Hello all -
I was up until nearly 4AM reading all the posts on this particular blog - it was like the page-turning novel that you can't put down. In fairness, I read some of the other posts as well, but nearly nothing (other than the recent blood-letting at KRLD) was as compelling. Here's my story:
Growing up in Houston and leading my own big band in the 1980's, I decided that in order to further that career that I should get into radio. I knew many air personalities peripherally in Houston - Paul Berlin, Scott Arthur, Ronnie Renfrow et. al from KQUE and I also knew the GURU of Houston traffic - Marty Ambrose.
It was Marty who helped me get a gig at Traffic Central in 1988. In those days in Houston, there were two traffic companies Traffic Central and Metro Networks (the Evil Empire) which at that time was owned by the notorius David Saperstein. Both traffic services had about an equal amount of stations. Competition was fierce as one might imagine.
Anyway, I started at Traffic Central as a mobile reporter. I drove around in a vehicle provided by TC with a two-way radio and the dispatcher/producer in the studio would listen to the police scanners and send me (and 2 other mobile units) to various problems along Houston freeways. Traffic Central also had a chopper and a fixed wing. This was in the days before traffic cams and internet was still a few years away. Over time, I worked my way up from the streets into the studio.
We had a good gang over at Traffic Central - there were personality issues now and then but on balance it was a great group - Marty, Gary Elliott, Linn Lesack, Michelle Jackson, Mick Perry, Len Reed, Ann Parker, the Enlows (who owned it-Brothers, the mom and sister in laws) Garth Maier, etc. If owner Richard Enlow hadn't run into some personal problems I might never have left Houston.
One day however, Enlow sold the company to Metro which meant that they had taken over virtually all of the radio stations that they didn't already have. The PD at KPRC (950 AM) was so unwilling to have Metro has his traffic service that he talked the Shadow folks to come in from Chicago to open a shop in Houston. Some of the Traffic Central people went with Shadow and 2 or 3 of us went to Metro (me included).
The atmosphere at Metro was drastically different than that of Traffic Central, partly due to the preponderance of chain smokers on the 50th-something floor of the Transco Tower at Metro, but also by the fact that there was a palpable air of a stab-you-in-the-back mentality among my new co-workers.
To be fair, some of this may have had to do with the fact that I was an outsider from Traffic Central and some there may have resented our hiring. It was there that I first encountered Tom Corbett who has been mentioned several times on this particular blog.
Back then, Tom didn't work in the studio. I think he was in an airborne unit and he came up through the ranks - a grunt like the rest of us who just tried to do his job to the best of his ability. At first, I thought he was a nice enough guy. Soon, I found him to be given to immature temperamental outbursts, obtuse, and wholly lacking in people skills or a sense of humor. After a couple of incidents where we butted heads I did my best during the remainder of my time at Metro to avoid him. I also remember thinking God help anyone who should ever become his subordinate.
A few years later when I was going through a rough patch in Dallas, I remember calling Tom for a job when he was at traffic.com but after excoriating me and delighting in kicking me when I was down, with a wife and a small baby, he said something about me having to "check my ego at the door" if I wanted to work for him. I said something about black pots and kettles and hung up. Back to my narrative:
When I moved to Metro I was solely an anchor in the studio. I was especially amused by the individual who posted the thread regarding hours we worked doing a couple of traffic feeds an hour - I would like to set that record straight.
I was always a full-timer at Metro. For the last two years or so that I worked there I was working from Noon - 7PM Monday through Friday. I was anchoring 6 different radio stations - 4 of those during afternoon drive - each of which required 3 or 4 feeds per hour each. When I wasn't doing traffic feeds I was listening to the scanner and making beat calls and pretty much so was everyone else. There'd be two of us from Noon to 3:00 - I did everyone else and Stewart Russell was doing KTRH. At 3PM the afternoon crew came in and there were 5 or 6 of us with a producer. Back then I was salaried making about $18K yearly.
The best Director of Operations we had back then was John Winder. Funny and a little quirky, but the man knew Houston traffic like no one else. More importantly, as a manager, he knew and could empathize with everyone and their jobs.
However soon after I got there, he was increasingly moving more into management by then since Metro was nationwide and was only then beginning to expand into offering news feeds with traffic to radio stations. We had a succession of Operations Directors each one as useless as a Dallas Cowboys coach hired by Jerry Jones.
My last D.O. was someone who is known on this thread as Traffic Chief - that would be Mike Haake - and he fired me and several others when he took over in September of 1994.
I have been amused by the things he has written here because I don't believe he's being wholly candid. This is a man that owes his entire career at Metro to slicing the bottom line to make himself look good. After all, why pay a traffic anchor an annual salary of $24k+ with health benefits when you can get some wide-eyed, Columbia School of Broadcasting grad to do the same job part time at an hourly rate?
And, if they start to gripe about no benefits or becoming salaried, find an excuse to terminate their employment and hire another hopeful. After all, it's only traffic. Being concerned first about the bottom line and willing to eliminate jobs means you keep yours - Mike Haake was the original Apt Pupil.
And Mike H. did the job that not even John Winder would do: Gut the operations side of Metro Houston. Why, the talent he fired reads like a who's who of Houston traffic reporters - Lyndon Joslyn, Gary Elliott, Neal Rohrig, Stewart Russell, etc. I hope he doesn't get offensive if he reads this, after all he was just doing his job. And if he hadn't done it - HE would have been replaced. In fact, it wasn't long after I was fired that Winder left Metro for Shadow.
On September 14th, 1994 Mike Haake fired me and I was devastated - having never been fired from a job before. But I bear no ill will.
If he hadn't fired me, I never would have gotten a job with Shadow Broadcast Services to come to Dallas, never would have met my wife and never would be a father. My son will be 10 on Saturday and I have Mike Haake to thank for setting me on this path.
I am unemployed again having been fired from KAAM in March. By now I should be used to inferior and unknowledgeable managers running roughshod over talented, capable employees, but I'm still astonished by the fact that it seems nice guys NEVER finish last and that owners and managers are perfectly willing to put out an inferior product - so long as costs are kept down.
That's okay. For me, when KAAM took away my Sunday night Sinatra and Big Band shows in January, I knew it was a matter of time. I've had no luck in finding a job and I have to say that that Clear Channel Board Op gig for $8 and hour is looking better and better!
One of the nicest people I ever knew in radio (and traffic) was Gary Elliott (also fired by hatchet man Haake BTW) who once told me early on that being a radio traffic reporter was something that one did as a spring board into broadcasting; Or, it was the gig you got as you were on your way down. But it was NEVER supposed to be the be-all end all of anyone who aspired to a career in radio. True enough.
Drinks anyone?
crbigband
Not afraid to tell you my real name - Cary Richards (214) 394-0608