Sounds like he had you arrested for assaulting a cart machine. You beast!BobOnTheJob said:I worked for him in 1972..."Colorful" is a good description. He was a tightwad...refused to repair equipment and paid me $2 an hour but I enjoyed playing the country hits on Big Clu Country. He has the distinction of being one of only 2 people who have ever "fired" me. He saw me slam his falling apart cart machine with my fist when it failed to start. Actually, he didn't fire me...he had Judge Roy Wakely do the dirty work. RIP Irv...
Cincinnati Kid said:I saw Irv in person just once - at a forum featuring many local radio station owners. Too bad that nothing was written in the paper when he passed away about owning the radio station. Does anyone know what the call-letters W-C-L-U stood for? I don't.
DXDXDX said:Irv Schwartz (Part 2)...I think he called that computer system "Centronics". Irv told me WCLU took the country market by storm in the 60's and many of the C/W stars of the day would stop in regularly or call. Additionally, some heavy weight talents worked their including Roy Wakely, Jack Reno, Dave Lee and maybe even Rich King. Even though I came in long after Roy had left, we still had listeners calling for him! By that time I felt the station's better days were behind it but it was a job and a fairly easy one at that. Yes, the equipment was old but I had previously worked under some of the more "thrifty" owners in the business, so this was nothing new to me. Like many non-technical owners, Irv felt he had more engineering knowledge than he actually did. We spent many times discussing his concern about minor line voltage fluctuations on the transmitter. He simply could not understand that was normal and did not make any difference. The PD when I got there was Ron Farris, from Detroit by way of Arizona. Ron did not understand "thrifty" radio and left abruptly but not until a profanity laced, religious insult filled tirade. Thru it all, Irv didn't raise his voice, use similar profanity or obscenities and handled the matter in an exemplary fashion. Irv had more than his fair share of "characters" who walked thru the doors. When I got there they had a guy from Erie, Pa named Ted Branch on the air, who lasted about a month. A few years later Branch made national headlines by defecting to the USSR! There were numerous drunks and johnny-come-lately sales people. One of those drunks stole my wrist watch from my desk. We had a receptionist who was head over heels for a PD who was old enough to be her grandfather. Another guy went off the deep end and was arrested and of course, hospitalized for showing up at a gas station naked. Still another guy failed to show for his shift...(more)
But...Rich King's voice was heard in the building daily...part of my job duties were to listen to WKRC's traffic reports during the Rich King show, re-type them & read them on WCLU. And yes, WCLU did take the country market by storm in the 1960's...double digit ratings I believe. That all ended in April 1969 when 1230 WUBE dropped Top 40 and went "CountryPolitan" 24/7 (WCLU was 6AM-Sunset at the time) with an air staff called The Magnificent Seven. And speaking of Country Stars of the day who passed through there, for some reason I thought that Jimmy Logsdon had some country records out (he was on the air there at the same time I was in 1972), but I see no record of him having charted since 1944. Anyone else remember the singing jingle with the request line number? 2-6-1-85-85?Ken Tucky said:DXDXDX said:Irv Schwartz (Part 2)...I think he called that computer system "Centronics". Irv told me WCLU took the country market by storm in the 60's and many of the C/W stars of the day would stop in regularly or call. Additionally, some heavy weight talents worked their including Roy Wakely, Jack Reno, Dave Lee and maybe even Rich King. Even though I came in long after Roy had left, we still had listeners calling for him! By that time I felt the station's better days were behind it but it was a job and a fairly easy one at that. Yes, the equipment was old but I had previously worked under some of the more "thrifty" owners in the business, so this was nothing new to me. Like many non-technical owners, Irv felt he had more engineering knowledge than he actually did. We spent many times discussing his concern about minor line voltage fluctuations on the transmitter. He simply could not understand that was normal and did not make any difference. The PD when I got there was Ron Farris, from Detroit by way of Arizona. Ron did not understand "thrifty" radio and left abruptly but not until a profanity laced, religious insult filled tirade. Thru it all, Irv didn't raise his voice, use similar profanity or obscenities and handled the matter in an exemplary fashion. Irv had more than his fair share of "characters" who walked thru the doors. When I got there they had a guy from Erie, Pa named Ted Branch on the air, who lasted about a month. A few years later Branch made national headlines by defecting to the USSR! There were numerous drunks and johnny-come-lately sales people. One of those drunks stole my wrist watch from my desk. We had a receptionist who was head over heels for a PD who was old enough to be her grandfather. Another guy went off the deep end and was arrested and of course, hospitalized for showing up at a gas station naked. Still another guy failed to show for his shift...(more)
No - Rich King did NOT work there - EVER!!!