Posts Tagged ‘Myron Jones’

Martin remembered by Warvel

Craig Warvel and Frank Martin - courtesy of Chris Tarbell's JET website

One of the longest and most successful teams in Erie broadcasting history was Frank Martin and Craig Warvel, who were consistently top-rated in the 1980’s and 1990’s. The partnership began on WJET-AM in 1981 and would continue through the jump to FM and the top of the ratings heap in the late 80’s and early 90’s. They finally split upon the purchase of JET and Froggy by NextMedia and Frank went on to finish his career playing the great songs of his AM days on Froggy and Warvel became solidly ensconced as the undisputed morning drive leader on Star 104. Martin and Warvel were as familiar to the families of the 80’s and 90’s and Frank as a JET Good Guy was to the generation of the 60’s and 70’s.

We are grateful that Craig Warvel shared his thoughts and memories about working with Frank Martin, who passed away on Monday at the age of 85 here on Press and Tower.

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Poll: Who will survive until 2020?

P&T readers tend to have a love/hate relationship with radio stations that offer the all-Christmas formats during the holidays. In our poll, the same percentage said that they were more likely as said “less likely” to go to a “Holly, Jolly”-formatted station.

As I said yesterday, the “aughts” has been a tumultuous decade for media, even locally. Remember it was nearly  ten years ago when Myron Jones sold Jet-FM and Froggy to Next Media, ending local control. And then we truly became a one-newspaper-town in September 2000, as the long and painful process of merging the Morning News and Erie Daily Times came to fruition. Of course, P&T has covered extensively the merger of the WICU and WSEE newsrooms this past June.

Even with all that change, we have not seen a media outlet go dark since the Daily Times stopped landing on our stoop in the afternoon sun. Since World War II, that’s the only major media stream to stop cold: every licensed radio and television station continues to operate with FCC authority, and the Times Publishing  Co. still delivers seven days a week.

So my question to you is, will that be the case in the next ten years? Will we actually lose media streams, or will they morph to an online presence and dump their transmitters or presses? Honestly, the question makes me shiver, but it is worth the ask.

On a scale from 1 to 5, will the current traditional Erie media streams (newspaper, TV, radio) exist in ten years?

  • 2 - It's not likely (49%, 21 Votes)
  • 4 - I think so (19%, 8 Votes)
  • 1 - Not a chance (16%, 7 Votes)
  • 3 - I'm not sure (12%, 5 Votes)
  • 5 - Absolutely (4%, 2 Votes)

Total Voters: 43

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