My story about the exploding air conditioner in studio. While I was on the air. With the mic open has led to David suggesting that we use "the worst thing" being a thread topic. He's right. Let's see if we can have a little fun with this.....
Actually, aside from getting fired once "in studio" (mic was off) or the station owner discovering that we had beer stashed in the pop machine. Most of my days in radio (and TV) were pretty uneventful. To be sure, there were a few moments. Like the time I got a phone call from an FCC field engineer (for being slightly off frequency), or the time I substituted the name of a local businessman for a similarly-named arrested criminal, or the time listeners got a 15% discount at a local jewelry stor instead of the intended 10% because the secretary in charge of our notebook with live tags put the wrong tag into a binder, and I didn't catch it.
But I remember one incident in 1972 that was one of the best....and worst. It actually happened on the TV side of WHBF-TV, channel 4 in the Illinois-Iowa Quad Cities (Davenport). I was working on the radio side in news as a reporter and morning drive anchor. One boring slow news day Friday afternoon, a bunch of us were just sort of hanging out in the newsroom talking about football. At least half of us were Packers fans, lamenting the fact that we were on the Bears network, and thus would not to see the Packers game with playoffs on the line because we'd be forced to carry a completely meaningless Bears game. So...someone got the bright idea to call CBS to see if they'd switch our game to the Packers. To our astonishment, the suit on the other end of the line didn't argue at all. The deed was done!
Now for the worst part. Sunday morning. Word had gotten out that our game had switched. I had to work a 4am-noon shift. The switchboard was closed on Sundays. And all phone calls rang in to the newsroom. It was a TORRENT! All irate. I was alone in the newsroom until the end of my shift, so I had to sit there and listen to it. I didn't get to do any writing, editing, news calls, etc. What got me through it was responding to the venom by saying stuff like, "Well, gee whiz, that was CBS's decision. You'll have to take it up with them." I don't think management ever suspected anything out of line. To this day, I'm sure they all just assumed it was CBS' call.
Actually, aside from getting fired once "in studio" (mic was off) or the station owner discovering that we had beer stashed in the pop machine. Most of my days in radio (and TV) were pretty uneventful. To be sure, there were a few moments. Like the time I got a phone call from an FCC field engineer (for being slightly off frequency), or the time I substituted the name of a local businessman for a similarly-named arrested criminal, or the time listeners got a 15% discount at a local jewelry stor instead of the intended 10% because the secretary in charge of our notebook with live tags put the wrong tag into a binder, and I didn't catch it.
But I remember one incident in 1972 that was one of the best....and worst. It actually happened on the TV side of WHBF-TV, channel 4 in the Illinois-Iowa Quad Cities (Davenport). I was working on the radio side in news as a reporter and morning drive anchor. One boring slow news day Friday afternoon, a bunch of us were just sort of hanging out in the newsroom talking about football. At least half of us were Packers fans, lamenting the fact that we were on the Bears network, and thus would not to see the Packers game with playoffs on the line because we'd be forced to carry a completely meaningless Bears game. So...someone got the bright idea to call CBS to see if they'd switch our game to the Packers. To our astonishment, the suit on the other end of the line didn't argue at all. The deed was done!
Now for the worst part. Sunday morning. Word had gotten out that our game had switched. I had to work a 4am-noon shift. The switchboard was closed on Sundays. And all phone calls rang in to the newsroom. It was a TORRENT! All irate. I was alone in the newsroom until the end of my shift, so I had to sit there and listen to it. I didn't get to do any writing, editing, news calls, etc. What got me through it was responding to the venom by saying stuff like, "Well, gee whiz, that was CBS's decision. You'll have to take it up with them." I don't think management ever suspected anything out of line. To this day, I'm sure they all just assumed it was CBS' call.