WZNG
WKIS WHOO-AM
WBJW WOMX
WOCL WLOQ WHTQ
WFLF
To
paraphrase Ted Baxter, “It all began at a 1000-watt radio station in Winter
Haven, Florida.” Dave and
Diane Buerger at 1360 AM WZNG (“Zing
Radio!”) were nice enough to hire an 18-year-old kid just a few months out of
high school to do weekends on their oldies station. A year later, I was on the
air in my hometown of Orlando. That
was at WKIS (740 AM), where I was hired to
join the news department after an interview with the legendary Gene
Burns, in which he inquired if I had any lawn-mowing jobs would
interfere with me working there. I
assured him I did not; although, at times during my radio career, I probably
could have used some lawn-mowing experience to fall back on.
My next stop was Orlando’s country station, WHOO (990 AM), where
I became news director. I
eventually segued into that same position at CHR-formatted BJ105/Orlando
(WBJW-FM 105.1) and,
after a few years, went from news to full-time personality, co-hosting the
“Breakfast Bunch” morning show and working with the very talented Bill Cross
and Carren Sheldon, plus
Darrell Hammond, who later joined the cast of Saturday
Night Live. I stayed there for
a total of almost 10 years, through the transition of BJ105 to Mix
105.1. I then rejoined Bill Cross to
co-host mornings in North Florida at Y103/Jacksonville, before returning to
Orlando and the market’s original oldies station, COOL 105.9 (WOCL-FM
105.9). I was again co-hosting mornings, first with Bill Gable and then with
Scott “Scooter” Sherwood. "Scooter & Company" was an amazing team, also
featuring Jack Dyer, aka Elvis
Gorbachev; the late, great newsman Frank Lasko
and traffic reporter Andrea
Lively. One
of my favorite promotions we did was “Pound the Pacers” as the NBA’s
Orlando Magic took on Indiana in the playoffs and we had listeners take sledge
hammers to an old AMC Pacer. The
show and the station were still performing well when, in April 1999, the air staff
was summoned to a remote location and informed that “due to a format
change, your contracts will be terminated as of noon today.” It was a cruel way to treat a group of very talented personalities, some
of whom had been at COOL for more than a decade. But, what goes around comes around:
the new format, “Jammin' Oldies,” was an unmitigated disaster and
another Orlando station picked up the abandoned COOL format and logo and enjoyed
several more years of Good Time Oldies success. While at COOL, I had begun my
own daily comedy prep service, Alan Spector’s Comedy News
Network, and was
writing for the likes of Charlie
Van Dyke and the late Robert W. Morgan in Los Angeles, Dick Purtan in Detroit,
Jeff & Jer in San Diego and Jack Diamond in Washington, DC.
I spent the rest of 1999
mellowing out as a part-time jock playing Smooth Jazz on 103.1 WLOQ (WLOQ-FM
103.1) in Orlando. In 2000, Clear Channel paired
up Scott Sherwood and myself again to host the morning show at 95.7
WRIT, their
oldies station in Milwaukee. I
worked with some great people there, but a record December snowfall of 50 inches
helped convince me it was time to return to Orlando. Within a few weeks, I joined
Classic Rock 96.5 WHTQ (WHTQ-FM 96.5)
as local producer and newscaster for the syndicated John
Boy & Billy Big Show, plus the
voice of Get the Led Out weekday evenings. That continued until January 2007, when Cox Radio
decided listeners wanted a “live and local” morning show and brought in
Richard Dixon and J. Willoughby from Birmingham and kept me on as executive
producer. I thought the show had
great potential, especially after we garnered international publicity by
convincing a listener to name his unborn son “Dixon & Willoughby with
Radio's Alan Spector.” But after
less than two years, Cox decided listeners did not want live and local after all
and replaced us with The Bubba the Love Sponge Show, syndicated out of
Tampa. It might not have been the
best move on their part; shortly thereafter, Bubba, classic rock and the call
letters WHTQ all disappeared from Orlando radio. I am currently back to my
roots in radio news, working for a company called Virtual News Center and, from
my home studio, anchoring local newscasts for stations in eight different
markets around the country.
I am also working with Erica Lee, a former colleague at Mix 105.1/Orlando and current morning-show host at
102.5 WLOQ (WLOQ-FM 102.5), in developing Aircheck, a podcasting website.
Radio personalities from all over the country and even overseas are
contributing shows to www.aircheck.us.
Erica and I can be heard there on our own podcast, “Alan
& Erica: Live from Alan’s House,” and, from time to time, I can be heard
again on the Orlando airwaves as Erica’s guest co-host on WLOQ.
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