1977 in radio








List of years in radio
(table)


  • ... 1967

  • 1968

  • 1969

  • 1970

  • 1971

  • 1972


  • 1973 ...

  • 1974

  • 1975

  • 1976

  • 1977

  • 1978

  • 1979


  • 1980


  • ... 1981

  • 1982

  • 1983

  • 1984

  • 1985

  • 1986


  • 1987 ...



In music

1974

1975

1976

1977

1978

1979

1980



In television

1974

1975

1976

1977

1978

1979

1980



In home video

1974

1975

1976

1977

1978

1979

1980



  • Art

  • Archaeology

  • Architecture

  • Literature

  • Music

  • Philosophy


  • Science +...

In the year 1977, significant events in radio broadcasting included the President of the United States participating in a call-in radio program.




Contents





  • 1 Events

    • 1.1 No dates



  • 2 Debuts


  • 3 Closings


  • 4 Births


  • 5 Deaths


  • 6 References




Events


  • January – WRSQ-FM (104.9) signs on the air in Geneseo, Illinois as a sister station to WGEN-AM (1500 AM). The station's first call letters are short-lived, as the station will quickly adopt the callsign WGEN-FM. The initial format is country music with a community focus.

  • February 18 – Belgischer Rundfunk (BRF) is founded and takes over responsibility for public-service radio broadcasting in the German language in Belgium.

  • March 5 - President Jimmy Carter participates with Walter Cronkite in the Dial-a-President radio program on CBS.

  • May 12 - WTIC-FM in Hartford, Connecticut switches from classical music to a new Top 40 format designed by consultant Mike Joseph. This successful new approach will later be termed Hot Hits.

  • August 16 - Radio and television stations nationwide interrupt regular programming to report the death of Elvis Presley.

  • September 1 -- Dave Lingafelt begins airing "The Whacky Wake Up Crew" on WNNC-AM in Newton, North Carolina. He has been on the air for more than 35 years and has since purchased another AM station as well as 95.7 WXRC "The Ride."


No dates



  • KSTP-FM in St. Paul, Minnesota adopts its long-running soft rock format.


Debuts


  • 3 February: Adventure Theater (a children's program, not to be confused with Adventure Theater, a 1956 anthology series on NBC) debuts on CBS.[1]


Closings


  • 29 May: NBC Radio's all-news "News and Information Service" ceases operations, citing a low number of affiliates. Most stations switch to different formats, but KQV in Pittsburgh launched a locally based production for its all-news format, which it maintains to the present day.


Births


  • November - Heidi Cortez, American model, writer, and radio host


Deaths



  • Bud Ballou, radio disc jockey


  • Sid Collins, (55, American broadcaster best known as the radio voice of the Indianapolis 500 on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network from 1952 to 1976.


  • Bing Crosby, 74, American singer, actor and early radio personality.


  • Alan Reed, 70, an American actor.


References




  1. ^ Dunning, John. (1998). On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-507678-3.











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