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KEWB Channel 91, Oakland
The Bobby Dale Show
Sunday, August 4, 1963
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Bobby
Dale, pictured
around 1975. |
Bobby Dale (1931-2001) worked at KEWB, KFRC, KSFO, KSAN, KTIM, KKCY ("The
City") and KOFY during four decades on the air in the Bay Area,
earning praise from no less than Don Sherwood as "the Disc Jockey's
Disc Jockey."
A latecomer to the broadcasting profession, Bobby Dale
(born Robert Dale Bastiansen) left behind a series of menial jobs to work at a small station in the
small town of Glendive in his native Minnesota. From there, he advanced
to KOIL/Omaha — apparently a required stop on every Top 40 DJ's résumé
during this era (Dr. Don
Rose, Gary Owens and The
Real Don Steele each made stops at KOIL on their ways to and
through San Francisco) — before returning to Minneapolis, his home town, at
KDWB. When platter spinners at sister station KFWB in Los Angeles went
out on strike, Dale was flown in to work a shift in the Southland. After
a brief stay in L.A., he was transferred up to KEWB, Crowell-Collier's
Oakland-based Top 40 outlet.
After his short stop at KEWB, he left Crowell-Collier's
employ for KRLA in Los Angeles, and then came back to the Bay at the
newly-launched "Big 610" iteration of KFRC.
"He was singular," said Ben Fong-Torres,
author of The Hits Just Keep On Coming. "Bobby had a jazz
soul; a love of music ranging from pop to blues, folk & jazz. He
loved breaking away from Top 40 and into the freedom he found at KSFO on
the all-night shift and at the FM stations KSAN and KOFY. But even at
Top 40, he was always his own guy, totally improv and off-the-wall,
doing W.C. Fields/Lord Buckley-inspired riffs, goofing with live spots,
and being so unpredictable that Chuck Blore once called him the worst DJ
he'd ever heard, and then, months later, hearing him again, declaring
him one of the best."
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