 
                           
                        Storied History of WJBO Began in a NO Basement
BATON ROUGE — There have been many significant moments in the  history of NewsRadio 1150 WJBO, but few have been as important as that  day in 1988 when manager George Jenne signed up a little known  conservative talk show host named Rush Limbaugh.
At first, it  must have seemed a disastrous decision.  WJBO had a slew of pantywaist  talk show hosts such as Dr. Dean Edell and Bruce Williams, which the  station’s liberal listeners seemed to like.
When Rush signed on  WJBO, all hell broke loose!  For two weeks, the station was barraged  with angry callers, probably orchestrated.  The essence of the calls was  “I hate Rush Limbaugh, and now I hate WJBO!”
Rabbi Barry  Weinstein was protesting outside the station.  It was, quite simply, a  nightmare.  Baton Rouge had never had a rip-roaring conservative on the  air day after day, and Baton Rouge apparently wasn’t happy.
Then,  after two weeks, everything seemed to change.  New people were tuning  into WJBO, and the tired old station suddenly had new life.  Everybody  was talking about Rush Limbaugh.  They loved him or they hated him, but  mainly they listened to him.
Looking back, one can see that the  decision to sign Limbaugh and stick with Limbaugh through the protests  has to be the single most important decision that has insured the  station’s survival.
Every commercial radio station survives on  advertising, but to sell advertising, it has to have listeners.  For 25  years, Rush Limbaugh has been pounding away on WJBO, and people have  been listening.
But WJBO is far more than one talk show personality — even if he is the most successful in history.
Mike Hudson, marketing manager for WJBO, said, “We’re just continuing  the heritage of this station and its connection to this community.  We  provide breaking news, traffic, and weather, as we have been doing since  1934!”
“This is the place where people can express their  thoughts on topics affecting our city.  Just this week, the Mayor’s  situation has been the talk of the town.  We were an outlet for people  to come in and speak about this and everything affecting Baton Rouge.”
In December 2014, Hudson says WJBO will celebrate its 80th anniversary  in Baton Rouge, and something special will be planned.
Actually,  the history of WJBO goes back even farther than 1934.  It was born in  1922 during the infancy of radio.  It broadcast from  the basement of  Valdemar Jensen’s home on South Patrick Street in New Orleans.  The  station, which was heard even then on 1150 AM, was sponsored by the  Times Picayune newspaper.  It adopted the call letters WJBO in 1926 and  became the first commercial radio station in the South.
WJBO  also became one of the first stations in the country to broadcast news,  thanks to its relationship with the Times Picayune.
In 1932, the  Manship family purchased the station and moved it to Baton Rouge. Its  first broadcast here was in December 1934.  By 1941, its power was  increased to 5,000 watts, a formidable increase compared to Jensen’s  basement experiment.
During World War II, WJBO built a new  transmitter in West Baton Rouge Parish.  The federal government, worried  about possible bombing attacks, required the station to build its  transmitter underground.  Today, that bomb-shelter transmitter site is  still being used by the station.  From the air, it cannot readily be  seen.
Ironically, fast forward to 2013, WJBO may be one of the  few radio stations in the country that doesn’t have to worry about a  drone attack, Mike Hudson laughed.
Thanks to the engineering of  Richard Petty, WJBO has recently “powered up” by increasing its power to  15,000 watts and improving its coverage area.  “It’s a 10-fold  improvement,” said regional operations manager Bob Murphy.
Today,  in addition to Rush, the station relies on nationally syndicated talk  show hosts such as Sean Hannity, Glenn Beck, Mark Levin, and now Michael  Berry.  Michael Hudson is enthusiastic about Michael Berry, a  bomb-throwing conservative from Houston who, like Limbaugh, evokes love  or hatred but never neutrality.
“He’s the next Rush,” Hudson  said.  “He’s amazing, really entertaining.  One thing people don’t know  is that his wife is from India, and they’ve adopted two children from  Ethiopia.  He comes here and broadcasts from the station, sometimes  barefoot and hung over.  This guy has law degrees from Houston and  Oxford.  He speaks with love and poetry.  Truly awesome!”
With the threat from the Internet and every imaginable form of competition, WJBO will need its share of awesome attractions.
Right now, it is relying on stalwart newsman Kevin Meeks, whose 40  years’ experience gives him an edge.  He rides away from the station  on  his Harley after his show.  Don Grady, an equally experienced newsman,  truly a household name in Baton Rouge, is there to provide credibility  and a calm voice for the news.
Newcomer Karen Henderson has come  over from public broadcasting.  She brings youth and true brilliance,  Hudson said.  She offers a delightful balance to Meeks in the morning.
The news operation is anchored by Bruce Collins, a veteran newsman  with extensive major market experience.  Hudson and Murphy worked for  over a year to get Collins to Baton Rouge, and they say it was well  worth the effort to bring Collins’ expertise into the fold.
WJBO  is one of Clear Channel’s stations in Baton Rouge, but it stands apart  in many ways.  Perhaps the commitment to news and the community makes  the station stand for more than money, more than an investment.  It’s  the kind of property that owners and employees can be proud of.
In the changing world of communications, Clear Channel has a deep  commitment to digital.  It owns iHeartRadio, which allows one to listen  to stations all over the country.  “Even our competitors use our  technology to reach the world through iHeart,” Hudson said.  In  addition, the Clear Channel stations in Baton Rouge, including WJBO,  have their own HD versions, such as the Downtown Radio.
What does  the future hold for WJBO? Hudson said, “We’re not losing sight of the  people who listen to us everyday.  We plan to continue our commitment to  Baton Rouge, to breaking news, sports, and weather, and to being the  vehicle for people to let their voices be heard.”


 February 22, 2013
February 22, 2013                            








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