Los Angeles Times: Hollywood, Radio Finally Part Waves

 
[Ad]
 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

THE STATE
Hollywood, Radio Finally Part Waves
By Bob Pool
Times Staff Writer

August 11, 2005

If everything goes as expected, nobody will really notice.

But with the planned flip of a switch at 11:05 p.m. Friday, another piece of 
Hollywood's golden age will disappear forever.

Microphones at the last radio station in Hollywood will go dead as announcers 
and newscasters complete their final on-air shift at the historic Columbia 
Square broadcast center.

The relocation of Los Angeles' first radio station, KNX-AM (1070), to new 
studios in Wilshire Boulevard's Miracle Mile area will end an 85-year tradition 
of radio broadcasting in the place that bills itself as the world's center of 
entertainment.

Over the years, Hollywood has been home to 68 radio stations and nine 
television stations. In the last few years, five television stations have left.

And when Columbia Square is shut down next year, two more - KCBS-TV Channel 2 
and KCAL-TV Channel 9 - will move to new headquarters being built in Studio 
City. That will leave just two television stations, KTLA-TV Channel 5 and 
KCET-TV Channel 28, in Tinseltown.

After KCBS and KCAL depart, the Streamline Moderne building at 6121 Sunset 
Blvd. is expected to be demolished to make way for new development.

"I never thought I'd see the day when there are no radio broadcasts out of 
Hollywood," said KNX assistant news director Ronnie Bradford, who joined the 
station in 1968. "This is a company town - movies, television and radio." 

The exodus ironically comes as Hollywood is in the midst of a major upswing. 
After years of decline, crime is down and a host of new trendy bars, 
restaurants, hotels and theaters has drawn young people back.

But many believe that the loss of radio has less to do with neighborhood 
revitalization than corporate economics.

The dozens of radio and TV stations, once independently owned, are now part of 
big corporate chains. These companies, like Infinity and Clear Channel, save 
money by consolidating engineering and administrative jobs under one roof. The 
radio and TV buildings in Hollywood are old, making it hard to conform with the 
latest technology.

Infinity owns seven radio stations, including KROQ-FM (106.7) and KRTH-FM 
(101), while Clear Channel owns 10, such as KIIS-FM (102.7) and KFI-AM (640).

For some, Friday will mark a dark day in Hollywood - and a reminder of how much 
the radio business has changed.

"There was a time when big stars were available to come on radio shows. They'd 
be passing by a studio and would just stop and come inside," said Johnny Grant, 
who had a 1951-59 afternoon show on Sunset Boulevard's KMPC-AM (710). 

"Someone would call back, 'Bing Crosby's out here - what should I do with him?' 
And I'd say, 'Bring him on back,' and I'd put him on the air."


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


With its porthole-windowed studio doors and chrome-accented, round-cornered 
interior walls, Columbia Square was considered America's most spacious and 
technologically advanced broadcast facility when CBS built it in 1938. 
Legendary CBS President William S. Paley personally oversaw its design and 
officiated at its dedication.

It boasted eight large broadcasting studios, including one theater-like room 
that could seat an audience of 1,050.

"Radio was so important to everybody back then; there was no TV. Columbia 
Square was the epitome of radio. Everything was modern. It was beautiful," 
remembered Sherman Oaks resident Art Gilmore, who was working as a KNX 
announcer the day Columbia Square opened.

During the 1940s and '50s hundreds would line up in the building's U-shaped 
forecourt to get in to see live productions of radio shows featuring Jack 
Benny, Art Linkletter, Burns and Allen, Edgar Bergen, Orson Welles, Jackie 
Gleason, Steve Allen, Eddie Cantor, Rosemary Clooney and Ed Wynn.

Celebrities rubbed elbows with fans at Brittingham's Restaurant, on the east 
side of the forecourt. Passersby could watch broadcast engineers sending out 
the CBS West Coast feed from a large, almost theatrical-looking master control 
room visible through a wide front window. Forty-five-minute tours of the 
studios were offered daily for 40 cents.

"It was a little awesome just walking into Columbia Square," said Mel Baldwin, 
who worked as a KNX announcer, overnight "Music 'Til Dawn" disc jockey and 
program host between 1951 and 1991. He is now retired and living in Port 
Orange, Fla.

In the 1950s, radio dramas were still being produced in front of live 
audiences, Baldwin said.

"We had ushers that worked full time to make sure we had crowds for the shows. 
Studio B seated about 400 people. If it wasn't filled, they'd be out on Vine 
Street handing out comp tickets."

Former broadcast executive Don Barrett, who in the early 1970s ran KIQQ-FM in 
Hollywood and now operates the LARadio.com website, credits a childhood visit 
to Columbia Square with launching his career.

He was about 9 when his Cub Scout pack went there to watch a western-themed 
radio show being produced. Remembering the hoofbeats from previous broadcasts, 
Barrett figured he would be going to a ranch where real horses were galloping 
about.

"But there were actors reading from pages, and sound effects were doing the 
clomping. Then Gene Autry came out. Right then I fell in love with radio," said 
Barrett of Santa Clarita. "My love affair with radio started in that building."

During that period, all four radio networks had Hollywood studios within steps 
of each other around Vine Street, which was known as radio row.

"NBC was at Sunset and Vine. ABC was across the street on Vine. Mutual was also 
on Vine. CBS' Columbia Square was on Sunset. It was a very busy place," said 
David Schwartz, who was KIIS-FM's assistant music director when it was in 
Hollywood.

With the help of friends who are broadcast buffs or former on-air 
personalities, radio historian Jim Hilliker has tallied the call letters of 68 
radio stations - some with transmitters as far away as Mexico - that were based 
in Hollywood at one time or another. KNX, which was launched in 1920 in the 
back bedroom of a house on Hollywood's Harold Way and officially licensed by 
the federal government as a commercial station a year later, is Los Angeles' 
oldest station.

No L.A. station has stayed in one place as long as the 67 years that KNX has 
resided at Columbia Square, Hilliker said. Besides changing addresses, many Los 
Angeles stations have changed call letters too.

KNX will join four other Infinity Broadcasting Corp. stations - KFWB-AM (980), 
KLSX-FM (97.1), KTWV-FM (94.7) and KRTH-FM - at 5670 Wilshire Blvd. At that 
high-rise, KNX and longtime news-radio rival KFWB will share the same floor - 
separated only by a wall that features a sliding-glass window, said KNX news 
director Ed Pyle.

KFWB moved there June 24 after spending 80 years in Hollywood.

Left behind at its old Yucca Street studios was a large neon sign bearing the 
KFWB call letters and twin antique microphones. A community group, the 
Hollywood Project Area Committee, is campaigning to preserve the distinctive 
sign, which dates from the days when Warner Bros. owned the station and 
operated it on Hollywood Boulevard.

Community activist John Walsh said the group was also attempting to block the 
demolition of Columbia Square. Acquired 1½ years ago for $15 million by a 
partnership called Sungow Corp. and rented back to Infinity's parent company, 
Viacom, the structure is widely expected to be torn down so the site can be 
redeveloped.

Alan Shuman, a Sungow partner, said there were "no plans at the moment" for the 
property, however.

The most ardent supporters of Columbia Square concede that the broadcast center 
is probably doomed.

Dan Gingold, who worked 18 years there as a television director for what is now 
KCBS-TV, is trying to piece together a video documentary about the place.

"I don't think any one of us realized it was a wonderful Art Deco landmark that 
should be preserved in history. At this point, I think preservation is a lost 
cause," said Gingold of Sherman Oaks.

George Nicholaw, who spent 36 years at KNX before leaving as general manager in 
2003, said he mapped out a plan for preserving Columbia Square shortly after 
Viacom acquired the CBS stations.

Under his proposal, a new building atop an underground parking garage at the 
rear of Columbia Square would have housed Infinity's seven local radio 
stations. That would have cleared the way for the 1938 building to be remodeled 
and used exclusively by KCBS-TV and sister-station KCAL-TV, he said. The two TV 
stations are scheduled to move to Studio City late next year.

"That would have saved the building. I sent a presentation to New York but 
never heard back from them. I gave it a go. Columbia Square is a historical 
monument and part of Hollywood's history. It's a shame that they can't add on 
and expand it," said Nicholaw, a Hollywood resident.

Current KNX employees said they would miss walking in the footsteps of 
broadcasting giants.

"As a kid, I'd ride my bike here. My mom said Jack Benny worked here, and James 
Dean was an usher here. Bob Crane did his show from this very room," production 
chief Raul Moreno said.

KNX reporter Michael Linder has produced a 55-minute retrospective of Columbia 
Square's radio history scheduled to run Friday at 10:05 p.m. It will be the 
last time that old-fashioned reel-to-reel recorders and cart tape machines are 
used: The new studios are all digital.

Never mind the Hollywood Walk of Fame, he said. "The stars walked up and down 
this very corridor." 

*

(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX) 

Once in Hollywood

Here is a list of radio stations that once had studios in Tinseltown:

KFPG-AM (570)

KMTR-AM (570)

KLAC-AM (570)

XETRA-AM (690)

KMPC-AM (710)

KBIG-AM (740)

KECA-AM (790)

KABC-AM (790)

KHJ-AM (930)

KKHJ-AM (930)

KFWB-AM (980)

KTNQ-AM (1020)

KNX-AM (1070)

XERB-AM (1090)

XEPRS-AM (1090)

KIIS-AM (1150)

KPRZ-AM (1150)

KGFJ-AM (1230)

KWKW-AM (1300) 

KFAC-AM (1330)

KWKW-AM (1330) 

KALI-AM (1430)

KPOL-AM (1540)

KZLA-AM (1540)

KSKQ-AM (1540)

KXED-AM (1540)

KDAY-AM (1580)

KFAC-FM (92.3)

KKBT-FM (92.3)

KNX-FM (93.1)

KKHR-FM (93.1)

KODJ-FM (93.1)

KCBS-FM (93.1)

KPOL-FM (93.9)

KZLA-FM (93.9)

KFMV-FM (94.7)

KFWB-FM (94.7)

KRHM-FM (94.7)

KMET-FM (94.7)

KTWV-FM (94.7)

KECA-FM (95.5)

KABC-FM (95.7)

KSKQ-FM (97.9L)

KMPC-FM (100.3)

KIQQ-FM (100.3)

KQLZ-FM (100.3)

KHJ-FM (101.1)

KRTH-FM (101.1)

KMPC-FM (101.9) 

KEDG-FM (101.9)

KLIT-FM (101.9)

KSCA-FM (101.9)

KKDJ-FM (102.7)

KIIS-FM (102.7)

KGLA-FM (102.5)

KBIG-FM (104.3)

KXTZ-FM (104.3)

KWST-FM (105.9)

KMGG-FM (105.9)

KPWR-FM (105.9)

KLVE-FM (107.5)



*

Note: KNX started as 5-watt experimental station 6ADZ and then KGC before 
getting its current call letters in 1922.

KABC-AM (790) began in Hollywood as KFVF-AM and then became KNRC-AM. 
Circa-1920s Hollywood stations KFAR-AM and KFQZ-AM are now defunct. Hollywood 
station K45LA, which operated at 44.5 on the old FM band, was the first FM 
station west of the Mississippi in 1941. It became KHJ-FM (99.7) when the FM 
band changed in 1945 and later became KRTH-FM (101.1). 

*

Source: Jim Hilliker, with the assistance of Dale Berg, Scott Fybush, Donna 
Halper, Richard Toebe, Roger Carroll and Bob Morgan 

Los Angeles Times 


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

If you want other stories on this topic, search the Archives at 
latimes.com/archives.

Article licensing and reprint options

Copyright 2005 Los Angeles Times | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service
Home Delivery | Advertise | Archives | Contact | Site Map | Help


partners:      

Attachment: lat_both.gif
Description: GIF image

Attachment: leader_label.gif
Description: GIF image

Attachment: tmsreprints_bug.gif
Description: GIF image

Attachment: ktla_logo.gif
Description: GIF image

Attachment: hoy_logo.gif
Description: GIF image

Attachment: blank.gif
Description: GIF image

---[Start Commercial]---------------------

World Radio TV Handbook 2005 is out. 
Order yours from http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0823077942/hardcoredxcom

---[End Commercial]-----------------------
________________________________________
Hard-Core-DX mailing list
[email protected]
http://dallas.hard-core-dx.com/mailman/listinfo/hard-core-dx
http://www.hard-core-dx.com/
_______________________________________________

THE INFORMATION IN THIS ARTICLE IS FREE. It may be copied, distributed
and/or modified under the conditions set down in the Design Science License
published by Michael Stutz at http://dsl.org/copyleft/dsl.txt

Reply via email to