Danny Bonaduce: Motown's favorite carrot-top? women listeners that advertisers covet. Surrounded by his stalwart wake-up crew ( Linda Lanci, Stacey DuFord and veteran newsman Dave Lockhart), Harp- er's "Breakfast Club" is chatty, homespun and occasionally hokey, but a winner by any definition. DANNY BONADUCE AND THE "Q CREW," 6-10 a.m. Mondays-Fridays, WKQI-FM (95.5 ): Much to Detroit's delight, at least one fallen TV child star from the 1970s has landed on his feet. In fact, Bonaduce, who has re- bounded from the pitfalls of early (lune on "The Partridge Family" to become one of the I lardest Work- ing Men in Radio ( he also hosts a daily afternoon-drive program in Chicago) has parlayed his name recognition with an anything-goes mentality and boyish likability to become Motown's favorite carrot top. As WKQI's chosen replacement for morning monarch Dick Purtan, who has worked wonders in mov- ing over to oldies WOMC-FM (104.3), Danny could have been set up for another career nosedive. But Lisa Orlando: The former "Lisa Lisa" has re-emerged. his perpetually excited raspy de- return of old Detroit R&B hotbed WDRQ. livery and the considerable con- She's also hosting a progressive dance tributions of sidekicks Rebecca-Marshall and John lieffron have helped keep the show called "Studio DRQ" from 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Saturdays that's big on beat, heavy "Q" a formidable three in the ratings. on hustle. A tightly-wound bundle of mu- LISA ORLANDO, 3-7 p.m. Mondays-Fri- sical energy and streetwise sassiness, Or- lando has landed within a radio format days, WDRQ-FM (93.1): You can take the princess out of the that sounds like it was tailor-made just penthouse, but you can't take the party for her particular talents. out of the princess. Forced into limbo af- ter urban-rock WHYT-FM transformed DAVID NEWMAN, 8-11 p.m. itself into "The Planet" (96.3) a few years Mondays-Fridays, WJR-AM (760): Sometimes, fate really does close one ago, former nighttime queen "Lisa Lisa" has re-emerged in the daylight with the door in order to open a bigger and better one. And of all the wholesale changes that swept through De- troit's traditional AM giant in 1996, the most welcome may have been the resurrection of Newman -- unquestionably our city's most urbane, provocative and articu- late talk-show professional — i prime time after his unceremoni- ous dumping by WXYT-AM. Newman was often dismissed as an overly intelligent highbrow by his previous employers — as if anything on radio these days could be too intelligent — but in retro- spect, it appears he may simply have been too big for the room. LIZ COPELAND, midnight-5 a.m. Mondays-Fridays, WDET- FM (101.9): And among the finalists in the "Best Radio Job in Detroit" cate- gory is this eclectic young lass of'latenight, who has fallen into a gig any deejay would die for: To play literally any music that suits her fancy, from gut-bucket blues to classic country and everything in between, for five hours every weeknight on Detroit's public radio outlet. "My goal is to always have the show sound interesting," Copeland says simply. "If I ever feel like I know everything that's going on in music, that's when I should quit, because I don't. There's just so much." Today's Jewish Voices Cu Radio JIM MCFARLIN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS bands, a wide range of celebrity and po- litical interviews, and studio sidekicks Rachel Nevada and comedian Ken Brown. "When we went on the air, the show was two hours with my name attached," Albom reflects. 'Nobody knew what was going on, or exactly what it was supposed to be. Today, I think we have a show that is very distinct, known for big-name in- terviews, humor, news of the day and a certain personality. hile Detroit radio has been graced with a glorious legacy of Jewish on-air talents, from Mickey Shorr and Rube Weiss to Dorian Paster, Specs Howard and Seymour Ra- binowitz — you may remember him bet- ter as Robin Seymour — their numbers have seldom been plentiful. Still, a scan of metro Detroit's AM and FM bands today reveals distinctive per- formers who have helped the nation's sixth largest radio city gain its reputation as one of the ra: most diverse and excit- r-,1 mg markets in America. The "Great Voice of t, the Great Lakes," WJR- P AM (760), sought to be- come greater — and younger, and hipper — through a radical over- haul of its on-air pro- gramming, led by the addition of award-win- ning sports columnist Mitch Albom in its key 4-6 p.m. afternoon drive slot. Rather than center on sports, Albom — who Mike Stone is "Stoney" on WDFN-AM (1130) from 4-7 p.m. weekdays. marked his one-year an- "Ken and Rachel are as well-known to niversary with "Albom in the Afternoon" WJR listeners now as I am, which is good, a late-night TV on Jan. 2 — tried to create and the audience seems to feel like one big talk show on radio, complete with live W family, as if the show is where they're sup- posed to go on their way home from work. That's what we're after, so if it's working, I'm grateful." g Nationally syndicated sports newspaper columnist, radio and TV man Mitch Albom marked his one-year anniversary with WJR's "Albom in the Afternoon" show Jan. 2. The show airs 4-6 p.m. weekdays on 760-AM. WJR's mid-day lineup boasts no-non- sense Jewish L.A. psychologist Dr. Laura Schlessinger, and evenings feature the articulate, penetrating Detroit talk host David Newman (8-11 p.m., Monday- Friday). Other Detroit Jewish voices include Mike Stone, co-host with Bob Wo- jnowski of WDFN-AM's spirited drive- home show, "Stoney & Wojo," from 4-7 p.m. weekdays; finan- ,-; cial expert Rick `i Bloom, whose "Money g Talk" airs from noon-9 2 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays on WXYT-AM 0 (1270); and Monte Korn, who mixes fi- nancial insights with fa- therly wisdom (and an occasional poem) at 11:30 a.m. Mondays- Fridays on WEXL-AM (1340). Classic rock 'n' roll music from the 1960s through the 1980s, in a format created by De- troit native Fred Jacobs (see JNE PRO- FILE story), is embellished at 8 p.m. Sundays by "The Motor City Blues Pro- ject," a two-hour series hosted by local music hound (and former WCSX pro- grammer) Mark Pasman. Finally, from 34 p.m. Fridays, WPON- FM (1490) carries "The Jewish Hour," a mix of music, interviews anti Chasidic viewpoints hosted by Rabbi Herschel Finman. ❑ See "REMEMBER WHEN . . ." page 86 N- CO >- CC z 85