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On Fri, 1 Jul 2006 at 03:05 -0000, David Eduardo scribbled:
-Here is a link to hundreds of call letter meanings -http://nelson.oldradio.com/origins.call-list.html Thousands, not hundreds! That's a really big list! However, many of the 'meanings' seem to be slogans that were probably adopted after call letters were assigned. One case warrants comment: Sure, the letters WNOP presumably were derived from the city of Newport, Kentucky, to which the sta- tion was licensed. But they didn't make any on-air use of this acronymistic tie, at least not in the 35-plus years after they adopted their famous wacky "format" of (mainstream) jazz and com- edy cuts in 1961. This was the radio station that reputedly served as the real- life inspiration for the TV sitcom, "WKRP in Cincinnati." All kinds of funny sayings, cuts from comedy records, and assorted noises were broadcast from their base in Newport, across the river from downtown Cincinnati. In fact, for many years in the '70s and '80s WNOP's studios were *IN* the Ohio river! -- floating in the river, which happens to be almost completely "owned" by the state of Ken- tucky. One of their wacky trademarks was a collection of station IDs recorded by comedian Shelley Berman, where the letters WNOP would stand for crazy things like (for example) "Where Nobody Oversizes Potatoes." They used many variations, but never something so dull as merely saying "This is WNOP, which by the way, stands for Newport." This was, after all, a station dedicated to the offbeat, the true hipsters, the 'real' original, laid-back counter-culture. It was cool when cool was still cool. It was where the put-on was normal. This was a station with its own recorded sign-off song which ended with the line, [we] "...hope you... don't... die... tonite!" and then after a pause, "from Doubleyou... Enn... Oh... Peee... NEW-PORT!!" (No complaints about bad taste, please. Their resident copy- writer, who went by the handle of Bunky Tadwell, might've read your complaint on the air, no doubt accompanied with sarcastic barnyard sound effects, and said you just don't "get it.") WNOP is gone now. RIP both 1950s' slang and Newport's legendary Jazz Ark. After the longtime owner passed away it was sold off and now there's a religious station on its 740 AM channel. Slogans and all, it will be missed. -- ---------------------------------------------- david moeser -- erasmus39 on yahoo Censornati, Ohio - USA ---------------------------------------------- * "DSFA" = Doesn't Stand For Anything! * |
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