Tag Archives: KMO



Bill Taylor – One of Seattle Radio’s Greats

I can hear his voice in my head as I read these words. Bill Taylor relates stories of his early years in radio. If you lived in the Puget Sound region during this time, you probably remember Bill Taylor…

“Lee Askervold was my mentor at KING, when I worked there as a switchboard operator and tour guide in 1965. Lee had the overnight show, and after my shift on the switchboard, I’d hole up in a production room with a reel-to-reel Ampex, records, news and commercial copy, and be a DJ. Lee would critique my tapes, and helped me assemble my first audition tape, which got me a gig at KMO (Tacoma).

After stints at KMO and KJNO (Juneau), I was hired by Lee in January 1967, to replace Bruce McMichael who was heading to KIRO Radio.

At the time, KTAC’s business offices and newsroom were in the Winthrop Hotel. Jerry Geehan owned and managed the station, Fred Kaufman (formerly of KOMO) was the sales manager.

The jocks did their shows from a ramshackle studio out at the transmitter site near the Puyallup River.

Dave Allen (Darrel Sauve) was doing mornings, John Welsh afternoons. Lee Knudsen, a former KING FM announcer, did 6 p.m. -12m.

Jack Allen (Thompson) came to KTAC from Idaho just before I left for KOL in June 1967. Dave and Jack and I worked together again in the ‘70s at KVI.”

***Thanks for the info, Bill! We welcome more stories from those who slaved over hot turntables, sold air-time, managed or programmed stations — pictures, newspaper clippings and audio is always welcome also!

More from Seattle Radio Greats: http://www.pugetsoundradio.com/cgi-bin/forum/Blah.pl?m-1262849372/

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1942 Tacoma radio listings



[click to enlarge]

Source: Tacoma News Tribune

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1936 Tacoma radio listings



Source: Tacoma News Tribune

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The voices of Tacoma baseball

Jerry Geehan [photo courtesy of the Tacoma Public Library archive] began his broadcasting career at KVI Radio in 1932. In 1937, he became the first broadcaster for the Tacoma Tigers of the Western International League. In 1938, he joined KMO Radio as Tacoma’s first play-by-play broadcaster handling WIL baseball and PLC and CPS games. He also had a daily sportscast.
Geehan became KMO’s sales manager in 1943, and two years later moved up to the station’s general manager post. In 1952 he served as general manager of Channel 13 TV. He was owner and general manager of KTAC Radio from 1952-69 and was Chairman of the Board of the Washington State Association of Broadcasters.

Many of Tacoma’s great sportscasters got their start under Geehan, including Clay Huntington, Rod Belcher, Doug McArthur, Bob Robertson, Don Hill, Art Popham and Bill O’Mara.

Clay Huntington, voice of Tacoma Tigers baseball 1946-1951;] Huntington’s early sports broadcast career includes stints at KTBI, KTNT and KMO radio stations and both KTVW and KTNT television. All of this, as well as sports broadcasts on a 14-station network that covered Washington, Oregon, and Alaska. His vast record of community involvement includes helping to fund the construction of Cheney Stadium in 1960 and bring Triple A baseball back to Tacoma.


Don Hill [pictured at the KTAC microphone] was for many years Tacoma’s voice of baseball. He was the regular announcer of the Tacoma Giants and Cubs games from 1960-1971. Don Hill had a record broadcasting career that spanned 50 years. “How About that Giants Fans” -Tacoma News Tribune; 1984

Bob Robertson – From 1958-68 he was the TV voice for the Seattle Rainiers and for 11 seasons he did Tacoma Giants, and Tacoma Cubs television play-by-play. Bob served 16 years as the radio voice for the Tacoma Tigers and Rainiers from 1982-1998 and was the last announcer to recreate a baseball road game from the home radio studios. – oldtimerbaseball.com

Art Popham – While serving as batboy for the Kansas City Athletics, Art earned the 1968 “Hustle Award” for always performing his duties at high speed and with gusto. He became the team’s public relations director at age 20 and, when Athletics owner Charles O. Finley moved the team to Oakland, Art followed the team to the Bay Area. He proudly wore the Athletics’ 1972 World Series championship ring. In 1976, Art left the Athletics to become the voice of the Pacific Coast League’s Tacoma Twins on KMO Radio, serving in that position from 1976-84. During that time, he broadcast games for the Twins, Yankees, Tugs and Tigers. In addition to calling PCL games, Art also worked University of Puget Sound and high school games. He and Doug McArthur also created the “Live from the Leaf” sports program, which aired from the Cloverleaf Tavern every Friday night from 1977-81. – oldtimerbaseball.com

Jerry Howarth-Tacoma Twins baseball broadcaster from 1973-75. Jerry is the only broadcaster from Tacoma to make it to the major leagues as he is currently the voice of the Toronto Blue Jays. – tacomasportsmuseum.com

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Washington radio 1935

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Sea-Tac radio knows which side of its bread is buttered

HANSEN BAKING Co., Seattle, and JORDAN BAKING Co., Tacoma; using 504 announcements on KIRO, KOMO, KMO and KTAC Tacoma, KXRO Aberdeen, all Wash., plus 60 announcements on KING-TV Seattle to promote Sunbeam, new brand name. Agency: Elliot, Goetz & Boone – San Francisico [1952]

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Washington Radio Census 1942

*KTW shared air time with KWSC Pullman

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Six Degrees of Carl Haymond

KMO was purchased by radio pioneer Carl Haymond in 1926 from Tacoma Times and Love Electric Co. Haymond also put KOOL Phoenix on the air. He later sold that Phoenix station to Gene Autry.

Haymond sold KMO to J. Elroy McCaw, father of cellular phone magnate Craig McCaw. Later, the station was purchased by J Archie Morton and Dana J Hunter, then sold [1962] to Edward Wheeler [Broadcast House Inc], who owned a station in Evansville, Indiana.

1977 – Broadcast House Inc., sells KMO Radio, Tacoma, to Jim Baine for $500,000 Baine, at the time, was General Manager of the station.

**I worked at these two Haymond radio stations. KMO, when the call letters were KAMT under Jim Baine’s ownership, and KOOL/Phoenix, under the ownership of CBS.

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Tacoma radio advertising night-time power

Power of nighttime radio was dramatically demonstrated when a Tacoma, department store ran a newspaper advertisement one day and used spot radio announcements the next. It found that radio brought in 96% of the total customers attracted to a store event at 37% of the newspaper advertisement cost.
The store bought 54 column inches (that’s about one-third of a standardsize newspaper page) in a leading Tacoma newspaper to attract women into the store’s appliance department. The total number of customers attracted by the lavish newspaper campaign: Five. Cost of the newspaper advertising: About $135. Cost per customer: $27. The next day spot announcements were used on KMO Tacoma-and 80% of the spots were aired between 6 p.m. and midnight. In an area of 263,000 TV sets, the radio spots brought 120 women into the store’s appliance department at a total cost of $50, or 42.5 cents per patron. [based on a 1953 report from KMO radio]

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Personnel changes at Seattle & Tacoma broadcast stations

John Jarstad, sports and special events director, KTVW (TV) Seattle-Tacoma, promoted to program director.

Ted Knightlinger, account executive, Howard Smith Adv ., Tacoma, to KMO Tacoma as program director.

Dave Ballard, KING Seattle personality, to KTIX Seattle as d.j.

in a related story…

Lloyd E. Cooney, account executive, KSLTV Salt Lake City, named assistant sales manager and manager of local sales.

[March 1958]

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