The Murray-Go-Round
A few years after my 11-7 Great Adventure, I too acquired a Hal Murray ("Hey, that's me!") presskit/resume from a station in Springfield, Mass. The audition tape was a 120-minute cassette crammed full on both sides with material dating back to Pittsburgh twenty years earlier. Folded around the tape was a 12- or 16-page illustrated booklet with photos and press clippings. It was one Hal of a presentation.
Hal had a couple of old jock jingles he used. His show opener sounded like an old ColorRadio station jingle with the call letters clipped off at the end: "Haaal Murreeeee....(pause)....Here is the Murray-Go-Round, Hay Murray (stinger)." The pause was where he'd jump on the mic and exclaim, "Hey, that's me!" But one evening Seymour came to me with an idea for a prank. I recorded him (this is the owner, mind you) shouting the Yiddish phrase "ALTA CACA" --- which means...er, um...."poopy head" --- and inserted it into that pause. Then I carefully peeled off the label of Hal's jingle cart, pasted it onto the cart with the "new" version," put the new one back in the studio and the original in my desk.
The next morning I waited with tape recorder at the ready for the station to sign on. And when it did, we heard...
jingle: "Haaaaal Murreeeeee......ALTA CACA!"
Hal: "Uh, buh, whaaa?"
jingle: "Here is the Murray-Go_Round, Hal Murray."
Hal: "Well, I'll be a...did you hear....I think there were some rats in the woodpile here overnight...." Hal continues to make comments and puns until the cart recues, then he plays it again!
He totally lost it and cracked up giggling. Later that morning I goaded him into playing it again, then returned the original. He was not only a good sport, I think he was flattered we'd go to those lengths to prank him.
"There's no time like the pleasant."
A few years after my 11-7 Great Adventure, I too acquired a Hal Murray ("Hey, that's me!") presskit/resume from a station in Springfield, Mass. The audition tape was a 120-minute cassette crammed full on both sides with material dating back to Pittsburgh twenty years earlier. Folded around the tape was a 12- or 16-page illustrated booklet with photos and press clippings. It was one Hal of a presentation.
Hal had a couple of old jock jingles he used. His show opener sounded like an old ColorRadio station jingle with the call letters clipped off at the end: "Haaal Murreeeee....(pause)....Here is the Murray-Go-Round, Hay Murray (stinger)." The pause was where he'd jump on the mic and exclaim, "Hey, that's me!" But one evening Seymour came to me with an idea for a prank. I recorded him (this is the owner, mind you) shouting the Yiddish phrase "ALTA CACA" --- which means...er, um...."poopy head" --- and inserted it into that pause. Then I carefully peeled off the label of Hal's jingle cart, pasted it onto the cart with the "new" version," put the new one back in the studio and the original in my desk.
The next morning I waited with tape recorder at the ready for the station to sign on. And when it did, we heard...
jingle: "Haaaaal Murreeeeee......ALTA CACA!"
Hal: "Uh, buh, whaaa?"
jingle: "Here is the Murray-Go_Round, Hal Murray."
Hal: "Well, I'll be a...did you hear....I think there were some rats in the woodpile here overnight...." Hal continues to make comments and puns until the cart recues, then he plays it again!
He totally lost it and cracked up giggling. Later that morning I goaded him into playing it again, then returned the original. He was not only a good sport, I think he was flattered we'd go to those lengths to prank him.
"There's no time like the pleasant."