Fifty Years Ago
this Month, music played a crucial sanctuary
for our insecurities, much like today. No self-respecting car cruising the drag
was without a radio; and like televisions today, a radio commanded space in
every room of the house.
Did your after-school job take a
month to earn up to $40 for that
Silvertone 4-speed automatic phonograph? Thumbing through the Sears (&
Roebuck) catalog though, you could score an AM clock radio for half that. We
were cool. ♪ California Dreamin’ … on such a
winter’s day … ♪
With our radios came those
smooth-talkin’, happy-hawkin’ DJs
who echoed our fears and soothed our tears … if only Batman could save the
world!
At WILS/Lansing Michigan, it was Batman to the rescue! Trading on the hottest show on television, the station’s “Top Sounds of the Week” for February 1966, featured “The exciting adventures of Bat-Fink and Rubin, the wonder-midget.” No, we were not particularly politically correct “in the day” …
At WILS/Lansing Michigan, it was Batman to the rescue! Trading on the hottest show on television, the station’s “Top Sounds of the Week” for February 1966, featured “The exciting adventures of Bat-Fink and Rubin, the wonder-midget.” No, we were not particularly politically correct “in the day” …