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'''Doug "The Greaseman" Tracht''' (born [[August 1]], [[1950]]) is a radio, television and movie personality. Tracht is best known for his morning show on [[WWDC-FM]] in [[Washington, D.C.]] during the 1980s where he took over the morning drive time slot from [[Howard Stern]] and his controversial comments made on that show.
'''Doug "The Greaseman" Tracht''' (born [[August 1]], [[1950]]) whose death was announced by a DJ named Roche on the radio station for which he worked on September 23, 2008, as reported by http://dcrtv.com/ was a radio, television and movie personality. Tracht was best known for his morning show on [[WWDC-FM]] in [[Washington, D.C.]] during the 1980s where he took over the morning drive time slot from [[Howard Stern]] and his controversial comments made on that show.





Revision as of 05:22, 24 September 2008

The Greaseman
File:GreaseWiki1.jpg
Born
Douglas Tracht
Career
StationWWDC
Time slotSaturdays, 8-noon
Showweb based
Stationgetalife.tv
Websitegreasyradio.com

Doug "The Greaseman" Tracht (born August 1, 1950) whose death was announced by a DJ named Roche on the radio station for which he worked on September 23, 2008, as reported by http://dcrtv.com/ was a radio, television and movie personality. Tracht was best known for his morning show on WWDC-FM in Washington, D.C. during the 1980s where he took over the morning drive time slot from Howard Stern and his controversial comments made on that show.


Career

During his time at WXRK, he was syndicated to several other Infinity Broadcasting (now CBS Radio) stations (such as WYSP 94.1 in Philadelphia). In fall 1996, his show returned via syndication to Jacksonville over WTLK "Real Radio" 106.5, where it lasted until January 1998, when the station changed owners and formats. During this Jacksonville run, Greaseman's show changed origination from a California studio, to WARW in Washington, DC. With this change, he again incorporated music into his program.

In 1985, while with WWDC in Washington, Tracht created an uproar by making an on-air crack about the Rev. Martin Luther King holiday, saying, "Why don't we plug four more and get the whole week off?" followed by, "Come on, now, you know I don't mean nothing!"

The Greaseman with Sean McPhillips, author of "The Modern Paradigm of Liberty: An Uncommon Sense Viewpoint on Contemporary American Issues" (ISBN: 1-414-02689-7)

In February 1999, while at WARW (now WTGB), Tracht made a comment about James Byrd, who was murdered in 1998 by being dragged behind a pickup truck by two white supremacists. The Greaseman had been playing a song by Lauryn Hill. Tracht then stated, as a reference to the quality of her music, "and they wonder why we drag them behind trucks." He immediately stated after the comment he "didn't mean nothing." This incident proved catastrophic to his radio career, igniting a firestorm of protest from listeners of all races, including Donnie Simpson, who savaged Tracht on his morning show on sister station WPGC-FM. Not only was Tracht quickly fired from WARW, he lost his position as a volunteer deputy sheriff in Falls Church, Virginia.

Starting in 2002, he returned to the air from his home studio, broadcasting on WDMV AM 700 (previously WGOP) near Frederick, Maryland, and was soon afterwards syndicated to numerous other stations in the region. He then held the morning show slot on WMET-AM 1160 in Gaithersburg, Maryland, until November 2, 2007. Selected Greaseman bits are heard during late PM drive on WGRX-FM 104.5 in the Fredericksburg, Virginia area. On March 31, 2008, WWDC announced the Greaseman show would be returning on Saturday mornings beginning April 5, 2008.[2]

Tracht also appeared in two television movies produced by close friend and associate Brian Dennehy [1] -- Jack Reed: A Search For Justice (1994) and Jack Reed: Death And Vengeance (1996). He made a film, inspired by Pulp Fiction, called The Last Mango.

Additionally, Tracht has authored a book under the pseudonym that is his radio character, Nino "The Greaseman" Mannelli. The book is titled "And They Ask Me Why I Drink" (ISBN 0-671-55160-4).

References

  1. ^ "Greeseman Bio". WWDC. Retrieved 2008-05-03. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  2. ^ Boyle, Mike. "'Greaseman' Returning To DC101". Radio and Records. Retrieved 2008-04-03. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)