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KEWB Channel 91, Oakland
Johnny G
Wednesday, January 19, 1966
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Johnny G
(KEWB Publicity Photo)


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A forty-five minute broadcast excerpt from Oakland's
popular KEWB featuring Johnny G, including
the tail-end of Barney Lee's newscast. (Another newscast near the middle
of the program was not included in the original recording.)
Johnny Gilbert, who worked at KEWB as "Johnny G," began his career at
WBAM/Montgomery, Ala., WLOF/Orlando and WFUN/Miami, Fla., and
WPOP/Hartford, Conn., before coming to KEWB in 1965.
Johnny was transferred to sister station KFWB in Los Angeles before
bouncing back up to KEWB, then — after the station became KNEW) went on
to KCBQ/San Diego, KOY and KRIZ/Phoenix, and WINZ/Miami. He was working
as an airborne traffic reporter at KULF in Houston when he was killed in
a helicopter accident on March 15, 1974.
Johnny was posthumously named as the recipient of the
Steve
Pieringer Award by the Texas Association of Broadcasters in 1974.
The award is given to a deserving newsperson for "providing lifesaving
continuing coverage in an emergency, or being jailed for refusing to
reveal a confidential source and even for suffering injury or death in
the pursuit of the day's news."
During this broadcast, Johnny makes several references to "Fun Town
USA," the teen dance promotions that he ran in partnership with his KEWB
teammate, Ron Reynolds.
"We were on stage together to introduce the Beatles at the Cow Palace
in 1965," Mr. Reynolds said. "He and I were partners in presenting
rock
band dances at the Veteran's Hall by Lake Merritt in Oakland for a year
or two back in the mid-1960s. I made enough money to make the down
payment on our Walnut Creek house."
"In fact, he and I at one point decided to expand our base and put on
dances in San Francisco," Mr. Reynolds continued. "We located a dump
called the Fillmore. We decided it was just in too bad a part of town,
so we passed on it and Bill Graham grabbed it. Then we attempted to
lease an auditorium off of Van Ness, but lost out to Chet Helms who
started the Family Dog at the Avalon. Great timing ... lousy decisions —
oh well."
KEWB
had begun its life back in 1922 as KLX under the ownership of the
Knowland family, which also published the Oakland Tribune. The Knowland
family operated KLX until June 8, 1959, when it was sold to
Crowell-Collier Publishing for $750,000 and became Top 40-formatted
Color Radio 91/KEWB.
By the time of this broadcast, KEWB was in the final
months of its mostly successful run as a Top 40 station. On April 30,
1966, the station was sold by Crowell-Collier to Metromedia Radio for
$2,459,000. Shortly thereafter, in early September 1966, KEWB became
KNEW under new general manager Varner Paulsen and dropped Top 40 for
talk programming.
RELATED EXHIBITS:
Please note that an additional
Johnny G broadcast recording from August 1965 may be found in the
Complete KEWB Airchecks Collection (see link below).
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Special thanks to Ron Reynolds
and
Ed
Brouder
for their invaluable assistance in developing this
exhibit. |
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