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98Q (WTCQ-FM) "The Rock Of Dixie"
This is a 98Q tribute page... To access the official 98Q website, click here!


"The 98Q Story"
As Told By Original 98Q Program Director, Ken Kurtis

98Q (WTCQ, Vidalia, at 97.7 FM, formerly WVOP-FM) was put on the air in 1975 by myself (PD) and John Shomby (MD). It all started with our AM counterpart, WVOP, a daytime-only station, which had a top-40 format (with me as PD and John as MD). WVOP-FM had an automated beautiful music format (very common use of FM back in those days). The AM side was sold out commercially almost every day AND we had to go off the air at sundown (signing back on at 6AM the next day). On the FM side, we couldn't give the spots away.

So we came up with a pitch to station ownership about flipping the very popular top-40 format over to the FM, allowing for a better spread of the commercial mix, more time to sell, and the ability to go live 24 hours a day, 7 days  a week. We proposed to dump the beautiful music format, and convert the AM station (WVOP) into a country station. And that's what we did.

It's also important to understand the nature of local radio at the time. Vidalia is a typical small Southern town of about 10,000 people, located about halfway between Macon and Savannah in SE Georgia. A lot of these small towns all had their own hometown radio stations. The formats were a mishmash, interspersed with hog reports, obituaries, tobacco prices, "local" news (usually revivals, library meetings, and such), and what-have-you.

Our goal with 98Q was to bring a major-market sound to Vidalia and the surrounding areas. And I think we did that with a vengeance.

We started by simply taking the FM format off the air and replacing it with a tape loop that said: "(Left channel) 98Q is coming, (right channel) 98Q is coming, (both) 98Q is coming!!!" That tape ran endlessly for two days. people would call and ask what it was and we wouldn't tell them. People called to say they spent hours listening because they couldn't believe that's ALL we were airing. But we sure burned the name of the station into their mind. And it set the tone for 98Q, which became known for innovative and ear-catching promotions.

On August 28, 1975, we signed the station on the air and went live. This was the first time outside of larger cities (as far as I know) that any small-town Georgia station was on the air for 24-hours-a-day, let alone with a live jock all the time.

Of course, starting up something like this is not without it's problems. Ours occurred when our music survey arrived (all 5000 copies) and we saw that the station logo was printed upside-down . . . on BOTH sides!!!! Our GM, Ed Bouchelle, loved to say, "When life gives you lemons, make lemonade." So we came up with the idea that anyone who got one of our surveys and could tell us what was wrong with it, would win an album. Needless to say, this helped burn the image of our logo into everyone's minds.

Our first indication that we were on to something special came three days into our new life. We'd decided to hold a Labor Day concert out on the station lawn (which housed the tower). We got a flatbed, invited a number of local bands to play, and were delighted when 1000 people showed up. Not a bad way to kick off the station.

From the time we'd spent on WVOP, we'd already gained a reputation as a tertiary station that had a good ear for breaking new music (Southern radio was very hot back then) and for doing promotions. We continued that with 98Q. We became among the first of the R&R P3 reporting stations and also reported to Kal Rudman, Bobby Poe, Ron Brandon, and other of the music tip sheets of the day.

We also continued to do weekly promotions. Among our favorites were "98Q Calling All Cows Cow Calling Contest" (keyed to an Elvin Bishop record and where the winner got a Kaw-asaki motorcycle), "National Ding-a-Ling day" (a take-off on the Bicentennial Minute of 1975-76), "The Equal Speed Rule" (an April Fool's joke), and many more.

About six months after we went on the air, there was a ratings book (Mediastat) done for our coverage area (about 85,000 listeners all told) that showed 98Q the resounding #1 choice is every daypart with AQH shares ranging from an 18 in the morning to a whopping 37 in the evening. (It was also nice to see that our AM station with its country format was generally #4 - but a distant #4 with about an overall 7 share.)

The station, and John and I, continued to receive a lot of national attention, much more so than our market size would indicate and probably on a level impossible to achieve today, given the changing nature of radio. In the spring of 1976, at the Bobby Poe Pop Music Convention in Washington, DC, I was named Program Director of the Year and John was named Music Director of the Year. Poe told us we should have also been Station of the Year but that he didn't feel it was fair for us to sweep all three categories. (We won Station of the Year the following year.)

The culmination of events for me at 98Q was when we held our second concert, this time over the July 4th weekend of 1976. We had the same idea as we did for the first concert - out on our lawn, got a flatbed truck, invited local bands. Only this time (by police estimates), we attracted 10,000 people (and remember the population of the entire town was around 10,000). OH MY GOD!!!!!! Shomby and I were stunned. Apparently, they still talk about that day in Vidalia. Like our own little Woodstock. Cars were parked along the main Highway 280 (where the station was and is located) for two or three miles in each direction. I vividly remember turning towards John as we surveyed the scene from the back of the crowd and said, "I can't top this. I've got to get out of here." And a month later, I was the new PD at KAKC in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

John was promoted to PD and stayed about another year and kept the station on top of the ratings. After he left (to go to Birmingham, I think), Scott Kerr took over and stayed about another year. The station went through a number of PDs after that, may have enough gone through some formatting realignment (but kept the call letters and the 98Q moniker), and now runs mainly satellite-supplied stuff but goes live in the morning for a few hours.

Over the years, John has run a myriad of stations in such markets Birmingham, Portland, New Orleans, Dallas, Flint, Augusta, and now runs a cluster of stations for Hampton Roads Radio Group in Norfolk/Newport News, Virginia. Scott Kerr is now a Senior Account Manager for Citadel Communications in Charleston, South Carolina. As for me, I went from 98Q to KAKC in Tulsa, then (briefly) to 99X in New York City, and then down to WLEE in Richmond, Virginia (all as PD). In Richmond, I segued into television and, after I get fired from WLEE, continued to work for the local PBS station there and left Richmond in 1981 to come to LA, where I continued my TV career (20 years as host for KCET, the local PBS station, did the weather for KABC, small stints on both "General Hospital" and "Days of Our Lives", plus doing various commercials and infomercials, the most successful of which were "QRB" and "The Fat Free Express") plus I'm the co-owner of a successful Beverly Hills scuba diving shop (Reef Seekers Dive Co.).

Over the years, John and I have talked about going back to Vidalia. Finally, earlier this year, I said, let's just do it. So we decided to go back for what would have been the station's 29th anniversary. (Well, we were always known to do things in an unusual way, so why wait for the 30th???) We talked to the current GM, Zack Fowler (who actually knew who we were), about coming back down and doing an airshift. Zack endorsed the idea. As word got out, the thing snowballed. We kept hearing from old jocks who said they wanted to come back and what began as Ken-and-John's-journey-down-memory-lane evolved into the official 98Q Radio Reunion.

When John and I arrived in Vidalia, we realized that this could turn into something very special. Checking into the our hotel, the clerk said, "Oh, I remember you guys. I used to listen to you when I was in high school. Welcome back." The local paper did a full-page spread on the upcoming reunion. The station was getting calls. And people around town were talking about it.

We converged on the station on Friday, August 27, and basically took over from 7AM-1PM. John and Scott Kerr had compiled a playlist consisting of music from 1975 and 1976 that we played on 98Q (including our first gold record - "Shannon" by Henry Gross). We even were able to resurrect the original jingles that we used when we went on the air. We also had some old airchecks, tapes of old bits, and best of all, lots of the old staff. All in all, we had about a dozen of the former jocks there and we all took turns sitting the studio and reminiscing about the good old days. John and I led most of the discussions throughout the day and we were also able to do phoners with one of our old part-timers, the original GM Ed Bouchelle, listeners who called in to chat, and even one of our old receptionists.

Perhaps most touching in what was an emotional day for all of us was meeting Nick Peterson. Nick is the 23-year-old son of our ex-morning guy, Martin Peterson. Martin was tragically killed back in the early 80s. But Martin's sister wanted to bring Nick out to meet some of the guys who knew his dad and get a feel for why 98Q was so special to Martin, who at times had led a troubled life. They brought station memorabilia with them and, most touching (and I'm crying now as I write about this) wrote a letter to John and myself thanking us for being so kind to Martin and telling us that the time he spent at 98Q were some of the best times of his life.

As things wound down, we posed for the requisite group picture on the steps on the station and all vowed to stay in touch and do it again. John and I (and a couple of the other guys) made an afternoon appearance at a tailgate party preceding the local high school football game and one listener came up to us and summed it up perfectly. Remembering that I was originally from Delaware and that John was from Philadelphia, he said, "I know you guys aren't originally from here but . . . welcome home."

Couldn't have said it better myself and it really summed up everything for us.  See all the photos, hear the audio and watch the video from 98Q's 29th Anniversary Radio Reunion here!


This is a 98Q tribute page... To access the official 98Q website, click here!

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