WNEW
Once underground, or free-form, radio proved itself capable of attracting listeners and advertising revenue in significant numbers, radio corporations jumped onto the bandwagon. None was as successful as Metromedia, which owned the West Coast pioneers KSAN in San Francisco and KMET in Los Angeles. The company soon switched its New York City FM station, WNEW, from an all-female deejay format to free-form, which as it matured under corporate umbrellas became known as progressive rock radio. Sister stations WMMR in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and WMMS in Cleveland, Ohio, soon followed suit.
WNEW attracted one major name from Top 40—Scott Muni, who had replaced Alan Freed at WAKR in Akron, Ohio, in the early 1950s on his way to WMCA and WABC in New York City. WNEW’s on-air staff also included Bill (“Rosko”) Mercer, who had been part of a short-lived free-form experiment at WOR-FM; Dave Herman, who had been a progressive pioneer at WMMR; Allison Steele, “The Nightbird”; and Carol Miller, also from WMMR, whose daily Led Zeppelin feature was engagingly titled “Get the Led Out.” In 1969 Billboard noted that some 60 progressive stations were on the air. The two top stations, according to the magazine, were WNEW and KSAN.