Tag Archives: Lila Keiter

KYA Radio’s sports director | San Francisco, 1950-1953

Ad from Broadcasting Magazine, 1953, featuring “Les Keiter ‘Take ’em out to the ballgame.'” Image is courtesy of Bay Area Radio Museum Archive

J. Elroy McCaw and KYA Radio

In April of 1950, J. Elroy McCaw and his partner each purchased a 50 percent interest in KYA Radio, San Francisco from Dorothy Schiff, who, incidentally, owned the New York Post for almost 40 years.  Dorothy was selling the station at a steep loss from her purchase price due to the fact that the station wasn’t quite profitable, so McCaw had every reason in the world to make some changes.  And, as was now his pattern, McCaw hired Les Keiter to be KYA’s sports director.

Post-war Boom

As Les and Lila Keiter (let’s not forget – she was 8 months pregnant) were winging their way back from Honolulu to the mainland for Les’ new job in San Francisco, the west coast was in a post-war boom, and the Bay Area was quickly becoming a major metropolis.  Former soldiers from farming families were heading into cities for college and better jobs, and GI’s who had passed through and fallen in love with San Francisco on their way to fight in the Pacific were back to start families of their own.  To help accommodate everybody, the last sand dunes in what would become The Sunset District were being leveled for the construction of cookie cutter houses, purchased with loans backed by GI Bill guarantees.

Upon their arrival, Les and Lila set up another house-hold, and Les went to work, broadcasting daily from the Fairmont Hotel in downtown San Francisco, starting mid-season with college football: Stanford, California, San Jose State, Santa Clara, St. Mary’s, and College of the Pacific. 

Lila Keiter with son Ricky in San Francisco, 1951

The Keiter’s were still settling in when, on November 10, 1950, Lila gave birth to the their first son, Richard Allan.  The family has always called him Ricky, and as Les said, Lila proved to be as adept a mother as she had been a scorekeeper.

Meanwhile, in Texas…

During the war, a Texan sportscaster named Gordon McLendon (self nicknamed “the Old Scottsman,” even though he was in his early 30’s) had the idea to create a radio network dedicated to bringing baseball recreations to rural areas when, as Time Magazine wrote, “he found that boys from Arkansas argued just as hotly as Brooklynites about big-league baseball, even though the only games they ever heard were the World Series.”  The radio network McLendon started in 1948, just two years before the Time Magazine article, was called the Liberty Broadcasting System.  McLendon was onto something – people loved listening to baseball!  The network’s recreations were jazzed up just enough to keep them believable, while sometimes making them even more interesting to hear than a game called live from the stadium.  As stations signed on, minor league ball game attendance rose across the country.

The Liberty Broadcasting System had meteoric growth.  There were 240 stations in the network by 1950.

Back to San Francisco

To supplement KYA Radio’s current offerings of college football, basketball, boxing, and other sports with as much action as possible, Les Keiter and station manager Jock Fearnhead signed KYA on to the Liberty network for the 1951 baseball season.

Likely Aug 1, 1951 when Louis faced Cesar Brion at the Cow Palace
Les Keiter interviewing Joe Lewis for KYA Radio, San Francisco

By 1952, when Liberty was up to 458 stations nationwide, Major League Baseball realized how much money they’d been leaving on the table and raised their annual rights fee from $1,000 to $225,000.  The astronomically increased bill combined with the fact that both professional baseball and football began restricting broadcasts around cities with league teams, and the Liberty Broadcasting System went out of business almost overnight.

Baseball is a HIT

Here’s a notice from Broadcasting Magazine in which it was reported that Keiter had polled his audience to see if they wanted to hear double headers on Sunday’s.  Whether KYA Radio saw the imminent demise of Liberty, or they simply wanted to satisfy the demands of their audience with even more baseball, after one season with the network, Les Keiter and KYA Radio began doing baseball recreates on their own.

McCaw’s methods for getting live game statistics for the recreations could be, to put it politely, imaginative.  To be blunt, according to Les, they eventually lead to charges of game piracy.  Les said McCaw once hired a spotter to phone in the details of Dodgers’ games from a tree overlooking Brooklyn’s Ebbets Field.  Keiter filled in the gaps with his own quick imagination.  As in Honolulu, recreates of baseball games made Les’s reputation in the Bay Area.

By 1952, Lila was pregnant again, and on November 22nd, gave birth to a surprise set of twins, a girl and a boy: Martin Bruce and Barbara Ruth.

Boom!

Just a month or two later, and only three years after coming to San Francisco, guess what happened?  J. Elroy McCaw turned Les Keiter’s life upside down, yet again:

“Be in New York a week from Monday. You are the new sports director at WINS Radio in Manhattan.”

Sportscaster in Hawaii – 1949

When We Last Left our Hero…

The Keiter's first apartment in Hawaii
The note on the back of this photo reads, “Our apt from the street, with the palm trees and air raid shelter in front, what a front yard, eh?”

Les Keiter had been summoned from Modesto, California to a new opportunity in Honolulu, Hawaii by his old boss, J. Elroy McCaw.  Such is the life of a budding sportscaster in 1949!  Les and Lila pulled up stakes and moved to a tiny apartment in Waikiki on Pau Street. 

Les hit the ground running as the sports director for KPOA-AM radio.  Immediately, he began doing baseball recreates on a full-time basis: 2 games a day, 7 days a week.  He called Major League ball games in the afternoon, and San Francisco Seals games in the evening.  Lila was Les’ official statistician!  She kept a huge book filled with the scores, and stats from the 8 Pacific Coast League teams as well as the American and the National Leagues. 

Kalaukukui to Kahuanui

Hawaiians love all of their sports – not only baseball.  In fact, Les was assigned a high school football game to announce four days after his arrival to the islands.  Always well researched, Les set about trying to familiarize himself with the team’s rosters.  Punahou High School was easy.  They had a lot of common names like Jones, Smith, and Obama…  But Kamehameha, the opposite team, was another story.  To attend that high school, you had to have a certain amount of Hawaiian blood in you, and therefore names got a bit more complicated.  They had 4 brothers on the squad: the Kalaukukui brothers.  Tommy Kalaukukui was the quarterback.  He threw 16 passes to Harry Kahuanui.  Imagine calling that game!  Kalaukukui to Kahuanui 16 times!  Les laid the groundwork for his life-long love affair with Hawaii because of his sense of humor and sensitivity to the local community.

Les Keiter, Gloria McLean Stewart, and James Stewart in Waikiki. The Stewart’s visited Hawaii for their honeymoon, where they enjoyed Keiter’s announcing, and the couples became friends.

In his later years, Les spoke wistfully about the time he and Lila shared together in those early days of their marriage and the early days of his career.  When they had the time, they played canasta with friends, went to the cinema, took in shows at the Waikiki hotels… They felt like they were on perpetual vacation!

A little more than a year after they’d arrived, Lila became pregnant.  She had carried on her job as statistician until, as she said, she decided to make a few statistics of her own.

Mr. Keiter? McCaw, Line One

The Keiter’s thought they’d be settling in for a while, but it wasn’t to be.  J. Elroy McCaw called again.  This time, he offered Keiter the sports director position at KYA Radio in San Francisco.  Les and Lila agonized over the decision, but since it would be a big move up for Les’ career, they decided to bid their idillic Hawaiian life “so long for now.”

Eight months into her pregnancy, having been given the go-ahead by her doctor, Lila and Les flew to San Francisco to set up their third home in as many years.

Enter Lila Jean

After the war ended, Les Keiter went right back to Centralia-Chehalis to his old job at KELA.  Les’ job was the same, but Les has changed, and he found himself wanting more…

This is where the matchmaker kicks in.  Les’ mother, Dolly Keiter, re-introduced Les to the kid sister to one of his fraternity brothers.  

Her name was Lila Hammerslough.  Lila was 7 years his junior. I say “re-introduced,” because when Les first met Lila, that seven-year difference was the difference between a young adult and a child.  Five years and a World War later, that wasn’t true anymore – Lila had grown up!

As Les would say, it wasn’t love at first sight, but one date led to another, and he described the turning point as follows:

One day, Les took Lila on a date to a Seattle Rainiers baseball game.  While watching the game, Les began explaining how to keep score.  She put up with him for about 3 innings, then she took the program from him and scored the game herself – even better than he did!  Unbeknownst to him, Lila Jean Hammerslough had been the sports editor of her school newspaper.  She had been named “Outstanding Baseball Fan” by a local paper, and she regularly listened to baseball games on the radio, announced by Leo Lassen (Les’ hero).  Lila was also a heck of a softball player!  Perhaps Dolly Keiter had known all of this when she made the re-introduction, but Les Keiter was completely surprised – and smitten.

From Lila’s perspective, they had been dating for some time and close to falling in love, so she didn’t want to make a scene about the scoring business.  She said, “I didn’t know if I should play dumb or show him my smarts.”  Les, it turned out, loved her smarts.

Les and Lila were married Sept. 9th, 1948 in Seattle, WA, and their honeymoon was an adventure!  Lila had never been east of Olympia, Washington.  So, they flew to Chicago (and saw the Cubs), to Cleveland (saw the Indians) to Niagara Falls, and to New York City, where they saw every team, Broadway Show, and Big Band they could.  Then, they took in the sights in Washington D.C. before the happy couple ended their honeymoon in Los Angeles.  From there, they drove up the coast and then inland to their first home: an upstairs apartment in Modesto, California.