6136 hrs rock, 52 hrs public affairs
8736 (24 x 7 x 52)
- Annually 365 -- 2548 + (2548/8736)*24 hrs talk; 6136 + (6136/8736)*24 hrs rock; 52 + (52/8736)*24 hrs public affairs
- Annually 365 -- 2548 + 7 hrs talk; 6136 + 16.857 hrs rock; 52 + 0.143 hrs public affairs
- Annually 365 -- 2555 hrs talk; 6152.857 hrs rock; 52.143 hrs public affairs ************
8760 (8736 + 24)
- RATIO talk ---> 2555/8760 = 29.167%
- RATIO rock ---> 6152.857/8760 = 70.238%
- RATIO public affairs ---> 52.143/8760 = 0.595%
Current programming
[edit]WWGK mostly airs syndicated programming from ESPN Radio, including Mike and Mike in the Morning, The Herd with Colin Cowherd, and SVP & Russillo; in addition, WWGK airs The Jim Rome Show via Westwood One. The station also airs weekly programs hosted by local ESPN Cleveland personalities Tony Grossi, Brian Windhorst, and Alicia Scicolone.[1][2][3] During football season, ESPN Cleveland personality Mark "Munch" Bishop hosts Falcon Football Weekly, a show focused on Notre Dame College of Ohio football. WWGK also airs: The Urban Meyer Call-In Show, a weekly update with the Ohio State football head coach via the Ohio State IMG Sports Network; and Varsity Chalk Talk, a weekly program on high school football in Northeast Ohio.[4][5][6]
The station airs a range of play-by-play programming from ESPN Radio, including MLB on ESPN Radio and NBA on ESPN Radio, as well as coverage of NCAA football and men's basketball. WWGK also airs local coverage of Notre Dame College of Ohio football (although WWGK is a daytime-only station, the WWGK online feed continues to stream games into the night). The station also shares coverage of the MAC men's and women's basketball tournaments with sister station WKNR.[6][7]
- ^ "ESPN Radio Schedule". ESPNRadio.com. ESPN Internet Ventures. 2014. Retrieved November 10, 2014.
- ^ Press release (July 18, 2013). "The New Cleveland Browns Daily". ESPNCleveland.com. Good Karma Brands and ESPN Internet Ventures. Retrieved November 10, 2014.
... ESPN Cleveland will move the Jim Rome Show to ESPN 1540 KNR2 so that all three hours of the show will air contiguously.
- ^ ESPN Cleveland staff (October 10, 2014). "Brian Windhorst to join ESPN Cleveland's Cavaliers Coverage". ESPNCleveland.com. Good Karma Brands and ESPN Internet Ventures. Retrieved November 10, 2014.
- ^ Press release (July 23, 2013). "ESPN Cleveland Extends Partnership with Ohio State IMG Radio Network". ESPNCleveland.com. Good Karma Brands and ESPN Internet Ventures. Archived from the original on September 17, 2013. Retrieved November 10, 2014.
- ^ Hare, Steve (July 13, 2013). "Varsity Chalk Talk to air live on ESPN Cleveland". OhioVarsity.com. Ohio Varsity. Retrieved November 10, 2014.
- ^ a b "KNR2 Weekly Broadcast Schedule". ESPNCleveland.com. Good Karma Brands and ESPN Internet Ventures. 2014. Retrieved November 10, 2014.
- ^ Snow, Skip; Barch, Andy (July 10, 2010). "Letter-perfect: NDC on ESPN". NotreDameFalcons.com. Notre Dame College Athletics. Retrieved November 10, 2014.
The Falcons' Aug. 28 opener against Mercyhurst (Pa.) will be broadcast live on ESPN 850 AM WKNR, and ensuing games will be aired on ESPN 1540 KNR2. All 11 games will also be streamed live on espncleveland.com.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
temp section
[edit]Kleps, Kevin (October 16, 2014). "Cleveland Cavs games will be broadcast in Spanish on 87.7 FM La Mega". CrainsCleveland.com. Crain Communications. Retrieved October 16, 2014. The Cavs and Murray Hill Broadcasting's 87.7 FM La Mega are partnering to broadcast all of the team's games in Spanish, the Cavs announced on Thursday, Oct. 16. ... Rafael Hernandez Brito, the Spanish play-by-play voice of the Brooklyn Nets the previous two seasons, will call the Cavs' games for La Mega.
Press release (October 16, 2014). "Cavs Games to be Broadcast in Spanish". NBA.com/Cavaliers. NBA Media Ventures, LLC. Archived from the original on October 16, 2014. Retrieved October 16, 2014. ... the Cleveland Cavaliers have reached an agreement with Murray Hill Broadcasting's 87.7 FM La Mega to broadcast all 2014-15 regular season and post-season games in Spanish.
{{cite web}}
: |archive-date=
/ |archive-url=
timestamp mismatch; October 17, 2014 suggested (help)
KBRU-HD2, KKBW-HD2, KUCD-HD2, KYSR-HD2, WRFF-HD2, WWDC-HD2
- 30-70-00 ---> 30-70-00
- 30-60-10 ---> 30-65-05
- 30-55-15 ---> 30-60-10
- w/o PBP ---> online
- 2548 talk (~29%)
- 6136 rock (~70%)
- 52 city club (less than 1%)
- 8736 total
- with min PBP (assume all time taken from rock) ---> on-air only
- 2548 rock (~29%)
- 5136 rock (6136 - 1000) (~58.5% rounded down)
- 1000 play-by-play (250 x 4) (~11.5% rounded up)
- 52 city club (less than 1%)
- 8736 total
- with max PBP (assume all time taken from rock) ---> on-air only
- 2548 rock (~29%)
- 4816 rock (6136 - 1320) (~55% rounded down)
- 1320 play-by-play (330 x 4) (~15.5% rounded up)
- 52 city club (less than 1%)
- 8736 total
- Postseason
- NBA - 28 games max ---> 4 rounds (7 + 7 + 7 + 7 = 28)
- MLB - 20 games max ---> 4 rounds (1 + 5 + 7 + 7 = 20)
158 + 89 + 48
April
8,8, 10,10, 12,12, 15,15,
2, 5, 6, 9, 11, 13, 14,
temp000
[edit]- July
- 5, 12, 19, 26
- July 5 vKC, 7:05PM --> 3–6:35 PM
July 12 vCWS, 3:05PM- July 19 @DET, 1:08PM (makeup lasted 3:02 hrs), 7:08PM --> 4:40–6:38 PM
- July 26 @KC, 7:10PM --> 3–6:40 PM
- August
- 2, 9, 16, 23, 30
- August 2 vTEX, 7:05PM --> 3–6:35PM
August 9 @NYY, 1:05PM (lasted 2:59 hrs) --> 4:34–7 PM (after game)- August 16 vBAL, 7:05PM --> 3–6:35PM
- August 23 vHOU, 7:05PM --> 3–6:35PM
- August 30 @KC, 7:10PM --> 3–6:40 PM
- September
- 6, 13, 20, 27
- September 6 vCWS, 7:05PM --> 3–6:35PM
- September 13 @DET, 7:08PM --> 3–6:38 PM
- September 20 @MIN, 7:10PM --> 3–6:40 PM
- September 27 vTB, 6:05PM --> 3–5:35PM
temp section 6/7
[edit]National format | Branding | iHeartRadio | Weekday shift | On-air talent | Home station |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Active rock | Rock Nation | Listen Live | Overnights | Shroom (Jason Schumm)[2] | WEBN/Cincinnati |
Mornings | Pyke (Jeremy Peterson)[3] | WIOT/Toledo | |||
Middays | Aly Young[4] | WRDA/Atlanta | |||
Afternoons | Josh Klinger[5] | n/a (Atlanta) | |||
Nights | n/a | n/a | |||
n/a (weekends only) | Chris Rozak[2] | WEND/Charlotte | |||
n/a (weekends only) | DZL (Chuck Thompson)[2] | WEND/Charlotte | |||
n/a (weekends only) | Mel Taylor[2] | WJRR/Orlando | |||
n/a (weekends only) | Ty Bailey[6] | WXTB/Tampa |
section temp
[edit]- ALTERNATIVE
- WMMS-HD2[7] Shroom (Mel Taylor)
- WXEG[8] Pyke (mornings), Aly (middays)
- KPTL[9] Pyke (mornings), etc.
- KRAB[10] Rozak, DZL, Shroom, Mel, Pyke ("Jocks" tab)
- WTFX-FM[11] Aly, Shroom, Rozak, Bailey, DZL, Colfax, Corey Rotic ("Jock Blogs" tab)
- WJRR[12] Shroom ("Jocks" tab)
- WXDX-FM[13] Klinger, Shroom, Rozak, Mel Taylor ("DJ Blogs" tab)
- WXSR[14] Shroom, Aly, Colfax, Bailey, Rozak, Corey Rotic, DZL ("On-Air" tab)
- KTEG[15] Mel Taylor
- WEND[16] Mel Taylor
- KKED[17] Mel Taylor
- WRXL[18] Mel Taylor
- KJMY-HD2[19] Mel Taylor
- WTZB[20] Mel Taylor
- WEBN-HD2[21] Mel Taylor
- WROV-HD2[22] Mel Taylor: Midnight-6a ("On Air" tab)
- ROCK
- WZRX-FM[25] Bailey/Rozak/Corey Rotic (Saturday)
- WRXR-FM[26] DZL (Saturday)
- WEBN[27] DZL :: Sat/Sun 12a-6a ("DJs" tab)
- WVBZ[28] Shroom
- WZZO[29] Shroom
- KIOC[30] Shroom
- WKGB-FM[31] Shroom
- WQEN-HD2[32] Shroom
- KSSS[33] Shroom
- KNCN[34] Shroom
- KEGL[35] Shroom
- KDAG[36] Shroom
- KFMQ[37] Shroom
- KDJE[38] Shroom
- KZPR[39] Shroom
- WTKX-FM[40] Shroom
- WHEB[41] Shroom
- KKBW[42] Shroom
- WXTB[43] Shroom
- WIOT[44] Shroom
- KBRQ[45] Shroom
- KLFX[46] Shroom
- WEGW[47] Shroom
- KMRQ[48] Shroom - Overnight ("DJ Blogs" tab)
- ^ "June 4th 2014 - Tweens Kill For Slenderman/Chef Steve Schimoler In-Studio/Racism In America". WMMS.com: The Alan Cox Show podcast. Clear Channel Media and Entertainment. June 4, 2014. Archived from the original on June 7, 2014. Retrieved June 7, 2014.
This weekend we're going to start running something on Sunday mornings called 'The Week in Cox'. It's gonna be 8 to 10 on Sunday mornings. It's going to be some of the best stuff from the week, just two short hours... Saturday morning there'll be the 'Rover Rewind', that's Saturdays from 8 to 10 am, and then 'The Week in Cox' will be Sundays from 8 to 10 starting this weekend.
- ^ a b c d "Clear Channel Atlanta Radio Online: On Air Talent Roster" (PDF). CC.AtlantaCluster.com. Clear Channel Media and Entertainment. August 21, 2012. Retrieved March 22, 2013.
- ^ "PR/Media: 'Pyke' Endorsement". LaidBrand.com. Laid Brand. 2013. Retrieved March 22, 2013.
- ^ "Premium Choice Blogs: Aly". PCBlogs.Radio.ClearChannel.com. Clear Channel Media and Entertainment. 2013. Retrieved March 22, 2013.
- ^ "In Brief: June 4, 2012". FMQB.com. Friday Morning Quarterback Album Report, Inc. and Mediaspan Online Services. June 4, 2012. Retrieved March 22, 2013.
- ^ "Premium Choice Blogs: Ty Bailey". PCBlogs.Radio.ClearChannel.com. Clear Channel Media and Entertainment. 2013. Retrieved March 22, 2013.
- ^ http://www.99xcleveland.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.newrock1039.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.alt1063.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.krab.com/main.html See "Jocks" tab.
- ^ http://www.foxrocks.com/main.html See "Jock Blogs" tab.
- ^ http://www.wjrr.com/main.html See "Jocks" tab.
- ^ http://www.1059thex.com/main.html See "DJ Blogs" tab.
- ^ http://www.x1015.com/main.html See "On-Air" tab.
- ^ http://www.1041theedge.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.1041theedge.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.1047theedge.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.xl102richmond.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.project991.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.1059thebuzz.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.cincinnatiproject.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.96thealtproject.com/main.html See "On-Air" tab.
- ^ http://www.kjkj.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.1037wffx.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.1075wzrx.com/onair/saturday/
- ^ http://www.rock105.com/onair/saturday/
- ^ http://www.webn.com/main.html See "DJs" tab.
- ^ http://www.ihaveabuzz.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.951zzo.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.bigdog106.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.925kgb.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.1031thevulcan.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.1015.fm/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.c101.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.kegl.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.969thedogrocks.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.kfmqrock1061.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.edgelittlerock.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.1053thefox.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.tk101.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.wheb.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.thebrew1049.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.98rock.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.wiot.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.1025thebear.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.1073rocks.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.eagle1075.com/onair/monday/
- ^ http://www.rock967.com/main.html See "DJ Blogs" tab.
Clear Channel SiriusXM
[edit]- XM 11 -- KIIS
- siriusxm
.com /kiis · kiisfm .com · Listen Live
- XM 12 -- Z100/NY
- siriusxm
.com /z100ny · z100 .com · Listen Live
- XM 57 -- WSIX
- siriusxm
.com /wsix · wsix .com · Listen Live
- XM 241 -- WGCI
- siriusxm
.com /wgci · wgci .com · Listen Live
- XM 242 -- Sixx Sense
- siriusxm
.com /sixxsense · sixxsense .com · Listen Live
- XM 243 -- Extreme Talk
- siriusxm
.com /extremetalk · n/a · Listen Live
- XM 244 -- America's Talk
- siriusxm
.com /americastalk · n/a · Listen Live
- XM 245 -- ReachMD
- siriusxm
.com /reachmd · reachmd .com · Listen Live
- XM 246 -- Talk Radio
- siriusxm
.com /talkradio246 · n/a · n/a
section 1a
[edit]- Friday Forum
- Swingos/Swingos Keg and Quarter/Swingos Celebrity Hotel
- La Cave
- The Perlich Project
- Forest City Publishing
- United Broadcasting Company (Cleveland) -- not United Broadcasting Company
- Malrite Communications
- Milton Maltz
- OmniAmerica
- Carl Hirsch
- Shamrock Broadcasting
- Hit Parade (format) -- not Hit parade
- Rick D'Amico
- Steve Nemeth (radio)/Doc Nemo -- not Steve Nemeth
- Dick Kemp (Wild Child)
- Lou Kirby
- Billy Bass (radio)
- Coffee Break Concert
- Denny Sanders
- Len Goldberg
- Charlie Kendall
- Buzzard Day
- Murray Saul
- David Helton
- Bill Freeman (radio) -- not Bill Freeman
- Dia Stein
- Tunc Erim
- Jeff Kinzbach
- Brian Philips (CMT) (redirect) -- not Brian Phillips
- Brian and Joe
- Buzzardfest
- Bob Wolf
- Rover (radio personality)
- Malcolm Ryker
- Envision Radio Networks
- Exit (Cleveland magazine)
- Buhhdist mag. publisher
HISTORY OUTLINE Move Purple Haze book to Further reading section Translators which repeat HD2 channels are becoming too common -- redirect W256BT to WMMS combine Rock music section paragraphs 1 and 2? Change WNCX section to "The Cleveland Funeral"? Progressive rock (1968–73)
- Underground radio
- Petitioning the FCC
- Bowie invades Cleveland
Album-oriented rock (1973–94)
- The Buzzard arrives
- Breaking new acts
- Coffee Break Concerts
- Nights Out at the Agora
- World Series of Rock
- Rock Forty hybrid
- Fight for the Rock Hall
- Key departures
- Rolling Stone readers' poll
- Decline and transition
- Stern gets silenced
Alternative rock (1994–97)
- The Next Generation
- BuzzardFest
Active rock (1997–present)
- Lady shock jock
- Deregulation and "death"
- Morning troubles continue
- Renewed energy
- Afternoon talk
December 5, 1974
-- Thursday
December 12, 1974 -- Thursday
January 9, 1975 -- Thursday
March 10, 1975 -- Monday
July 16, 1975 -- Wednesday
August 13th, 1975 -- Wednesday
September 10, 1975 -- Wednesday
TITTLE, Diana. The short, unhappy life of Exit magazine. Cleveland 4:48-49 Nov 75 (2)
Potential articles 1. Billy Bass (recording industry) 2. Denny Sanders 3. Music Grotto 4. Swingo's Keg and Quarter 5. Malrite Communications 6. Carl Hirsch 7. Milton Maltz 8. Jeff and Flash 9. Brian and Joe 10. Record Rendezvous 11. Cleveland Plaza/Statler 12. Mike Shea 13. Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Radio 14. OmniAmerica Communications 15. Shamrock Broadcasting 16. Pete "Mad Daddy" Myers 17. Inner Sanctum Maybe??? Coffee Break Concert Nights Out at the Agora Murray Saul Len "Boom" Goldberg David Helton East Ninth Street (Rock and Roll Boulevard) Jennifer Wylde Maria Farina
section 1
[edit]- Foo Fighters - "Learn to Fly"
- Green Day - "Brain Stew"
- Led Zeppelin - "Whole Lotta Love"
- Mötley Crüe - "Kickstart My Heart"
- Alice in Chains - "Again"
- Nine Inch Nails - "Closer"
- Metallica - "Enter Sandman"
- Disturbed - "Stupify"
- *** CCE ONLINE LINK ***
http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/cce/
W-MMS and Buzz@rd tr8dmrxs
NDAU
[edit]
- COUNTRY
- WKSF -- SUN 7:30 AM -- "7:30 each and every Sunday morning"
- WXLY -- SUN 7:30 AM -- "Sunday mornings at 7:30 before the Country Top 30 Countdown"
- WCOL-FM -- SUN 10 PM -- "10pm [Sunday]"
- WSSL-FM -- SUN 10 PM -- "10 pm [Sunday]" and "WSSL runs the show Sunday nights at 10pm"
- WKKT -- SUN 11 PM -- "Yes [Sunday night] at 11"
- WKSJ-FM -- SUN MIDNIGHT -- "Sunday night at [Midnight]" -- CST
- WMAD -- SUN MIDNIGHT -- "Sunday nights at [Midnight]" -- CST
Incoming links
[edit]- Jani Lane
- Nina Blackwood
- etc.
refref
[edit]rock ohio
[edit]- W256BT
- W264AK
- W264BW
- W292DT
- WBIK
- WBUK
- WBWC
- WBWR
- WCGX
- WEBN
- WEGE
- WFTK
- WFXJ-FM
- WFXN-FM
- WIOT
- WLVQ
- WMMS
- WMWX
- WNCD
- WNCX
- WOFX-FM
- WONE-FM
- WRDL
- WRKZ
- WRQK-FM
- WSTB
- WTUE
- WWCD
- WXEG
- WXKR
- WXUT
- WYRO
- WZRX-FM
- WZZZ
rv edits
[edit]- Special:Contributions/FOX_Sports_Radio_2
- Special:Contributions/FOX_Sports_Radio_3
- Special:Contributions/216.52.226.90
- Levdr1lp removes (1st time) ext link 31-July-2012
- Levdr1lp reverts addition of ext link 3-Nov-2012
- XLinkBot reverts addition of ext link 15-Nov-2012 13:14
- Levdr1lp reverts addition of ext link 9-Jan-2013
- Levdr1lp reverts addition of ext link 30-Jan-2013
Indians coverage
[edit]Share of station airtime
[edit]- WMMS for 147 games (plus 3 spring training)
- 2000–2010 in-game average: 2 hours 56.4 minutes
- network gameday coverage: 3 hours 53 minutes weekday saturday day saturday night sunday
- 365 x 24 = 8760 total hours
- 5 + 4 = 9 hours talk daily ---> 9 x 5 = 45 hours talk weekly ---> 45 x 52 = 2340 hours talk
- 8760 - 2340 = 6420 hours music (w/o baseball coverage)
- 4 x 150 = 600 hours baseball coverage (approx. 6.84%)
- 6420 - 600 = 5820 music (w/ baseball coverage)
- network BROWNS gameday coverage: 6 hours 30 minutes
- thursday night preview show 2 hours
- 8.5 x 20 = 170 hours seasonal coverage (approx 1.94%)
- add nfl draft, missing preview weeks (bye), etc.
- Hoynes, Paul (September 21, 2011). "After 50 years in baseball, Hegan stepping aside from broadcasting". The Plain Dealer. Plain Dealer Publishing Co. p. D2 - Sports.
He did home games on WTAM AM/1100 with play-by-play man Tom Hamilton and Jim Rosenhaus...
- Hoynes, Paul (June 18, 2012). "Chatter". The Plain Dealer. Plain Dealer Publishing Co. p. C5 - Sports.
... Jason Stanford worked Sunday's game on WTAM AM/1100 with play-by-play man Jim Rosenhaus. Tom Hamilton, the team's lead broadcaster, is attending the College World Series...
- "Broadcasters". Cleveland.Indians.MLB.com. MLB Advanced Media, L.P. 2012. Retrieved March 29, 2013.
Tom Hamilton... will enter his 23rd season of calling Cleveland Indians baseball games on radio in 2012. ... Hamilton will be joined in the booth with Jim Rosenhaus to provide commentary...
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airports
[edit]- Cleveland Hopkins International -- P-M (primary commercial; medium hub)
- Burke Lakefront -- R (reliever)
- Cuyahoga County -- R (reliever)
- Lorain County -- R (reliever)
- Medina Municipal -- R (reliever)
- Willoughby Municipal -- R (reliever)
Akron-Canton -- P-S (primary commercial; small hub)
refs 2
[edit]- 1968-69 Pat McCoy 1
- ???
- 1970-71 Mike Griffin 1
- 1971-72 Billy Bass 1
- 1972-73 Denny Sanders 1
- 1973-86 John Gorman 13
- 1986-87 Brian Philips 1 --- now VP/GM Country Music Television (CMT "Chief")
- 1988-89 Jeff McCartney 1
- 1989-90 Rich Piombino 1
- 1990-94 Mike Luczak 4
- 1994-96 John Gorman 2 (15)
- 1996-98 Bob Neumann 2 --- WENZ/WNCX PD prior; after, PD at WWDC
- "10 Questions with ... Bob Neumann". AllAccess.com. All Access Music Group. November 14, 2011. Retrieved November 11, 2012.
- 1998-2001 Greg Ausham 3
- 2001-04 Jim Trapp 3
- 2003-present Bo Matthews (Alex Gutierrez) 9
- R&R: Twenty Years of Excellence. Los Angeles, CA: Radio & Records. 1993. p. 12.
WMMS/Cleveland. The AOR format's most acclaimed station, and a Midwestern titan for more than two decades.
- Mortland, Shannon (May 16, 2005). "WMMS, The Buzzard: Tuning in to the Times". Crain's Cleveland Business. Crain Communications. Retrieved February 9, 2012.
- "Cleveland Rock Station WMMS Calling It Quits: Former Radio Giant to Change Call Letters, Format". Akron Beacon Journal (Beacon Journal Publishing Co.): p. A1 - Entertainment. October 2, 1998. "WMMS-FM, once one of the most influential radio stations in America and home to some of the most powerful disc jockeys in the country..."
- Willey, Jack (September 16, 1990). "Radio Man Takings His Energies North". The Columbus Dispatch (Dispatch Printing Company): p. 1D - News. "... Munch leaves Sept. 28 to join Cleveland rock giant WMMS as its promotions director."
- "DJs Sign Off". The Cincinnati Post (The E.W. Scripps Company): p. 12A - News: Metro edition. April 16, 1994. "Cleveland's Ed 'Flash' Ferenc and Jeff Kinzbach, whose manic morning show helped push WMMS-FM to national prominence..."
- Encyclopedia of Cleveland History
quote=... a cohesive staff developed a rock-centered radio station that came to dominate the Cleveland radio market and gain a national reputation as a forum for new Rock 'n' Roll acts. ... In the 1980s it... was one of the highest-rated radio stations in the country.
- Benson, John (October 25, 2003). "Cleveland Rocks!". Billboard.biz Archive. Billboard. Retrieved February 14, 2010. "... the '70s heyday of the once highly prominent and influential local radio station WMMS (The Buzzard)."
- Tucker, Ken (April 21, 2006). "Renda Fills Florida Opening With Radio Vet". Billboard.biz Archive. Billboard. Retrieved February 14, 2010. "... Tiburski was VP/GM and co-founder of the former Malrite Broadcasting’s legendary WMMS (the Buzzard) in the '70s and early '80s."
Plot
[edit]In 2010 Los Angeles, three friends are dissatisfied with their lives: Adam Yates has been dumped by yet another girlfriend, and his geeky nephew Jacob lives in his basement. Lou Dorchenis a party guy way past his prime. Nick Webber has a dead-end job at a dog spa and an unfaithful and controlling wife named Courtney.
Lou almost dies from carbon monoxide poisoning in what his friends think is a suicide attempt. Adam and Nick impulsively take him and Jacob to the site of some of their most memorable weekends, the Kodiak Valley Ski Resort, which has fallen on hard times. During a crazy night of drinking in a hot tub, they spill a can of an illegal Russian energy drink called "Chernobly" (reference to Chernobyl disaster) on the hot tub's controls. The next day, they wake up in 1986. They see each other as their normal age, but in their reflections and to other people, they appear as they did in 1986, except Jacob, who was not yet born. They arrive during "Winterfest '86," the weekend when Poison played to a huge crowd at the then-thriving Kodiak Resort. At first, the guys do not think that they have traveled back in time but are convinced when they find out that Michael Jackson's skin has not become lighter yet.
It is a time that was hard on the group. Adam broke up with his first girlfriend, Jennie, and got stabbed in the eye with a fork. Lou was beaten up by Blaine, the ski patrol bully. Nick played a bad show with his band at an open mike contest. The four are at first concerned that if they change even the slightest thing in this time, it could have drastic consequences in the future, so they set out to do exactly what they did 20 years ago. Later, they decide that this may be a chance to change their destinies. When Jacob begins to flicker in and out, he warns the guys that if they continue what they are doing, then he may be wiped out of existence. A mysterious hot tub repairman informs Jacob that the key to their time travel was the Chernobly, which contains chemicals that are vital to the time travel process.
While drunk, Nick calls Courtney (his then-9 year-old wife) and yells at her. Her dad interrupts the conversation and Adam and Jacob stop Nick from telling him that Courtney is his wife. Jennie dumps Adam before he can dump her, but he ends up sleeping with a music journalist, April. Nick rocks the crowd with his band with performances of "Jessie's Girl" and "Let's Get It Started". Lou is beaten up by Blaine, but finds the courage to punch him back. Lou also seduces Adam's sister, Kelly, and has sex with her, and conceives Jacob, thus solving the identity of Jacob's father. Phil Wedmaier, helping them to get back to the resort, gets his arm cut off by an oncoming bus, much to Lou's delight.
The guys are set to go back to 2010, but, just as the hot tub starts to activate, Lou decides to remain in 1986, admitting to Adam that he was trying to kill himself, and that if he goes back it will happen all over again. He says he wants to use his knowledge of future history to make investments, and do right by Kelly and Jacob. Adam says that if Lou is staying, so is he but Lou pushes Adam into the hot tub, just as it blasts the guys back into 2010.
Adam, Nick, and Jacob discover that Lou, Kelly, and Jacob are now a happy family enjoying a lavish lifestyle due to Lou taking advantage of his knowledge of the future. Lou has become a successful rock star with his favorite band, "Mötley Lüe" (reference to Mötley Crüe) and is the founder of an Internet search engine called "Lougle" (reference to Google). Adam discovers that he eventually married April, and Nick is a successful music producer married to a loyal Courtney. She tells him about a wrong number phone call she got when she was 9, that was enough to keep her from trying to cheat on anybody. Adam, Nick, Lou, and Jacob reunite at Lou's mansion with their families, satisfied with their new lives.
http://www.cleveland.com/moviebuff/index.ssf/2010/03/john_cusacks_hot_tub_time_mach.html
http://blogs.westword.com/latestword/2010/04/john_elways_drive_never_happen.php
Stern Detroit Press Conference
[edit]2/20/97
"Other" programming
[edit]http://www.cleveland.com/cavs/index.ssf/2010/04/kevin_mchale_likes_cleveland_c.html
current temp
[edit]REGULAR vs NON-REGULAR programming
station as a whole -- WMMS Ultimate Tailgate, sponsored shows of Metallica,[1] Deftones,[2] Steel Panther, Cavo, Adelitas Way, Staind, comedian Jim Norton;[3] regular station on-site appearances w/ and w/o personalities, contests/Buzzard Army
STICK TO REGULAR (DAILY/WEEKLY) SEGMENTS
Duji (Susan Catanese), Dominic Dieter, phone screener Dumb (Shaun Street); new members at WMMS -- Chocolate Charlie (Mike Toomey), Rob Garguilo, Jeffrey LaRocque; The Shizzy, The Thursday Hookup, Tech Tuesday - Lance Ulanoff from PC Magazine, Skid Mark Cinema, Know the Show, League of Extraordinary Morons, RoverFest, Miss Morning Glory Calendar, LeBron curse/hex, syndication currently in Rochester/ formerly in Memphis and Columbus, Bob Marley's son, guests in studio and over the phone
- 100.7 / 100.7–HD1
- WEEKDAYS
- 12-6a — Premium Choice
- 6-11a — Rover's Morning Glory
- 11a-3p — Maria / WMMS playlist
- 3-7p — The Alan Cox Show
- 7p-12a — Corey Rotic / WMMS playlist
- SATURDAY
- 12-6a — Premium Choice
- 6-10a — Premium Choice
- 10a-3p — Maria / WMMS playlist
- 3-7p —
- 7-10p — Miles / WMMS playlist
- 10-11p — The Saturday Sanitarium
- 11p-12a — Skratch 'N Sniff via Compass Media Networks
- SUNDAY
- 12-6a — Premium Choice
- 6-6:45a — Premium Choice
- 6:30-7:30a — Friday Forum via City Club of Cleveland BATMAN SPOT 8/5 (before show)
- 7:30-10a — Premium Choice
- 10a-3p — Corey Rotic / WMMS playlist BATMAN SPOT
- 3-7p — Keith / WMMS playlist
- 7-7:30p — NEW! Discover & Uncover via iHeartRadio
- 7:30-8p — Premium Choice
- 8-10p — The House of Hair with Dee Snider via United Stations Radio Networks
- 10p-12a — Premium Choice
- 100.7–HD2 / W256BT 99.1
- WEEKDAYS
- 12-12a — The Alternative Project via Premium Choice
- WEEKENDS
- 12-12a — The Alternative Project via Premium Choice
columbus stations
[edit]- 92.7 — WHIZ-FM (2009–present)IMGFOUND - Z92.7 — WCVZ (92.7 FM)IMGFOUND - 92.7 The River; IMGFOUND - 92.7 Joy FM
- 101.1 — WOSA (2010–present) — WWCD (101.1 FM)IMGFOUND - CD101
- 102.5 — WWCD (2010–present) — WCVZ (102.5 FM) (2009–2010) — WHIZ-FM (102.5 FM)IMGFOUND - Z102
- 820 — WVSG (2011–present) — WOSU (AM)IMGFOUND - WOSU (AM)
Inductions
[edit]- 1986 (1st) - Waldorf-Astoria Hotel - New York, New York - January 23, 1986
- http://rockhall.com/inductees/ceremonies/1986/ "took place in the Waldorf-Astoria's Grand Ballroom"
- 1987 (2nd) - Waldorf-Astoria Hotel - New York, New York
- http://rockhall.com/inductees/ceremonies/1992/ "onstage or in the Grand Ballroom over the past six years"
- 1988 (3rd) - Waldorf-Astoria Hotel - New York, New York - January 20, 1988
- http://rockhall.com/inductees/ceremonies/1988/ "guests gathered at the Waldorf-Astoria"
- 1989 (4th) - Waldorf-Astoria Hotel - New York, New York
- http://rockhall.com/inductees/ceremonies/1992/ "onstage or in the Grand Ballroom over the past six years"
- 1990 (5th) - Waldorf-Astoria Hotel - New York, New York
- http://rockhall.com/inductees/ceremonies/1990/ "filled the Waldorf-Astoria"
- 1991 (6th) - Waldorf-Astoria Hotel - New York, New York
- http://rockhall.com/inductees/ceremonies/1992/ "onstage or in the Grand Ballroom over the past six years"
- 1992 (7th) - Waldorf-Astoria Hotel - New York, New York
- http://rockhall.com/inductees/ceremonies/1992/ "onstage or in the Grand Ballroom over the past six years"
- 1993 (8th) - Century Plaza Hotel - Los Angeles, California
- http://rockhall.com/inductees/ceremonies/1993/ "For the first time, the induction ceremony was held in Los Angeles."
- Dyer, Bob (January 14, 1993). "Talk About a Strange Brew... Cream Comes Back, but Jim Morrison Doesn't, for Truly Weird Rock Hall Bash". Akron Beacon Journal. Beacon Journal Publishing Co. p. D1 - Entertainment.
... set at the Century Plaza Hotel...
- 1994 (9th) - Waldorf-Astoria Hotel - New York, New York
- Norman, Michael (January 16, 1994). "Helm of the Band Steering a Course Beyond Hall of Fame Entry". The Plain Dealer. The Plain Dealer Publishing Co. p. I1 - Arts & Entertainment.
... New York's Waldorf Astoria, site of this year's rock hall of fame induction ceremonies.
- Norman, Michael (January 16, 1994). "Helm of the Band Steering a Course Beyond Hall of Fame Entry". The Plain Dealer. The Plain Dealer Publishing Co. p. I1 - Arts & Entertainment.
- 1995 (10th) - Waldorf-Astoria Hotel - New York, New York - January 12, 1995
- http://rockhall.com/inductees/ceremonies/1995/ "a tenth-anniversary party was held at the Waldorf-Astoria"
- http://rockhall.com/inductees/ceremonies/1995/ "For the first time, the event was taped for a later broadcast on MTV."
- 1996 (11th)
- 1997 (12th) - Renaissance Cleveland Hotel - Cleveland, Ohio
- http://rockhall.com/inductees/ceremonies/1997/ For the first time, the Hall of Fame induction ceremony took place at the home of the Museum, in Cleveland, Ohio.
- 1998 (13th) - Waldorf-Astoria Hotel - New York, New York - January 12, 1998
- http://rockhall.com/inductees/ceremonies/1998/ "back at New York's Waldorf-Astoria"
- 1999 (14th)
- 2000 (15th)
- 2001 (16th)
- 2002 (17th)
- 2003 (18th)
- 2004 (19th)
- 2005 (20th)
- 2006 (21st)
- 2007 (22nd)
- 2008 (23rd)
- 2009 (24th) - Public Hall - Cleveland, Ohio
- http://rockhall.com/inductees/ceremonies/2009/ "first-ever induction ceremony open to the public"
- 2010 (25th)
- 2011 (26th)
- 2012 (27th) - Public Hall - Cleveland, Ohio - Saturday, April 14, 2012 - 8pm - HBO broadcast TBA???
- http://rockhall.com/events/the-27th-annual-rock-and-roll-/ "will take place at Cleveland's historic Public Hall"
- 2013 (28th)
- 2014 (29th)
- 2015 (30th)
New York
[edit]1290 Avenue of the Americas (Sixth Avenue), New York, NY, 10104
- Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Foundation - 2nd floor - http://rockhall.com/contact/ http://rockhall.com/site/faq/
- Rolling Stone - ???? floor - http://www.rollingstone.com/services/contactus/
- Atlantic Records Group (part of Warner Music Group)
- Atlantic Records - 26th floor - http://atlanticrecords.com/contact/
- Elektra Records - 28th floor - http://www.elektra.com/contact-us/
- Fueled by Ramen - 28th Floor - http://www.fueledbyramen.com/about/ - "1290 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10104"
- Independent Label Group (part of Warner Music Group)
- Rykodisc - 23rd Floor - http://www.rykodisc.com/aboutus/ - "1290 Avenue of Americas, 24th Floor, New York, NY 10104"
- Warner Bros. Records Group (part of Warner Music Group)
- Asylum Records - 24th floor - http://www.asylumrecords.com/
- Nonesuch Records - 23rd floor - http://www.nonesuch.com/
- Sire Records - 23rd floor - http://www.sirerecords.com/
- Warner Bros. Records - 23rd floor - http://www.warnerbrothersrecords.com/
Attendance
[edit]- 1996
- Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, OH --- 227,000 visitors annually
- Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville, TN --- 230,000.
- Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, NY --- 326,000
- Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, OH --- 910,000
Metromedia rainbow/radio logos
[edit]"Madison Avenue's idea of psychedelia."
Summary
[edit]Tl|Non-free use rationale
| Article = WMMS
| Description = WMMS promotional poster featuring buzzard mascot under station owner Malrite. Poster drawn by David Helton circa 1975.
| Source = http://www.wmms.com/
http://buzzardbook.wordpress.com/2008/07/21/440/
| Portion = All.
| Low_resolution = Low resolution thumbnail — much lower resolution than original.
| Purpose = The image is significant in identifying the subject of the article, radio station WMMS, and its promotional mascot, the Buzzard; it also shows the station's rounded-off frequency used prior to the adoption of digital tuners; the hatching of the Buzzard from an egg, an image used to communicate the mascot's; and the mascot's general style designed to convey attitude to the station's listeners. It is of sufficient resolution for commentary and identification for informational and educational purposes. Copies made from it will be of inferior quality for uses that would compete with the commercial purpose of the original product.
| Replaceability = No free equivalent exists. Promotional item bound to specific time in station's history, and specific point in the evolution of the station logo/mascot.
}}
{{Non-free poster}}
Buzzard radio stations (current or former)
[edit]- WMMS, 1974–present; Clear Channel owned since 1999.
- WZRR, 2002–2003; Clear Channel owned.
- WVBZ, 2001–2009 (2009–present as "the Buzz"); Clear Channel owned.
- WJRR, mid 1990s–2000s?; Clear Channel owned; "buzzard mascot" -- see http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/1995-12-08/entertainment/9512081174_1_wjrr-web-page-radio-stations
- KHBZ-FM (now KBRU), 2002–2009 (as "the Buzz" only); Clear Channel owned.
- WNAP (now WIBC), 1970s–1980s; poster similar to KSEA (now KSON).
- KSEA (now KSON), 1970s? ; poster with ugly buzzard eating KCBQ call letters.
- Buzzard 98FM, New Zealand station.
- KZBD, 2003–2008.
- KZZY (now KCYY), 1977–1979 – Billboard article 1978 v. WMMS: "There are apparently no other buzzard logos in Texas, but there are stations using the bird in at least four other states."
- KBZS - blatant wmms buzzard rip off
- WHHZ, "The Buzz", Gainesville, Florida
- WVBF (now WROR-FM) ????
Key start dates
[edit]Date | Event |
---|---|
March 30, 1946 | W8XUB |
November 13, 1947 | WHKX |
November 11, 1948 | WHK-FM |
August 15, 1968 | progressive rock 1 |
September 28, 1968 | WMMS |
September 11, 1970 | progresive rock 2 |
April 16, 1974 | Buzzard |
Timeline
[edit]Carl Hirsch TO links
[edit]GoodRadio.TV
NextMedia Group
1994 in radio
WHTZ
WMMS
WMJI
WHK
WXMG
Brian and Joe TO links
[edit]WONE-FM
KAZY
WAZU
WENZ
WMMS
WMVX
Category:Ohio University alumni
Ohio_University#Entertainers_and_artists
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=David_Bowie&diff=prev&oldid=404372373
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=David_Bowie&diff=prev&oldid=402979891