Alaska VIP Club

A Fascinating Treasure Chest of Coke Show Radio Memories


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On Christmas Eve, 1959, a small booth sitting on the roof of the Bun Drive-In, a burger place in Anchorage, Alaska, became home to a new program on KENI radio, called The Coke Show.And it became a huge hit.Long before cell phones, Anchorage teens who were listening to the Coke Show, picked up their rotary dial phones and called in their dedications and song requests to DJ Ron Moore. And Ron would often speak with the teens live on Anchorage radio before playing the songs they requested.In the photo above, Ron Moore signs autographs for happy Anchorage Teens.Now listen toRon Moore and the Coke Show**(Ron is asking callers to guess how much Paul of the Heartbeats band weighed when he was born)Click on the following link:The Chicken Coop or the Royal RoostA group of Anchorage teens pose for the picture above in front of the small booth that was the home of the Coke Show. The booth was the radio studio where Ron Moore brought his young, dedicated radio audience together each night for music and fun.Yes, You Can Share This EditionYour friends and family will love you for sharing this fun edition of the Alaska VIP Club with them. And when you do, they will call in a dedication on the radio just for you… well, it could happen.Thanks for reading and listening to the Alaska VIP Club. This post is public, so feel free to share it.A Word from Ron MooreThe following is from an interview with Ron Moore on Coke Show Memories that you’ll find on Anchorage Memories.com. Ron said the following.“I have often felt that the Coke Show was successful largely because of all the various ingredients it had going on at one time or the other.Sometimes it felt like there were too many things happening at once. Being live from the roof of a Drive In restaurant, having dozens of cars in the parking lot honking their horns and being identified by names like GTO Joe, T-Bird Tommy, and many more.”BONUSRon just mentioned GTO Joe.Anchorage Memories caught up with GTO Joe and you’ll really enjoy our interview.Take a look at “Cruisin’ with GTO Joe” and remember when.Now here’s more from Ron.”Having a live mike way out over the intersection so I could pick up the sound of dual exhausts and tires peeling out. Having local bands as guests in the "Chicken Coop" answering phones. And putting popular bands on either side of the Bun Drive-In roof on weekends and my spot ended up on the top of the chicken coop, playing all oldies on Sunday afternoon. So I felt it would be fun to give the kids at home a chance to be heard on the air by making requests and dedications. That resulted in many of them having on air nicknames. Later when one of the few audience surveys was released, it gave yours truly the highest rating of my 37 year career. 72% of the people listening to radio were tuning in to The Coke Show" and more than 40% were above 18 which really shocked some folks back at the radio station that thought the only listeners were Teeny Boppers.But it turned out a lot of parents and others were tuning in to find out what their kids or siblings were doing by listening to them on the air and discovering there was a new boyfriend or girlfriend. So it really paid off and advertisers like Coca-Cola, Sears, and Alaska Sales and Service were happy.”Anchorage Teens Loved itFor Anchorage teens, the Coke Show was the place to be.Besides listening to the show from home and calling in song requests and dedications, some listened to the show while driving around town.Others would show up in the parking lot in front of the Bun, where they could enjoy a burger and a coke while listening to the show on their car radio.And Ron had fun with the Bun Drive-In parking lot crowd.Naming them “Honker-Bonkers”, Ron would look out over the parking lot and ask “how are you doing down there?” and everyone would honk their horns in response.The KENI radio engineers even put a microphone over Northern Lights Blvd, so they could hear cars as they gunned their engines and squealed their tires during the show.And you may remember that after Sam the Sham and the Pharaoh’s hit Wooly Bully, Ron would often call Northern Lights boulevard, “Wooly Bullyvard”.Ron Moore Remembers“I had two turntables, a Bogen sound mixer, a reel to reel for playing the Coke jingles, two phone lines, with one for the broadcast signal.The first show from the Bun took place on a cold Christmas Eve and everything was frozen from the big window looking out over the parking lot to the turntables. I had to take the portable heater and warm the turntables and they still sounded less than 45rpm.But there were cars in the parking lot and eventually they built a new Bun across the street with parking for many more cars and a new broadcast booth, again on the roof.There was a microphone strung out all the way to the intersection so I could bring up the sound of the hot rods as they peeled out. Even when the music was playing. On at least one occasion the police were monitoring the show and pulled the car over down the road on Northern Lights Blvd.I also installed a loud air horn just outside the broadcast booth and it could be heard for blocks.It also allowed me to open the mike when I cued the cars to honk their horns while the car hops were bringing an armful of orders out to the cars. More than one car hop lost her tray because it could be very loud.The Bun was the first location in Anchorage for speed bumps to slow down the Chevy 396’s from picking off a car hop.We even hosted a wedding at the Coke Show. I can’t recall their names but the bride arrived in a white Chevy convertible from Northern Lights side and the groom arrived in a matching convertible from the Fireweed Lane side. They were married on a flatbed trailer. I broadcast the ceremony and when the groom was told he could kiss the bride every horn in the parking lot, and the air horn, sounded off.”She Said What?“One night a band that play at all of the shows at The Royal pad, Shindig City, and Carpenters Hall, joined me on the Coke Show to answer phones.Some of Anchorages most popular bands were included, including The Heartbeats, Arsons, Blue Chip Stock, Proof, Burgundy Rose and others. One night they handed me a phone call to put on the air and this ladies voice said something like:“Ronnie, quit playing all that rock n roll and lets hear some Englebert Humperdink. This is your Mother calling .”The horns in the parking lot loved it and went wild for 10 minutes.”The Arsons in the Chicken CoopThe Coke Show was a very happening place, and local teen bands were frequently a part of the show.In a story by Mark Thompson of the local band, the Arsons, Mark talks about being in the Chicken Coop during the Coke Show.“When the Arsons were beginning to rock around Anchorage, we were invited to take requests at the Bun Drive-In in the Chicken Coop with Ron Moore on occasional Wednesdays.It was always fun and a good way to get to know our fans and the kind of music they enjoyed. I really liked girls and there were a lot of calls from giggly girls to the Chicken Coop.”The Pulsating HeartbeatsAnother very popular local teen band that was featured on The Coke Show, was the Heartbeats.Right about the time the band came out with their hit record “Anne”, Ron Moore started introducing them as the “Pulsating” Heartbeats.The following is from an interview with John Apostol of the Heartbeats on Anchorage Memories.com“The Pulsating Heartbeats came from Ron Moore. He started calling us "The Pulsating Heartbeats" every time he introduced our band on the radio or at dances. It was such a catchy name. We love it! “Jerry Rose and The Coke ShowWhen Ron wasn’t able to host the Coke Show, he would have other KENI radio DJs stepping for the night.One of those was a young DJ named Jerry Rose (Peter Bie in real life).The Coke Show had so many things going on that it made it a hard show to do. So when another DJ was sitting in for Ron… they had their hands full.Anchorage DJ Jerry Rose remembers taking a microphone into the Bun Drive-In parking lot to speak with teens in their cars.“We would often take a microphone down into the parking lot to talk with folks (especially those that wanted to make a dedication).From time to time we’d get them to honk their horns, but that was rare as it was quite noisy.Of course while the DJ was in the parking lot, someone (like Michael Dougherty of the Alaska VIP Club) would have to be up in the Chicken Coop to answer the phone and spin the records.”The View from the Chicken CoopAbove photo courtesy of Malcolm BurgessDuring The Coke Show, Ron Moore would say “from high atop the Bun Drive-In”.The small radio booth sat on the roof of the Bun, overlooking the parking lot below. The booth was sometimes called the Chicken Coop or the “Royal Roost”. Why the Royal Roost? Well, on Anchorage radio, Ron was called the Royal Coachman. He even had a Royal Coachman theme song. You may also recall that Ron’s car was called the “Royal Coach”. So, of course, the studio on top of the roof was the “Royal Roost”.Ron Moore talks about the radio booth.“To my best recollection, "The Chicken Coop" was how Ruby Westin referred to the broadcast booth a couple of times and it stuck. Ruby and Roy Westin built the original Bun Drive in on the SW corner of Northern Lights at Fairbanks Street, facing Northern Lights (Where the Office Lounge was located later). It was quite small with little parking. The broadcast booth was quite small too. It didn't take long for it to outgrow the location so a new and much larger Bun was constructed at the NE corner facing Gambell Street but open to Northern Lights looking across to the Sears Mall where parking spilled over from the Bun every so often. The Westin’s sold to Ken and Bobby Haines and the broadcast booth was new and larger with room for a couple of guests. The Mighty Michael ConnectionYes, that’s me, Michael Dougherty, the autho
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Alaska VIP ClubBy Michael R Dougherty