CKLW is a 50,000 watt AM radio station broadcasting on 800 kHz and located in
Windsor,
Ontario
, Canada
, and serving
Windsor and Detroit
.
Additionally, its signal can be heard clearly
in Toledo
and Cleveland, Ohio
.
It is best known for having been one of the most influential
Top 40 stations in the world in the 1960s and
1970s. During this era, CKLW used a very tight Top 40 format known
as
Boss Radio, devised by legendary radio
programmer
Bill Drake. However, CKLW
never actually used the handle "boss" on the air, just the style.
Rather than a "Boss 30", CKLW's weekly music survey was known as a
"Big 30". And instead of calling itself "Boss Radio", CKLW called
itself "The Big 8".
During this period it was the top-rated radio
station not only in Windsor, but across the river in Detroit, and
even in cities as far away as Toledo
and Cleveland
in Ohio
.
In its
current incarnation, CKLW is a news/talk radio
station primarily serving listeners in Windsor and Essex County in Ontario, Canada
, with a mix of local and syndicated programs,
including some programs from the United States
.
It is the
co-flagship station (along with
WOMC
) of the Michigan Wolverines Football
Network.
History
Before the "Big 8": Gentile and Binge
CKLW first came on the air on May 31, 1932 as CKOK on 540 kHz with
5000 watts of power, and was owned by a group of Windsor-area
businessmen led by Malcolm Campbell, operating as "Essex
Broadcasters, Ltd." CKOK became CKLW in 1933, when Essex
Broadcasters, Ltd. merged with the
London Free Press and its station CJGC
(now
CFPL), and became "Western Ontario
Broadcasting", which was co-owned by Essex Broadcasters, and the
London Free Press. The "LW" in the callsign is said to have stood
for "
London,
Windsor", considered
to be the two chief cities in the station's listening area. When
the station's power increased to 50,000 watts, its listening area
increased accordingly. In 1934, when London Free Press's station
CJGC pulled out of the agreement, the station's ownership became
wholly-owned by Western Ontario Broadcasters. CJGC-AM later evolved
into today's CFPL 980, while today's
CBEF
occupies the 540 kHz slot on the AM dial.
CKLW had been a popular station in the Detroit area for years
before becoming "The Big 8". The station always sounded more
American than Canadian, and for a number of years served as the
Detroit affiliate of the
Mutual Broadcasting System, an
affiliation which would last from 1935 until its purchase by
RKO General in 1963. Alongside its
affiliation with Mutual, it also gained a dual affiliation with the
Dominion Network in 1935, replacing
its
CBS Radio affiliation with that of
Mutual/Dominion. Its affiliation with Dominion would last until
1950, when
CBE 1550 launched.
The Mutual System's owner,
General Tire and Rubber
Company, purchased a controlling interest in CKLW and its owner
at the time, Western Ontario Broadcasting in 1956, along with
RKO General (which had purchased a
minority interest in 1954, and had controlled Mutual since 1952).
RKO would later increase their stake to 100% in 1963.
In the late 1930s and early 1940s, CKLW was home to
Happy Joe's
Early Morning Frolic with Joe Gentile and
Toby David, which was one of the very first
popular comedy-oriented radio morning shows in Detroit. The show
continued strong after David left CKLW for Washington, D.C., in
1940, and was replaced by
Ralph
Binge.
Gentile and Binge kept listeners entertained with an endless stream
of comedic sketches and situations. The show's sponsors got in on
the fun as well, as Gentile and Binge's trademark was their ability
to turn a standard 60-second commercial announcement into a comedy
sketch which could run for three minutes or longer. A typical
three-and-a-half-hour Gentile and Binge show might feature such
comedic commercials for as many as fifty legitimate products, and
some imaginary ones as well. Sometimes listeners didn't get the
joke. For example, according to popular legend, after promoting a
miracle weight-loss aid called "Dr. Quack's Slim Jim Reducing
Pills" with the story of an obese woman who got stuck in a
telephone booth, Gentile and Binge received over $3,000 from
listeners requesting a $1 trial of the pills as advertised, and the
station had to hire a clerk to return the money.
Gentile
and Binge were a fixture on CKLW until moving to WJBK radio (now
WLQV
) in 1948, attracting audience ratings as high as
80% at their peak. The duo disbanded their partnership in
1956, and Gentile returned to CKLW. Toby David also eventually
returned to AM 800 to host the morning show in the late 1950s and
early 1960s.
Both Binge and David were also stars of early
Detroit television kiddie shows: Binge was "Pirate Pete" on
WJBK-TV
in the
mid-1950s, and David became CKLW-TV's (now CBET
) "Captain
Jolly" later in the decade (a role which, ironically, Binge had
originally been tagged to play).
As television's popularity boomed, CKLW, like many other stations,
coped with the changes by replacing the dying network radio fare
with locally-based disc-jockey shows. Throughout most of the 1950s
and into the mid-1960s, CKLW was basically a "variety" radio
station which filled in the cracks between full-service features
with pop music played by announcers like
Bud
Davies,
Ron Knowles (who had a
rock-and-roll show on AM 800 as early as 1957), and
Joe Van. For a few years in the early 1960s, CKLW
also featured a
country music program
in the evenings called
Sounds Like Nashville.
This ended in 1963
when WEXL
1340 became
Detroit's first 24-hour country station.
The glory years
After
RKO General took over the station
and its FM sister (93.9) in 1963, CKLW began to shed the
variety-format approach and, as "Radio Eight-Oh," began focusing
more aggressively on playing contemporary hits and issuing a record
survey.
Davies, Knowles, Dave
Shafer, Tom Clay, Tom Shannon, Larry
Morrow (as "Duke Windsor"), Terry
Knight, and Don Zee were among the
"Radio Eight-Oh" personalities during this time, and helped raise
the station's ratings to the point where it was beating longtime
hit station WXYZ
(1270) by
the summer of 1966 (though WKNR "Keener 13"
was still a solid number one).
However it took Bill Drake's "
Boss Radio"
format and a roster of legendary personalities such as Shannon,
Shafer,
Gary "Morning Mouth" Burbank,
"Brother" Bill Gable,
Pat Holiday, Steve Hunter, "Super"
Max Kinkel,
Walt "Baby"
Love,
Charlie O'Brien,
Scott Regen,
Ted "The Bear"
Richards,
Mike Rivers, Duke Roberts,
Charlie Van Dyke,
Johnny Williams, and newsmen
Randall Carlisle, Grant Hudson,
Byron
MacGregor (who had a three and a half million-selling #1 hit
single with his recording of
Gordon
Sinclair's commentary "
The Americans" in 1973) and
Dick Smythe to raise the station — newly
dubbed "The Big 8" — to number one in the ratings starting in April
1967.
Before long, the station's top-of-the-hour ID, sung (as were all of
its jingles) by the
Johnny Mann Singers,
was on everyone's lips: "C-K-L-W, The Motor Cit-eeeee".
WKNR
would never recover, but put up a good fight against the awakened
CKLW for five more years before switching to an easy-listening
format as WNIC
in
1972.
Initially, CKLW called itself "Radio 8" after the "Drake"-style
format was adopted (later lengthened to "Fun Radio 8") and used
jingles from
PAMS which sang "Radio 8, CKLW,"
but by the end of the summer of 1967 the Johnny Mann jingles were
in place and the transformation into "The Big 8" was
complete.
Long-time music director
Rosalie
Trombley was also legendary for her ability to spot a potential
hit record, and became the subject of a song by
Bob Seger titled "Rosalie". According to the
documentary
Radio Revolution: The Rise and Fall of the Big
8, Trombley refused to allow the station to air the song,
threatening to quit if the station added it to its playlist; thus,
CKLW never played it, although the song did receive airplay on
other Detroit stations. Her career with the station began as a
part-time switchboard operator on
Labour Day weekend of 1963,
before she was offered a full-time position in the station's music
library a few years later. As CKLW's popularity boomed and Rosalie
became more and more influential, her job title was changed to the
more prestigious-sounding title of "Music Director". Trombley was
unique in that she garnered much respect in a time where there were
not many influential women in the radio business.
Recording stars both established and aspiring regularly visited
Rosalie to personally promote their latest single releases, and the
walls of her office were lined with gold records. Trombley also
made an effort to fashion a station that would appeal to
black as well as
white listeners by featuring soul and R&B
product, especially the
Motown sound for
which Detroit was famous. The "Rosalie Trombley Award" honours
women who have made their mark in broadcasting.
This was perhaps one of the earliest examples of what would today
be called "Rhythmic CHR", and it united both white and
African-American listeners behind the banner of a single station.
As a
result, CKLW has been called "the blackest white station in
America", and many believe the integrated music mix helped bring
Detroiters closer together in racial harmony, especially after the
riots
of July 1967.
Another female employee of CKLW who helped break down gender
barriers was reporter
Jo-Jo
Shutty-MacGregor (the wife of Byron MacGregor), the first
female helicopter traffic/news reporter in North America. She
remains one of the most respected
Detroit Traffic Reporters to this
day. She now works for
Westwood One's
Metro Traffic in Detroit and continues
to provide news & traffic reports for radio/television stations
on both sides of the U.S.-Canadian border.
The
Windsor-based station maintained a sales office in the Detroit
suburb of Southfield
where it picked up numerous sponsors for U.S.
consumer products, some of which had to use the disclaimer and live
announcer end-tag "Not available in Ontario". Possibly the
best known of sponsors was Merollis Chevrolet known for its comedic
30 second spots and the campy Al Jolson-styled jingle "that
Merollis what a great great guy!"
Along with the current hits on the station's weekly "Big 30" lists,
CKLW also featured lots of rock oldies dating back to the
mid-1950s, which helped cement the station's appeal to adults as
well as teenagers. The "Big 8" featured oldies especially heavily
on its "Million Dollar Weekends", during which every other song
played was a golden classic. The station used special jingles to
introduce oldies: "CKLW — Golden".
The station's high-frequency compressed audio processing help set
the standard for contemporary hit music formatted stations
throughout the 1970s giving it near FM clarity. Some hit songs
surpassing three and a half minutes in length were edited down to
accommodate more songs in rotation. This was evident in such early
70s hit songs as "
Signs" by The
Five Man Electrical Band, "
American Pie" by
Don McLean and "
Are You
Ready?" by
Pacific
Gas & Electric.
Another legendary feature of the "Big 8" was its "20/20 News", so
called because it was delivered at 20 minutes after the hour and 20
minutes before the hour. The thinking behind the scheduling of the
news was that while other stations featured news at the top of the
hour or on the quarter-hour, CKLW would be playing music. To hold
the audience's attention, the news would have to be presented in a
style that was as exciting as the music the station played.
Hence, the "Big 8"'s newscasters — including Byron MacGregor,
Jon Belmont (later ABC),
Bob Losure (CNN),
Grant
Hudson,
Joe Donovan (sports),
Randall Carlisle,
Keith Radford, and
Lee Marshall — delivered
imagery-laden news stories in a rapid-fire, excited manner, not
sparing any of the gory details when it came to describing murders
or rapes.
"20/20 News" had actually been a fixture of CKLW for a few years
before the station adopted the Drake format, but when
Byron MacGregor became the station's
youngest news director in 1969 (replacing
Dick Smythe who had left for Toronto), the sound
of the station's newscasts took on the familiar sensationalized
"blood-and-guts" style that most listeners remember. Another
memorable feature of the 20/20 newscasts was the incessant clacking
of the teletype in the background, which gave the newscasts a
unique sound.
CKLW's newscasts were acknowledged for more than just their
"flash," however - the station won an
Edward R. Murrow Award for its coverage of the
1967 riots, helmed by Smythe. This was the first time that this
particular award had ever been given to a Canadian
broadcaster.
The decline and death of the Big 8
Some say that CKLW started to decline in popularity after
Canadian content regulations went into
effect. Certainly "CanCon" was a factor, particularly because many
of the soul records on CKLW's playlist had to be sacrificed to make
room for the Canadian content and because competing stations
reacted by eliminating the "CanCon" songs from their own playlists
and filling the holes with oldies or often stronger,
American-originating new hits.
Still, CKLW dealt with the new regulations as best it could,
breaking records by Canadian acts such as
Gordon Lightfoot, the
Poppy Family,
Anne
Murray,
Joni Mitchell,
the Stampeders,
The Bells,
Neil
Young,
Five Man Electrical
Band,
April Wine, and the
Guess Who and helping them to all become
well-known hit artists across the United States as well.
And even with CanCon, CKLW remained a solid #1 in the Motor City
through 1973, so probably the biggest reason for the decline was
because listeners in North America as a whole were abandoning
AM radio in favor of the clearer
audio available on
FM radio stations.
WDRQ
(93.1 FM)
grabbed away much of CKLW's teenage audience in the mid- and late
1970s, while older listeners migrated to FM album rockers like WWWW
(106.7, now WDTW-FM
) or WRIF
(101.1) or
to FM adult contemporary stations like WNIC
(100.3) or
WMJC (94.7, now WCSX
).
The listening audience was becoming fragmented as music formats
continued to splinter to appeal to narrower and narrower
demographics, and a mass-appeal station like CKLW could no longer
afford to be "all things to all people." For many younger listeners
by 1978, CKLW was the station they listened to only if they had an
AM-only radio in their cars.
As a
result, CKLW attempted to hold on to its adult audience by calling
themselves "Rock N' Talk" using an adult-stylized logo "CKLW R8dio"
and softening its playlist to a more adult-oriented sound (an early
version of what would today be known as Hot Adult
Contemporary) and hiring Dick Purtan
from WXYZ (which transitioned from its own AC format to all-talk
around the same time, and is now WXYT
) to host the
morning show in 1978.
By 1979, CKLW had dropped all jingles (having already phased out
most of the famous Johnny Mann Singers jingles, except for the fast
"shotgun" jingle, starting around 1973) and changed its on-air name
from "The Big 8" to "Radio 8", and had also begun to make use of
"dead segues" (two songs played back-to-back with no station ID,
announcement or jingle in between), which would have been a
definite no-no on the station even five years earlier.
Soon afterward, the station adopted the name "The Great
Entertainer", with new jingles to go along with the change.
Purtan's
strong numbers in morning drive helped keep CKLW's ratings
respectable if not spectacular into the 1980s, but Purtan was
basically the station's last line of defense, and after he left for
WCZY-FM
95.5 (now WKQI
) in early
1983, the station's already-diminished ratings (CKLW's last
appearance in Detroit's Arbitron top 10 was
in 1981) fell further.
Meanwhile, the already-fragmented listener
pie got even more fragmented thanks to several new FM competitors
in the early 1980s, including album-rocker WLLZ (now WVMV
), top 40
WHYT (now WDVD
), the
resurgent WDRQ
(now an
Urban Contemporary station after a disastrous try at all-disco from
1978 to 1980), urban WJLB
(which moved
from AM 1400 to FM 97.9 in 1980), and Dick Purtan's new home,
"Cozy-FM" WCZY-FM
(which was reinventing itself as an adult-leaning
Top 40). In an attempt to go after longtime "full
service" powerhouse WJR
, CKLW
converted to AM stereo in 1982 and even
got the rights to broadcast University of Michigan
football and NASL soccer, but in this it was also
unsuccessful.
In 1984, the station's owners (Baton Broadcasting) had sold
CKLW-AM/FM to Russwood Broadcasting Ltd. Russwood Broadcasting
would later strike a deal with
CUC
Broadcasting (owners of Trillium Cable)
the
following year, changing its name to Amicus Broadcasting Ltd.,
and would sell the station to CUC Broadcasting in 1988.
CKLW
decided to jump on the FM bandwagon and made an attempt to put the
contemporary hit format on its FM station (93.9, now CIDR-FM
) as CFXX, "94 Fox FM," in 1984, but it failed when
the Canadian
Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC)
refused to approve the format change from big
band music. The CRTC allowed the FM station to broadcast
the "Fox" format for only four hours a day - two in morning drive
and two in afternoon drive. The CRTC's rationale in this was that
rock music belonged on AM and that FM was for classical, jazz and
easy listening music.
Meanwhile, CKLW-AM continued to plod along with a low-key mix of
soft rock hits and oldies and with many of the live announcers
replaced by automation, as ratings and revenue continued to drop.
By this time, the station had once again begun to call itself "The
Big 8" and had brought back some of the Johnny Mann jingles, but
was merely a shell of its former self.
The final
death knell for the "Big 8" came in October 1984, when the station
fired 79 staffers (including most of the remaining announcers and
Rosalie Trombley), closed its American sales office in the Detroit
suburb of Southfield, Michigan
, and announced that it would soon change format to
Al Ham's "Music of Your Life" format of pop
standards and big-band music and go completely automated.
The "Big 8" was finally laid to rest on January 1, 1985, and the
station soon dropped stereo since most of the big-band and
standards music in its new format was in mono anyway. CKLW's FM
sister adopted a
beautiful music
format with the calls CKEZ.
At this time, both stations were also sold
to CUC Broadcasting, which would
sell CKLW and CKEZ to CHUM Limited
in 1993.
CKLW was known as "K-800" during its "Music of Your Life" days and
also became the radio home for the
Detroit Pistons. Ratings with the standards
format were also a dramatic improvement over the station's final
years as a contemporary outlet, although the station now attracted
a significantly older audience than the "baby boomers" who had
grown up listening to the Big 8. Longtime CKLW jock and Detroit
radio veteran
Dave Shafer was the K-800
program director during this time.
For a brief time under CUC Broadcasting ownership, it was a member
of the
NBC Radio network, beginning in
1991, and ending with the station's sale to CHUM Limited in
1993.
The Big 8
lives on today in a slightly different form, as many of the
original disc jockeys now work at
Detroit's oldies station WOMC-FM
, where much of the same music is played. To
further boost this link to the past, WOMC-FM has even began (
August 2007) airing historic jingles from CKLW's "Big 8" era,
similar to
TV Land's "Retromercials".
Competing oldies station
CKWW (now CKLW-AM's
sister station) also plays up its connections to the "Big 8" on the
air, having appropriated CKLW's legendary top-of-the-hour "Boss
Radio" instrumental signature and mentioning that they broadcast
"from the legendary studios of the Big 8." (CKLW-AM and FM were
housed at 825 Riverside Drive in Windsor until 1970, when they
moved to 1640 Ouellette Avenue, where all four of CTVglobemedia's
Windsor stations, including CKLW and CKWW, are now housed.)
CKLW today
CHUM,
which already owned CKWW (580) and CIMX-FM
(88.7, formerly CJOM) in the Windsor/Detroit
market, purchased CKLW-AM/FM in 1993 and subsequently swapped the
formats of CKWW and CKLW, moving the nostalgic music down to 580 on
the AM dial and planting CKWW's news-talk format on 800, and thus
ending the music on AM 800 for good.
Today CKLW combines local
talk radio with
U.S.-based syndication programs and those produced by CHUM. The
station now goes by the name
AM 800, The Information
Station (or as
AM 800 CKLW). The station
boasts a fully-staffed local newsroom and also airs hourly
newscasts from the Canadian
Broadcast
News network, primarily at night.
CKLW is a member of
the WOR Radio Network (an
affiliation that hearkens back to when WOR
and CKLW
were partners in the Mutual
Broadcasting System) and carries Dr. Joy
Browne live, one of the few stations in Canada that broadcasts
an American program during daylight hours. The station also
carries, like countless other AM stations in North America,
Coast to Coast AM with
George Noory and some
brokered programming.
Some people consider this format a waste of a high-powered station
with a signal that reaches far beyond its immediate local area.
CKLW is
picked up clearly as far off as Toledo
and Cleveland
(where it was consistently a highly-rated station
during its Top 40 days), Lansing, Michigan
, and even the outskirts of Cincinnati,
Ohio
, with reports of night-time reception as far off as
Toronto
/Oshawa,
Ontario
, Pennsylvania
, New York
City
, Little
Rock
, Des
Moines, Iowa
, and San Antonio, Texas
. At one point, it was stated that CKLW-AM
could be heard in at least 23 states and 4 Canadian
provinces.
For the
station to be heard as far west as Arkansas, Iowa and Texas is
impressive, given the station is not a "clear channel" Class A station, and
has extreme northward/eastward nighttime directional signal in
order to protect stations on 800 kHz in Ciudad
Juárez
(clear
channel XEROK-AM
across the river from El Paso, Texas
), Bonaire
in the Netherlands Antilles
(Trans World
Radio), and Montreal
(CJAD
).
During CKLW's Top 40 heyday, because of its nighttime directional
pattern, the station was frequently heard in
Scandinavia, but was often rendered unlistenable
just a few hundred miles to the west and south of Detroit because
of interference from the Mexico City and/or Bonaire stations.
Nevertheless, the current news/talk format enjoys good ratings in
Windsor, though it now hovers near the bottom of the Detroit
Arbitron reports.
In May
2006, it was announced that CKLW would be a co-flagship station for
University
of Michigan
football with Detroit
radio station WOMC
.
CKLW-FM and CKLW-TV
In 1948,
CKLW started CKLW-FM
on 93.9 MHz (now CIDR-FM
). Despite a powerful 100,000-watt signal,
CKLW's FM sister has never been able to attract a sizeable
audience, at least not on the American side of the border. In the
1970s, CKLW-FM programmed a country format, and then big band and
jazz as CKJY in the early 1980s.
After the failed "Fox" format, the station became beautiful-music
CKEZ in 1985, and then in 1986, the CKLW-FM calls were restored and
the station made an attempt to mimick the sound of the classic "Big
8" formula with a playlist spanning the 1950s through 1980s and
with many of the original jingles, features and personalities, but
it lasted only a few years.
In the early 1990s, CKLW-FM again tried the "Big 8"-style oldies
format, as "93.9 The Legend".
Though the sound was again very faithful to
the original CKLW-AM, it once again did not last long, as there was
a lot of competition for the oldies market in Detroit at the time,
with WOMC
(104.3)
eventually emerging as the most popular oldies station.
93.9 is
now CIDR-FM
, with an AAA (Adult Album Alternative) format as
"93.9 The River", using the positioner "it's about the
music".
The
operation also included CKLW-TV, Channel 9 (now CBET
). For
years, one of the TV station's most popular shows was an
American Bandstand-style
show called
Swingin' Time
(and later,
The Lively Spot), hosted by
Robin Seymour (and also Tom
Shannon for a time) and featuring performances by national and
local recording artists and teenagers demonstrating the latest
dances. In fact, as early as 1956, Bud Davies hosted a
"bandstand"-style show on CKLW-TV called
Top Ten Dance
Party. For the most part, though, CKLW-TV was overshadowed by
its powerhouse sister radio station and mainly aired low-budget
local shows along with
Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation (CBC) (and also CTV) network fare.
When the Canadian government requested
RKO
General divest itself of its Canadian holdings in 1968, the
stations were sold to a consortium of the CBC and
Baton Broadcasting, which was finalized
in 1970.
Baton ran the radio station (and CKLW-TV)
for several years (under its subsidiary, St. Clair Broadcasting),
before selling to CHUM
in
1975. When the CBC took full ownership of the
television station (CKLW-TV), it changed its call letters to
CBET
.
CKLW-AM/FM then moved from the TV station's 825 Riverside Drive
West location to its own studios and offices at 1640 Ouelette
Avenue. CBET continues as Windsor's CBC English affiliate to this
day, although recent budget cuts at the CBC have meant less local
programming and more simulcasting of programming from
Toronto.
CHUM
continues to own CKLW and CIDR today, along with alternative rock
station CIMX
(88.7 FM,
"89X") and oldies/nostalgia station CKWW ("AM
580 Motor City Favorites"). All four stations are located at
the Ouelette Avenue address.
The 2004
film Radio Revolution: The Rise and Fall of the Big 8,
produced by Michael McNamara and aired on the History Television in Canada and PBS member stations WTVS
in Detroit
(2005) and WVIZ
in
Cleveland (2006), chronicles the history of CKLW's top 40
years. The film has been honored in Canada with the
Gemini Award (equivalent of an Emmy Award) for
"Best History Documentary".
CHUM sale to CTVglobemedia
On July 12, 2006, it was announced that CHUM would be absorbed by
Canadian media conglomerate
CTVglobemedia, the owner of Canadian
television network
CTV and
the successor of CKLW's former owner, Baton Broadcasting. On June
22, 2007 the sale became final.
See also
References
External links