The Don Jennett Collection

Don Jennett at age 7
Don Jennett, Christmas 1969, in his new Roman Gabriel Edition RAMS uniform.

Picture of Don Jennett when he was Entertainment Editor and Radio Critic for the Cal State Long Beach Daily Forty-Niner
College Dude Don

Don Jennett and Kids
Don with son Calvin and daughter Victoria, January 1999, north of Nevada City, California.

Don Jennett was born in Los Angeles in 1962, and is an avid collector of Los Angeles airchecks.

Many L.A teens grew up with Boss Radio 93/KHJ. But in 1969, Don was only seven years of age when he was first hooked on KHJ.

As an adolescent, he made all-too-brief airchecks of KHJ, KFI and 10-Q.

He was unaware that the tapes would become collectibles, so not much survives from that era. His collection, as presented here, was built virtually from scratch.

Don dreamed of being a "Boss Jock" or a journalist while growing up, and was schooled in newspaper journalism. He was Entertainment Editor and Radio Critic for the Cal State Long Beach Daily Forty-Niner during his college years.

He became aware of aircheck collecting as a hobby in 1991, when he stumbled upon KRLA's April Fools' day broadcasts of classic DJs like Dave HullEmperor HudsonBob Dayton and Charlie O'Donnell.

Bobby Ocean and Don Jennett, April 2001
Bobby Ocean and Don Jennett, April 2001, San Rafael California.

His career path took him into the world of advertising sales. He moved to Nevada City, California in 1998, where he worked as a publisher's representative.

Don's only hands-on contact with radio — other than being a former groupie — was as a volunteer broadcaster at KVMR-FM, public radio in Nevada City.

 

The Repository thanks Don Jennett for sharing!

… where you’re never more than a minute away from music …
[Description by Uncle Ricky, July 29, 2001]Paul Freeman and Lloyd Lindsay Young, from a June 1970 KNAK Survey.

Here’s Los Angeles radio veteran Paul Freeman on KNAK (1280 Khz) in Salt Lake City, Utah during the Solid Gold Summer of 1970.

KNAK had some ballsy ID drops, TM “Beat Goes On” jingles and a
“Salt Lake City Weather” acapella which caps the “Salt Lake City Today”
report (at 47:33) by Lloyd Lindsay Young. (Lloyd Lindsay was later at KFRC. Mr. Young was a TV weatherguy and commercial spokesman in Sacramento, CA. for several years.)

This is an enjoyable escape to a time when hit records were all “about” 3
minutes. Top 40 stations in smaller markets could pay the bills with reasonable commercial loads and the format comfortably blended rock, R&B and Pop. This was not “diversity”. It was plain old “variety”. Smaller market stations that got this good at their craft were still making exciting radio – and payroll.

Even more appropriate for the date of the online debut, within the last 60 seconds of this salty treasure you’ll hear a spot for Beneath the Planet of the Apes.
It’s 31 years, one month and a couple of days after June 27, 1970 — and some things never change!

Paul Freeman, 1970
Lloyd Lindsey Young
… KHJ Star Trek Time on the Tom Maule Show …
Tom Maule (courtesy of www.bossradioforever.com) Tom Maule (1939-1993) spent less than a year at his dream station, but his resume is nonetheless impressive. He worked at other major Top 40 stations both before, (KGB) and after, (KFRC) his brief stint at KHJ. Maule hailed from Fresno, where he both began and ended his career. He always gave his listeners the impression he was truly happy to be where he was. I am told this aircheck was provided by Tom himself.
… back in May, when CCR still existed …

The “Big 93” of 1972 would prove to be the sixth and final one for Robert W. Morgan, The Real Don Steele and The Johnny Mann Singers on KHJ. I vividly recall 28 years ago my friends and I writing down each and every song in this countdown as it was revealed.

RWM sounds as though he understood at this time that the official end of the Boss Radio era was finally at hand. Very few spots here (even for a Saturday morning), but the “Big 93” jingle is intact. This segment features Hits #93 through #67.

Listen for an extremely rare “KHJ News Bulletin” (from newsman Bob Lee) announcing the resumption of the Paris Peace Talks.

… let’s end the suspense right now …
The countdown continues the following night on New Year’s Eve with Mark Elliott (sitting in for Cat Simon.)

This segment features Hits # 31 – #1. After the “giant-killer” for the year is announced, it all begins anew with the #93 song.

… that’s The Balloon Farm, setting my thermometer on fire …
Before he was called up to KGB by Bill Drake, 23-year-old Bobby Ocean spun Boss platters and doubled as his own newsman under the moniker Johnny Scott at KY-NO Number 1 in Fresno. This recording was made by my friend Marty Levy, who explained the reason he ran valuable tape on this rather “new” radio voice was that “I knew someday he’d be a major market talent.” Marty has since changed his name to Carnac.
… sinking slowly into oblong oblivion …

[Description by Uncle Ricky for this exhibit contributed by Don Jennett]

A scoped partial version of this exhibit has been on REELRADIO since May of 2000, and now, in memory of Dave Diamond who passed on May 5, 2014, here are the entire three hours of the last Diamond Mine program on KBLA.

There were some small technical problems with the original tape, resulting in a few places where speed is lost. Three songs were restored because they were incomplete or for technical reasons. At one point, it sounds like the radio was tuned away for a few seconds, and then tuned back. There’s an odd “acoustic” effect on portions of the last 90 minutes, mostly noticeable on voice. Gary Whitaker handles news.

There’s plenty of pomp at the end, as KBLA becomes KBBQ.

… The final hour of music sounds from KFWB …

Ever the consummate professional, Gene Weed (1935-1999), one of the only two remaining original “Seven Swinging Gentlemen,” brings down the curtain after 10 years, 2 months and 8 days of what was initially called Color Radio.

A certain highlight is Weed’s recitation of the names of 50 personalities (all male, by the way) who used a KFWB microphone between 1958 and 1968.

… You betcha! Have a Burgie tonight …
Reb Foster,at KRLA The majority of Reb Foster’s career in Los Angeles was spent at KRLA, but he worked afternoon drive at KFWB in 1965 and 1966. Prior to Los Angeles, Foster worked at KYA in San Francisco, KISN in Portland and KYW in Cleveland. He owned a nightclub in Redondo Beach, and in the ’70’s, he managed Three Dog Night, the Turtles and Steppenwolf.
… KRLA proclaims January twenty-seventh ‘Bee Gees’ day in Southern California …

Bee Gees Day was coming – as evidenced by TWO Brothers Gibb tunes in this aircheck recorded during KRLA’s “New Season of Excitement,” a high-energy format which sounded very much like rival KHJ. Of course, by January of 1968, KHJ had lapped KRLA (and everyone else!) in the ratings. The DJ lineup at this time included Reb Foster (PD), Casey Kasem, Jim Wood, Dave Hull (in morning drive), Bill Slater and Rhett Walker (a New Zealander who was KRLA’s answer to KHJ’s Tommy Vance and KFWB’s Lord Tim Hudson).

Bob Dayton (1934-95) left WABC in 1965 after the infamous “Hiroshima” broadcast and headed west, first stopping at KBLA in Burbank (later KBBQ and then KROQ), where — as evidenced by an aircheck elsewhere at this site — he “puked” for two years. Reb Foster hired him the day KBLA folded, and by 1968 he had toned it down to at least “Boss Jock” level. In early ’69 he even went up against The Real Don Steele in KRLA’s afternoon slot.

The “New Season of Excitement” ran out of gas, however, and by mid-1968 KRLA had all but conceded that KHJ ruled the town, giving way to large chunks of “automated” programming. Dayton stuck with KRLA off and on through 1973 (including a brief run back in New York at ‘CBS-FM). He died of cancer April 28, 1995.

… Country Joe’s is located at 2113 Stoner Avenue, uh huh …
[Description by Don Jennett]Jimmy Rabbitt, early 1970’s

Here’s some of Jimmy Rabbitt’s final show on KRLA during their Phase 1 format. Phase II was launched when Shadoe Stevens joined KRLA as Program Director later that year.

Following this stint, Rabbitt joined B. Mitchel Reed at album-rocker KMET,
then moved to country KBBQ, where he stayed on for the switch to KROQ in September, 1972.

[Uncle Ricky: Classic comedy from The Credibility Gap is included in the extended newscast beginning at timemark 17:24 (06:55, ‘scoped version). Music was restored to this exhibit on May 31, 2015.]

Welcome to the new ReelRadio!

This site is now operated by the North Carolina Broadcast History Museum. 

We want to thank the board of ReelRadio, Inc. for their stewardship since the passing of the founder Richard Irwin in 2018.  It has not been easy and they have maintained the exhibits for future generations to enjoy.

I met Richard Irwin, aka Uncle Ricky, when we were freshmen at East Carolina University.  We both had worked at local stations in our hometowns.  No one was more passionate about radio, especially Top 40 radio, than my friend Richard. 

Our goals with this site are to preserve the exhibits and make them available free of charge for people to enjoy.  Over time, we hope to add some airchecks to the site.  This will not happen immediately.  Time and resources will determine the future of new exhibits. 

Many thanks to the web folks at the Beasley Media Group for countless hours of work.  Again thanks to the board members of ReelRadio, Inc. for their faith in us. 

Richard Irwin’s hope was that his site would live on long after his passing. He said, “I hope REELRADIO will survive as my contribution to the ‘radio business’. The business is allowed to forget me, but the business should never forget the great era of radio that we celebrate here”.

We remember Richard and we thank him. If you enjoy this new site, we would appreciate a contribution. We hope you enjoy the new ReelRadio!

Board of NCBHP
North Carolina Broadcast History Project