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Category: Radio Broadcasting

Ken Nicholson Voice of the Jets

voice of the jets

When you listened to CJOB radio broadcasts of the early Winnipeg Jets, I was the usually the guy sitting behind the console at the station. I enjoyed listening to the Voice of the Jets night after night. And the Jets were great, too!

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WKRP and Me – Living on the Air

wkrp

One day in the early 1980’s I was watching one of the funnier shows on television – WKRP in Cincinnati. WKRP was a situation comedy, running from 1978-1982, based on a struggling major market radio station. I had what writers call an epiphany, a sudden and striking realization. WKRP was not a comedy. WKRP was reality. WKRP was me! It was time to move on.

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Remembering Student Radio

student radio studio circa 1955

My career in broadcasting started in student radio. Right there, in the chair of the studio shown above at the University of Manitoba. Since the 1940’s, student radio has been a place for young people to develop and pursue passions and careers. I am planning to write a short history of UMSR. Can you help? I would love to hear your stories and get a copy of your pictures. In the meantime, here is the short version of student radio at University of Manitoba. There are similar stories at most universities and colleges across Canada.

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Remembering CJOB – Early Radio Broadcast Automation

Early Radio Broadcast Automation

 

Radio broadcast automation today is about computers. Back in 1970’s, it was about robots. After years of “experience” in student radio, I was thrilled to get my first real, paid job in professional radio. The thrill was somewhat tempered by reality. My job was actually to configure and baby-sit a robot on the weekend overnight shift.

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Remembering CJOB – The Main Studio

John at CJOB 2

We were all young once. Here I am in the main radio broadcast studio at CJOB during the early 1970’s. When you look at your picture album, do you ever notice that while you look so young, everything around you in the photo looks so old? Young broadcasters might have difficulty identifying these historical artifacts. Today’s broadcast studios are mostly software and monitors. Back in the day, we had hardware, and lots of it!

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