This week we head north of the “dotted line” to Vancouver’s 1410 C-FUN, that city’s second contender in the top40 wars for teen listeners. From 1960-67, the station played the charted hits & offered some of the best talent on the west coast led by Vancouver radio legend Red Robinson. C-FUN’s big disadvantage was their puny 1,000 watt signal that had a hard time reaching around all those corners & up/down hills in the city & Fraser Valley. Within 2 years of it’s launch, the rock underdog would unseat Vancouver’s first top40 – 1130 CKWX (with it’s mighty 50,000 watt clear channel signal) as the reigning champ. However, C-FUN met it’s match when 730 CKLG switched to top40 in Aug. ’64. ‘LG had a much bigger signal (10 kW) & a crack team of DJs, plenty of remotes & live promotions. Within 3 years, C-FUN would call it quits, switch format to MOR & concede to “73CKLG”. After a call letter change & a few failed format tries, C-FUN would once again regain the call letters & relaunch as a top40 in 1973. Now with 50,000 watts, the station had a long run of success until changes in listener habits & the competitive Vancouver market would force C-FUN to finally give up in 2007.
Radio's ultimate aural broadcast service—FM—is permanently assigned. By unanimous vote, the FCC has pegged the…
On December 4th, during a segment on CNN's The Lead with Jake Tapper, host Jake…
After Bob Hale was let go from KING 5 in 1963, he worked at stations…
Former KLSY air personality, Dave Wingert, now in Omaha at KOBM FM Boomer Radio, updates…
The Official Tennessee Radio Hall Of Fame Community · (Facebook) From QZVX: October 1961 –…