davesand said:I've caught the Italian Stallion doing the weather in the Big Apple. Is he a meteorologist or just a weather person?
He was calling himself a meteorologist on WTOK-TV in Meridian long before he ever got the degree.
LF
davesand said:I've caught the Italian Stallion doing the weather in the Big Apple. Is he a meteorologist or just a weather person?
tzbarber said:Had to make sure that weather wire had paper in it first thing each morning! And who could forget getting the clock in sync with the NBC network for news at the top of the hour. Bark. Nothing like letting bleary-eyed college kids flipping switches of radiated power first thing in the morning and having responsiblity of playing music for the dairy farmers before sunup. Small town radio,what a blast. BTW, Dr. Bob,I'm Tim,the one that did some mornings and sales at SSO. Terry was the one over at the big KOR years later.
I'd like to withdraw my original statement, your honor. Mr. Barber is indeed correct. It was Chuck who took his wit and charm to WKOR. You left for the big time at JDX shortly after I started. I have a JDX "hit list" with a picture of you on the front. Your mouth is covered with tape (or at least that's what it looks like) and the caption reads something like "Tim Barber, the way he was intended to be."tzbarber said:Sorry,counselor! That's not true!(I have trouble smarting off to lawyers,Dave. Comes from some FCC Comparative Hearings experiences. Trying to get over it,really!) I actually went to SSO after a brief interlude at KOR. John Weeks brought me over to do the Lum and Abner show,I mean,Mornings,at the mighty Wesso. We had Barry Brooks, Jack the Whack Talley,little Pete Turpel,to name a few. I left for JDX in late '77. Wanted to get the facts straight,or at least the way I remembered them.....davesand said:Tim, I remember when you left "your radio station" for the King of Rock. WSSO was never the same - no wit, no charm. You took it all to the cross-town rival as if Dennis and Glen needed any help.
Do you know when he got the degree?lfuss said:davesand said:I've caught the Italian Stallion doing the weather in the Big Apple. Is he a meteorologist or just a weather person?
He was calling himself a meteorologist on WTOK-TV in Meridian long before he ever got the degree.
LF
Nar Vall, that boy's got a right to know how much taxes are comin out hiz check(hands waving around the head with mouth stretched showing teeth). Now,go check the paper for the weatha wire. Does that boy work for me? Tell um to get a tie and git sellin'. Anybody around here know how much it costs to run this radio station?SkinnyJohnny said:Hey Tim,
Could you email me a copy of that for my website?
If you have anything else that may be of interest could you send that along too?
Thanks,
John
P.S. Deddy, them boys are being Prima-Donnas again!
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------tzbarber said:{quote from davesand}I'd like to withdraw my original statement, your honor. Mr. Barber is indeed correct. It was Chuck who took his wit and charm to WKOR. You left for the big time at JDX shortly after I started. I have a JDX "hit list" with a picture of you on the front. Your mouth is covered with tape (or at least that's what it looks like) and the caption reads something like "Tim Barber, the way he was intended to be."
Talley's Joe imitation was good,Bob, but trust me, there's a whole generation that can do Joe and Norvell in their sleep. Especially Joe's former son-in law,right Skinny?
beachguy3b said:
Most times he'd be warming up leftovers in the oven,but he never shared with me! The hard part of cover duty was listening too much to the ZZQ side and not keeping up with the JDX side. Best case scenario was both playing something like the Who's "Won't get fooled again" at the same time. It also gave you the feeling of monopolizing the airwaves. Together at night,you're talking about a 60 share of the audience at the time,much to the chagrin of those Y-16 fellas. Hey,too bad there weren't LMA's back then.SkinnyJohnny said:I was on "ZZQ listen duty" a few times a week for Perez. He would come in and say "Hey, can you put us in cue and make sure my album doesn't skip or get stuck, I'm going to Jack's. Do you want anything?".
And you discovered that middle of nowhere one Sunday afternooon. I remember meeting you at Fulton while I was still at State working at WSSO and you were working in Memphis (WHBQ, pehaps?). You said let's go for a ride. And ride we did. Little did the rest of us in the car know that your were intent on finding WHKW. And somehow, without directions it seems, you eventually found the hill. And to our amazement, we discovered a Jim Walter home at the top of that hill (wasn't WWUN in a similar-type home?). What a surprise to find that incredible sound came from a small Jim Walter home. I have a friend who grew-up in Fayette. Incredibly, she doesn't remember the station!robgrayson said:By the way, Skinny J, tangentially related to this thread... Over the course of the years very few FM Top 40 or CHR stations ever appealed to me on the visceral level that the old AM's did... but WHKW was a distinct exception. Back in the day when I heard it, I was always impressed with's it's tight bright BIG TIME-ish attitude and sound that belied that fact it must have been located near the middle of nowhere. And I mean all that in the nicest way possible!
Good point. I was WSSO in 1973. I still remember Joe and his green El Camino. And if it hadn't been for JDX, I likely wouldn't have gone to St. Louis in 1975, and get stuck there for 30 years. Always will remember Bob Burton's reaction when he thought he was about to fire me ("not good enough for middays in Jackson!") and instead, I told him I was going to KSLQ to do middays...davesand said:Compared to WSSO it was. I suppose "big time" is a relative term. The real big time in the '70s would have been WLS, KHJ, WRKO, etc. But us Mississippi young'uns saw JDX as a step to the real big time.
Yep. Next to a cemetary. And a farm. I remember one afternoon having someone reading the news and a cow stuck her head in since the window was open on a nice day. I think Walt Grayson was reading the news, but I'm not sure.davesand said:And to our amazement, we discovered a Jim Walter home at the top of that hill (wasn't WWUN in a similar-type home?).