Williams, who became the station’s first Black disc jockey in 1948. He also pioneered what was then called “Black appeal radio,” which factored greatly in how Black listeners were courted in ...
Wehba was just a senior at Classen High School when he got a job as a DJ for the influential OKC radio studio KLPR.
Known as “the dean of country music broadcasters,” Ralph Emery was the dominant country disc jockey in the late twentieth ... escape was listening to the radio, especially the broadcasts ...