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The course that 1260 AM had
taken with their identity change left many people confused. Most
of the local folk still identified the station with the WMMM
call letters and found the new WCFS call sign far from natural.
The station still played its popular oldies music and was actively
involved in community service, but something was missing. Some
began to question the course that the former general manager
had left the station with.
It seemed like luck might
have been with the station during 1989. A fellow engineer informed
me that the station in Virginia that had taken over the WMMM
call letters had gone off the air. I mentioned this to Mark Graham.
as this opened the oppotunity to change the station back to the
more familiar call letters of yesteryear. Morning man John LaBarca
decided to pursue a new career opportunity and moved to Bridgeport's
WICC-AM while midday personality Bob VanDerheyden, a former CBS
radio executive, had taken over as the station's general manager
and vice president. These events gave the station some latitude
to explore other avenues of programming.
The station's call letter
change occurred on July 1st, 1989 with the format change not
far behind. On July 17th, WMMM emerged with its all Business
Radio format, shifting away from their former oldies music format.
WMMM became an affiliate of the Financial Broadcasting Network
based in Los Angeles, one of three 24 hour a day financial radio
networks.
The new format prompted other
changes. Leo Motoyka, better known to his listeners as Lee Moore,
had taken his popular "Doo-Wop Sock Hop" program to
Ridgefield's WREF-AM. Lenny Kerr and Tony Napoleon now assumed
the duties of staff announcers.
As luck would have it, the
Business Radio format would be short lived! FBN had been suffering
from it's own financial difficulties and had failed to pay its
employees. On a Friday during lunch, the entire FBN staff walked
out "en masse", leaving WMMM and other network affiliates
without programming. Lenny Kerr and Lee Moore ran home and grabbed
their collections of records, returning the station to its former
oldies format. The station stood with a mostly music format ever
since.
WMMM still covered many community
happenings. A new Italian show called "Family Fiesta"
filled the void left when John LaBarca left the station. Peter
D'Amico hosted the program geared toward the local happenings
in Westport's Italian population. A variety of ethnic programs
joined the schedule thanks to leased air time. The station's
commitment to other causes like the Save The Children radio auction
continued as well. They even carried a radio version of home
shopping. Mark Graham did his best in light of soft ratings and
an advertising base that didn't come close to paying the station's
expenses.
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