kenhawk1160 said:
gHz said:
Wow, lots of great names there...including Porky....Did anyone mention Chilly Billy?.....Gotta tell you a story about one of my faves...Jimmy Roach circa 1975...skinny 19 year old calls Jimmy on the phone to ask about radio stuff, Jimmy invites kid to DVE at 7th & Smithfield the next day. Kid shows up, Jimmy is great, gives the kid the royal tour, allows kid to sit in with Denise Oliver for awhile, explains how it all works etc, wishes kid good luck if he wants to really get into radio.....
Thanks Jim....32 years later, a few stations under my belt, partners in some for awhile, still working...building stuff now, built stations all over the country....Nashville ain't such a bad stop for a 51 year old radio geek. What a long strange trip its been....
Glad I stopped by da Burg board....
I can relate to that, gHz. I was a 17-year-old high school senior in the late 80's when Pete Morley was still doing the Heartlite shift on WLTJ. I called and asked him to dedicate a song to my girlfriend, and I asked him how he got started in the business, and that I had radio ambitions of my own.
He talked to me for
THREE HOURS. He was very honest and didn't glamourize the profession at all. He straight up told me that if I wanted to make money, to choose something else to do with my life, cuz it sure wasn't here.
I worked with Peter over on Brinton Road. In my 30+ years of radio, he is among the 5 most memorable folks in the business. He was (and I presume still is) so talented but was so unimpressed with his talent. I hesitate to use the ``down to earth'' phrase because it's such an overworked cliche but it's applicable to Peter.
After my shift was over at 7, I'd usually hang out with Pete for hours just because he was so funny and a great story teller. The statute of limitations is long past, so we can't in trouble for this -- but we'd switch on one of the tuners in the control room to WLUP/1000 and listen to Steve and Gary and Kevin Matthews from Chicago while the Heartlite songs were airing for the unaware listeners. Pete could do a dead on impression of Kev (and most of the callers, too). He also busted me up with his imitations of the callers to Perry Marshall.
I'd go so far to say that if Phil Hendrie didn't come along -- Morely could have nailed that genre of entertaining talk. The format of Lite FM, of course, was not all conducive to his full range of capabilities. Sometimes I think...If only we'd have the mic open those nights...