WBT Celebrates 100 Years At Halton Theater - Page 2
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April 14, 2022
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Source: Turner’s Shot / Radio One Digital
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A “Century Panel” discussion followed, led by Bo Thompson and his new Morning Co-Host, Beth Troutman, featured WBT legends and luminaries such as former Program Director Mary June Rose, former host James K. Flynn, former station Sales Executive Robert Boyd, the son of WBT Hall of Fame member Ty Boyd, and John Hancock. Following a performance by The Briarhoppers, whose original lineup was created by Crutchfield and inducted into the WBT Hall of Fame in 2007, Afternoon Drive Host Brett Winterble took the microphone to speak about the legacy of Rush Limbaugh, whom Winterble worked with for nearly a decade early in his career.
Two UNC basketball legends, WBT’s Pastor David Chadwick and station contributor Matt Doherty took the stage next, Chadwick to speak about the legacy of the Reverend Billy Graham and the need for messages of hope on the airwaves, while former National Championship team member and eventual UNC head coach Doherty spoke about the late coaching legend Dean Smith and Tar Heels play by play voice Woody Durham before introducing a message from retired UNC head coach Roy Williams.
After his Hall of Fame plaque was revealed, Stokes relayed that it was his fascination with the Watergate scandal that pulled him away from a career path in architecture to journalism, but that he was too introverted for television and wanted to enjoy sports rather than “work” in sports. So, radio news would be his chosen path, and after working in several markets he arrived in Charlotte where, for thirty-two years, he strived to do the best job he could do, every day, for the listeners.
Carolina Panthers play by play legends, Bill Rosinski and Mick Mixon, were introduced next to speak about the second honoree of the night, WBT Sports Director, Jim Szoke. Rosinski, the first Panthers play-by-play announcer in the team’s history, and Mixon, who retired from the same position after seventeen years this past January, spoke highly of Szoke’s talent, sports acumen, and ability to seamlessly fill the gaps in a play by play broadcast. Most of all, they spoke of his razor-sharp wit and sense of humor, and how Szoke made their broadcast teams better. In his acceptance comments, Szoke recalled seizing on the opportunity of radio to jumpstart his career in sports broadcasting, and his tenure as the only member of the Carolina Panthers broadcast team to be a part of every game broadcast in the team’s history. Szoke, who has been a part of WBT across five decades from the late 1980s to the present, expressed that he listened to the station as a boy in Ohio, and is now honored to be inducted into its Hall of Fame.
WBT Mid-Morning Host Vince Coakley was introduced next, and spoke about what being a part of this station means to him, and the responsibility of speaking to its listeners each weekday from 10:00 AM to Noon. Coakley then introduced 2012 WBT Hall of Fame inductee H.A. Thompson, who hosted in same daypart during his nearly two decades at WBT.
After giving his thoughts on the station’s century of broadcasting, Thompson spoke about the final inductee of the evening, Bob Lacey, both having joined the air staff in the early 1970s during WBT’s Top 40 and Adult Contemporary eras. Thompson recounted the exciting time it was to be on the air at WBT and how the station thrived at night with the groundbreaking nighttime talk show, “Lacey Listens,” and how that success lead to Lacey being moved to Mornings, where he dominated the airwaves through the end of the decade. Accepting his place in the WBT Hall of Fame, Lacey thanked the many past executives in attendance and praised the ownership groups of his time at WBT for believing in and supporting the air talent at both WBT and WBTV, where he hosted “PM Magazine” in the 1980s before ultimately returning to radio.
Bo Thompson returned to the stage to introduce the final video history of the evening, which covered the period from 1990 to the present. This period included the debut at WBT of John Hancock, the creation of the NFL’s Carolina Panthers with WBT as the original flagship station, the acquisition of the 99.3 frequency which would become WBT-FM, the creation of the WBT Hall of Fame in 1997, and WBT’s coverage of the events of the 9-11-01 terrorist attacks. This was also the era of personalities like Spires & Krantz, Al Gardner, Stacey Simms, Keith Larson, Jason Lewis, and Tara Servatius, among others.
Holiday on Ice, the Uptown Charlotte ice skating tradition was created, and in 2013 a historical marker was placed on the site of the former Wilder Building at the corner of Tryon and 3rd Streets in Uptown which used to be the site of the WBT studios. Finally, the current WBT on-air team was highlighted – Bo Thompson and Beth Troutman, Vince Coakley, Bill O’Reilly, Pete Kaliner, Brett Winterble, Mark Garrison, Brett Jensen, Tony Marino, Jim Szoke, Pam Warner, Mark Mueller, Boomer Von Cannon, Anna Erickson, Joe Gillespie, Sharon Thorsland, Jeff Atkinson, Mike Dohn, and Ed Billick.
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