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Radio Hall of Fame Voting

Voting for the Bay Area Radio Hall of Fame's Class of 2008 has opened, allowing the public to voice its opinion on which local radio stars from the past and present will be inducted this September.

More than 6000 votes were cast in last year's balloting.

Voting will begin on February 18 and will end on July 1, with one "bonus" date -- an additional public voting day will take place on Saturday, July 5, during the "Radio Day By The Bay" open house with the California Historical Radio Society at the KRE Building in Berkeley.

Public voting will also take place at Broadcast Legends events on March 27 and June 11 in Berkeley.

The Class of 2008 will consist of the six nominees receiving the most votes based on public voting, plus another four to six selected by the Veterans Committee, plus two to four selected by the museum's board of directors.

The Class of 2008 will be announced on July 16, and will be inducted during a public ceremony as part of the Broadcast Legends' quarterly luncheon, which will be held on Tuesday, September 30, 2008.

http://www.bayarearadio.org/hof/barhof_2008_vote.shtml
or http://tinyurl.com/24w34e
 
Hey, Meestah DJ (--Van Morrison sample),
Would you be so good as to please explain the "you can vote as many times as you wish" decision
to a small trip dreamer such as myself? Doesn't seem to be the same way the politicians have taught us to vote...
 
something wrong with the machine.
I tried to vote for two people and when I voted for the second person the vote for the first person disappeared.
 
tripton99 said:
something wrong with the machine.
I tried to vote for two people and when I voted for the second person the vote for the first person disappeared.

There's nothing wrong with the machine. You select the person you want to vote for, and you place your vote by clicking on the button at the bottom of the page. You can't select multiple nominees on the same screen.

You can vote as many times as you want, but you have to do it one vote at a time.
 
skyrocker said:
Hey, Meestah DJ (--Van Morrison sample),
Would you be so good as to please explain the "you can vote as many times as you wish" decision
to a small trip dreamer such as myself? Doesn't seem to be the same way the politicians have taught us to vote...

You obviously didn't grow up in Chicago or New York! Does the phrase "vote early, vote often" ring a bell? ;D

All of the candidates deserve to be in the Hall of Fame, and I'd venture a guess that -- eventually, over the next decade or so -- everyone on the list will get in.

If someone wants to load up and vote for Alex Bennett (for example) or Hap Harper (for example) a few hundred times, it won't skew things too much, because someone else will probably sit there and vote for John Mack Flanagan (for example) or Red Blanchard (for example) a few hundred times.

It happened last time with two candidates ... and they both deserved to get in, and it would have been a shame if they didn't.

DJ
 
Thanks for clarifying that "Chicago-style" voting system so vividly, David. You
know, it sounded too good to be true -- such a magical place, this Radio Hall
Of Fame -- I was sorely tempted to vote for myself again and again to insure
I would most certainly be inducted therein.

But then came the crushing disappointment: I talked to my old friend Don Bleu,
a Hall Of Famer himself, and he informed me that you don't get to move in and
live there rent free.

You could've mentioned that, too...
 
skyrocker said:
But then came the crushing disappointment: I talked to my old friend Don Bleu,
a Hall Of Famer himself, and he informed me that you don't get to move in and
live there rent free.

You could've mentioned that, too...

Well, um...

Should I mention that we do ask you to stand verrrrrrry still while we smear bronze paint all over you for the induction ceremony? We simply can't afford statues yet, and this saves us a bundle.

DJ
 
Can't figure out why Dennis Erectus isn't on your list. I nominate him and hope you add him to the list soon so I start voting Chicago style.
 
Hey David,

Here's how I wasted company time and bandwidth today.

Let's vote.

Jack Friday!!!!

I also voted for Phil Lerza just because he was the engineer for the Big 610, KFRC. That alone makes him awesome. Anyone who can make an AM sound like THAT is awesome.

Dave McQueen has the slowest, funniest news delivery ever, but then again, he was on the Big 610, KFRC also. I thought he was just talking that way to be funny on KFRC, but now listening to him on KCBS, I realize it is a speech impediment. Sorry for laughing at you all those years, Dave!

Bobby Ocean, just because. Um... KFRC!

Lee Rodgers! Not because of KSFO, but because he is the voice of WWV!!!! 'All time, all the time'. Hee hee! Lee is on 2.5, 5, 10, 15, and 20 MHz. 24/7.

Tom Rounds, just fercuz.

Don Sainte-John because I had NO idea he was black until I met him at KFRC! He kicked so much butt on KFRC, and never played the 'poor pitiful me, I'm black' crap. He is awesome as a jock and as a human being.

Michael Savage (weiner) because he came from nowhere and made it in San Francisco, then went national and made it big time. Agree with him or not, we should be proud that a guy that got started in San Fran made it big and stays there.

Roy Storey because he sounded so awesome on KFRC. Every time he did a news cast, he made it sound like he had info that was about to save your life and you didn't DARE tune out until he was done! The best newsman 'urgency' ever.
 
:(

This voting is only for commercial radio it would appear.

Since the best programing is often on non-commercial radio, I can see why you and your Board would be intimidated.

Sad - and no clear way to write in - this is certainly an OPEN forum.
 
I'm a newbie here. Name's John LaTorre, from Sacramento, California.

I'd like to see somebody nominate Laura Ellen Hopper, who (along with Jeremy Lansman and Lorenzo Milan) created the KFAT format, which exists to this day as KPIG radio after over thirty years. It exists largely because Laura Ellen kept the format alive at a succession of radio stations until it found a permanent home at the PIG.

I wrote an article back in the 80s about this transition period, and specifically how Laura Ellen took the FAT format to a little radio station in Hollister for a spell. The article can be found at:

http://midtown.net/dragonwing/KHIP.htm

Considering how often the name "KFAT" is preceded by the word "legendary," and how the station is still remembered with fondness (and, yes, imitation) after all these years, I'm surprised that the BARHOF has let this nomination slip by for so long.

--JLT
 
foxeye said:
:(

This voting is only for commercial radio it would appear.

Since the best programing is often on non-commercial radio, I can see why you and your Board would be intimidated.

Sad - and no clear way to write in - this is certainly an OPEN forum.


Norm Howard and Fred Krock are KQED-FM Guys. Dick Conte and Mal Sharpe are most recently on KCSM a Non Com.
 
I second the Dennis Erectus nomination. As I posted zomw time ago:

Adding to your list of the more creative professionals, Dennis Erectus comes to mind. All of his breaks were multi media events, each including pre produced original skits, TV/movie audio (well before that was a thing), song bits, and improv'd live rants all appropriate to the skit, and the entire breaks appropriate to the surrounding sets of music. It was only after the term "shock jock" was coined that his reputation was marginalized to fit the term.
 
I’d just like to add my two cents regarding my friend Dennis Erectus. If anyone deserves to be recognized for his contribution to bay area broadcasting it has to be Dennis.
When I arrived in the bay area in 1983, I was told to check out this DJ in San Jose, I’ve became a fan from that night on…
Dennis is an incredible talent who truly understood why people listened to the radio. Although our shows were very different, our approach to doing a show was very similar. When in the studio he was in constant motion, working the phones, editing the calls ( yeah we played records back then and had to edit tape on the fly) interviewing his guests and doing his breaks. Because of his usual guest line-up, he had a producer in studio to assist him (but only with the in-studio guests) Dennis did everything else. I also had a producer for the morning show(near the end) but never for the idiotshow.
To call Dennis a “Shock Jock” is an insult. Those bozos weren’t worthy to key his mic. Dennis was/is a true original who was able to walk into a studio and create compelling radio without (except for his scheduled guests) any plan, he just let it happen, very much like Dung.
I had the fortune of working with him for almost 3 years when I was at KFOX and he was across the hall on KSJO. It was during that time we became friends. It took Clear Channel to come in and end his career (and mine) blow out our protector Dana Jang and destroy KSJO forever. Not only did they fire Dennis (without cause) but they also screwed him out of the money that was due him.
The saddest part of all this is that jocks today will never know the thrill of doing their own show. I’ll spare everyone my inevitable rant on how ****ed up radio is out of respect for my friend Dennis Erectus. Give him the recognition he deserves.

M. Dung
 
dungboy said:
I'd just like to add my two cents regarding my friend Dennis Erectus. If anyone deserves to be recognized for his contribution to bay area broadcasting it has to be Dennis.

M. Dung

You'll find Dennis Erectus listed on the online ballot now, just below M. Dung, who also deserves your serious consideration.

http://www.bayarearadio.org/hof/poll/

Considering that I'm such a huge fan of Dennis, you'd have thought I'd have made certain that his name would have been on there two years ago...

DJ
 
Question: It used to be vote early and vote often....as many times as you like. Now it is saying you may vote only once?? Any reason why??
 
blackhole said:
Question: It used to be vote early and vote often....as many times as you like. Now it is saying you may vote only once?? Any reason why??

That's a great question, and I'm glad you asked.
 
JLT said:
I'm a newbie here. Name's John LaTorre, from Sacramento, California.

I'd like to see somebody nominate Laura Ellen Hopper, who (along with Jeremy Lansman and Lorenzo Milan) created the KFAT format, which exists to this day as KPIG radio after over thirty years. It exists largely because Laura Ellen kept the format alive at a succession of radio stations until it found a permanent home at the PIG.

I wrote an article back in the 80s about this transition period, and specifically how Laura Ellen took the FAT format to a little radio station in Hollister for a spell. The article can be found at:

http://midtown.net/dragonwing/KHIP.htm

if your nominating, i will second this. i doubt very many people who read this board, get over the hill to give....k p i g ....a listen. yeah i know its on an..a m ...channel in s f, but still i doubt there are very many listeners here. if i am wrong, oh well.

:)

Considering how often the name "KFAT" is preceded by the word "legendary," and how the station is still remembered with fondness (and, yes, imitation) after all these years, I'm surprised that the BARHOF has let this nomination slip by for so long.

--JLT
 
> ...I'm surprised that the BARHOF has let this nomination slip by for so long.

Just a quick comment on this -- and I'm not directing it at John personally.

First of all, not one nomination has slipped by, and none "for so long." The Hall of Fame has been in existence for two years. If anyone has not been nominated or selected yet, it is not because I personally have an axe to grind, it's because this program could have and should have been started by someone -- ANYONE! -- twenty or thirty years ago.

Since Ben Fong-Torres mentioned the Hall of Fame balloting in last Sunday's "Radio Waves," I have been receiving a ton of messages, nearly all of which question my sanity for denying one or another deserving candidate his or her rightful place in BARHOF.

Consider the challenge here:

1: Everybody (everybody!!!) on the current list of nominees deserves to be in the Hall of Fame.

2: There are more than 100 nominees on the current ballot. How many should get in this year? Ten? Twenty? Thirty?

3: Look at the list of nominees. How many of the names don't you recognize? How many do you think you recognize, put can't quite place? Now, guess what my job is in all this: to make sure that person's contribution to local broadcasting history isn't forgotten due to the passage of time. How many hours of each day do you think I'm on the phone trying to track down family members, or searching through old newspapers? That's my job.

4: I can give you a compelling argument for each and every person on the ballot. I can give you a compelling argument for another 25 or 30 that deserve to be on it. Realistically, how many names should be on the ballot? Should we increase it to 150 next year? 200? What is maximum density.

5: Every day, a member of the museum team comes up with another name of a person who worked in local radio from the 1900s through the 1950s that we hadn't known anything about. What are the criteria that elevates that person from "forgotten" to "Hall of Famer"?

6: Let's say you've worked in Bay Area radio, for example, since 1970. You've worked at a variety of jobs -- production, sales, management, etc. -- but you've never been a "star" on the air. You have run a radio station as a general manager, served as a program director, the people you work with love you, and you're respected -- revered! -- within the industry. But Joe Listener has no idea who you are. You deserve to be in the Hall of Fame ... but what are the criteria?

I'll save bullet points 7 through 23 for some other time.

DJ
 
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