This was told to me from the traffic person at a station I managed 44 years ago (and honestly never should have been GM).
She was working for a small town AM & FM in 1979. The AM was live while the FM was automated.
A change in management meant cleaning house at the station, opting for an all new on air staff. When the announcement was made in late afternoon, everyone seemed to take it well, almost expecting to get the boot. It seems the morning guy had an extra key made to the station and his apartment just in case he lost his keys.
The station signed off at 10pm and the morning guy drives up, parks in the back. He goes in and randomly through the automated reels of music records a loud 'F U" but the whole word. Over on the AM side, everything was on cart and back in the day you could pull the cue jack and record over what was on the cart. About the middle of each spot he repeated his "F U" and he did the same on the carted music. There were no turntables in the studio at that time, just two triple decker cart machines. She seemed to think he was gone before 4am.
The poor new guy comes in and starts his first shift. He quickly discovers every cart he fires off has "F U" somewhere on the cart. A quick call to the new management and the GM says, just simulcast the FM but alas, the carts in the carousels had been adorned with the same "F U". And even the automation reels had the same although I was told he only got the first four or five songs an each reel.
The funny thing was he altered his voice just enough that the new management wasn't sure who said it. My traffic director said the local police department, who the GM called, offered to try to help but actually though it was quite funny. Many advertisers and locals were not amused in the least.
What they ended up doing was getting the engineer in to wire up the production studio to run on AM and FM. The lady said she was told to get there as soon as possible to help find the written copy of all the spots. By mid-afternoon the engineer had the AM studio for recording all the commercials again and then they started re-carting all the music after the 10pm sign off. Within a week the music service the FM used sent a replacement library at quite a large expense. I understand nobody slept much for a couple of days.
She knew who did it but he remained 'never heard from again' in that little town. This happened in 1979.
I worked at a station in that town about 1992/93 and asked about the incident. Some people remembered it.
That's the best one I know of. How about you?
She was working for a small town AM & FM in 1979. The AM was live while the FM was automated.
A change in management meant cleaning house at the station, opting for an all new on air staff. When the announcement was made in late afternoon, everyone seemed to take it well, almost expecting to get the boot. It seems the morning guy had an extra key made to the station and his apartment just in case he lost his keys.
The station signed off at 10pm and the morning guy drives up, parks in the back. He goes in and randomly through the automated reels of music records a loud 'F U" but the whole word. Over on the AM side, everything was on cart and back in the day you could pull the cue jack and record over what was on the cart. About the middle of each spot he repeated his "F U" and he did the same on the carted music. There were no turntables in the studio at that time, just two triple decker cart machines. She seemed to think he was gone before 4am.
The poor new guy comes in and starts his first shift. He quickly discovers every cart he fires off has "F U" somewhere on the cart. A quick call to the new management and the GM says, just simulcast the FM but alas, the carts in the carousels had been adorned with the same "F U". And even the automation reels had the same although I was told he only got the first four or five songs an each reel.
The funny thing was he altered his voice just enough that the new management wasn't sure who said it. My traffic director said the local police department, who the GM called, offered to try to help but actually though it was quite funny. Many advertisers and locals were not amused in the least.
What they ended up doing was getting the engineer in to wire up the production studio to run on AM and FM. The lady said she was told to get there as soon as possible to help find the written copy of all the spots. By mid-afternoon the engineer had the AM studio for recording all the commercials again and then they started re-carting all the music after the 10pm sign off. Within a week the music service the FM used sent a replacement library at quite a large expense. I understand nobody slept much for a couple of days.
She knew who did it but he remained 'never heard from again' in that little town. This happened in 1979.
I worked at a station in that town about 1992/93 and asked about the incident. Some people remembered it.
That's the best one I know of. How about you?