Don and Mike Show
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Genre | Talk |
---|---|
Running time | 4 hours |
Country of origin | United States |
Language(s) | English |
Home station | WJFK-FM |
Syndicates | 26 affiliates |
Starring | Don Geronimo and Mike O'Meara |
Announcer | Buzz Burbank |
Produced by | John Nolan, Frank Murphy, Diana Silman, Charles Broyhill, Lisa Herndon, John Normand, BethAnn McBride, Robb Spewak |
Original release | 12-11-1985 – 4-11-2008 |
Website | www.mikeomearashow.com |
The Don and Mike Show was an American nationally syndicated radio talk show hosted by the shock jocks Don Geronimo and Mike O'Meara, which aired from December 1985 through April 11, 2008. The show debuted on WAVA-FM in 1985 as The Morning Zoo with Don and Mike. The official name of the show became The Don and Mike Show when the duo moved to WJFK-FM in 1991. In the later years, the show was carried on 20-30 stations across the United States by the CBS-owned Westwood One Radio Network. The show's flagship station was 106.7 WJFK in Washington DC. In 2007 the show ranked #66 in the Talkers Magazine Heavy 100.[1] Geronimo retired in 2008.[2] The show's last live regular episode with Geronimo was broadcast March 13, 2008 and Geronimo hosted a farewell show April 11, 2008.[3] After Geronimo's retirement, the remaining cast members formed The Mike O'Meara Show.
Personalities
The show was co-hosted by Don Geronimo (real name: Mike Sorce) and Mike O'Meara. News briefs and occasional commentary were provided by Buzz Burbank. The show was most recently produced by former show intern Robb Spewak. Phone calls were screened by Joe Ardinger (sometimes referred to as the "World's Oldest Phone Screener"), who also contributed to the show and broadcasts his own show on Saturday nights on WJFK-FM.
The show included four news reporters over the course of its run. David Haines (1985–1989), the program's original newsman, died on July 10, 2005 (the same day that Don's wife Freda was killed in an auto accident.)[4] Laurie Neff, the second newsperson, is known for getting into a traffic accident with Washington DC mayor Marion Barry.[5] Dave Schreiber served as the show's third newsman until 1991 when Buzz Burbank (real name: Michael Elston) arrived and continued in the position through the end of the Don and Mike show and on to the successor show hosted by O'Meara.
WAVA and WJFK-FM subscribe to the traffic services of fellow CBS Radio subsidiary Metro Traffic. Former Washington traffic reporters include Kim "Boomer" Anderson, Rob Carpenter, Janet DeLaney, Kris Gamble, Stevie Bridgewater, and Shari Elliker (1992–1996) Elliker co-hosted the Broadminded radio program on XM Radio and currently hosts her own show on WBAL in Baltimore, Maryland. The show also took advantage of the service's offer to allow the show to provide pseudonyms for its traffic reporter. Over the years, "Michael Hunt", "Vera Bruptly", "Lane Closure", "Jason Feces", and "Michelle Hughes" (a take-off on "Michael Hughes", WJFK's general manager) were heard on the WJFK-FM feed of the show (not on affiliate feeds).
Others featured on the show
The show had a number of producers throughout its run. While at WAVA, John Nolan (1985–1986) was the first producer. Frank Murphy (1986–1991) opted to stay with WAVA when Don and Mike left the station for WJFK. Murphy has since moved to Los Angeles and worked at KROQ-FM and KLOS. Diana Silman (1991–1996) began the WJFK era for the show. She later left to become a program director on March 7, 1996. The current producer and a former show intern, Robb Spewak served as producer for a time after Silman and before Charlie Broyhill (1997–2001) arrived, followed by Lisa Herndon-Broyhill (2002–2004). Beth Ann McBride (2004–2005) left, citing the high cost of living in the Washington area, and to have her own show on WSJS in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. She has since left that job and returned to Washington to work on O'Meara's successor show. Robb Spewak picked up producing duties again until March 2007 and then again in October 2007 Robb Spewak took over the role of producer.
In keeping with the open environment on the show, phone screeners were sometimes featured on air. In addition to Joe Ardinger, Joe Rockhead, and Christine CK2 were featured. Engineers Darryl Nichols, Tony Diggs, and NRA member and gun enthusiast Wendell Hall received airtime as well.
Executives and managers at WJFK were also featured on the show. Former WJFK-FM production director, Chris Madzik, was featured frequently before he left in 1996 for Detroit. WAVA general managers Alan Goodman and Ken Stevens as well as WJFK-FM general managers Alan Leinwand and Michael Hughes were frequent targets for the show. Program directors Smoky Rivers, Jeremy Coleman, Cameron Gray, Greg Gillespie, Max Dugan, Matthew Verbin and Matt Farber received similar treatment.
Unlike other similar radio shows, the Don and Mike show did not always have an intern; those it did have, however, were often featured on the program. Producer Robb Spewak started as an intern on April 2, 1992. Other former interns included, The Menendez Brothers (Lowell Melser, Marc Ronick) Jimmy the Intern, "B.O. Bob" (Bob Cesca) (news intern reporting to Buzz Burbank) and, most recently, Matt the Intern (AKA Matt the Pole) who worked with the show from June–August 2007.
History
WAVA era
In 1985 Don Geronimo was doing afternoons on WAVA-FM. That year, the station asked him to move to mornings, and Geronimo, who had heard O'Meara entertaining station employees with impressions, asked whether O'Meara could serve as a co-host during his new time slot. The new program would replace the "Charlie and Harrigan Show".[6]
WAVA debuted "The New Morning zoo" on December 11, 1985, pairing up hosts Don Geronimo and Mike O'Meara. It also featured David Haines with news, Kim Anderson (nicknamed "Boomer" or Kim "Boom Boom" Anderson) on traffic reports, and was produced by John Nolan. Nolan was later replaced by producer Frank Murphy. Whenever anything went wrong with the show, Don or Mike would shout "Fraaaank". The original format interspersed talk and comedy bits with top-40 music.
For several weeks during the summer of 1987, Geronimo and O'Meara hosted their own Washington, DC-based television series, "The Prime Time Video Zoo", which was aired on the local CBS affiliate WUSA. Airing weekly at 8pm, the show was taped with a small studio audience and featured several bits from the radio program as well as O'Meara's impressions and D.C. area personalities, with segments of Top-40 music videos.
Haines was the first show "regular" to leave for a better offer elsewhere, departing for more money at WPLJ in New York City in 1989. Haines' replacement was Laurie Neff. Dave Schreiber succeeded Neff.[7]
Geronimo's wife was a DJ at the time of the debut of the show, using the radio name "Laura Petrie." Geronimo's young son Bart Sorce made appearances on the early stages of the show as "Bart the Weatherman."
In June 1991 WAVA was purchased by Salem Communications. At first, Salem was known primarily as a religious broadcaster. But it had a few secularly programmed stations, and indicated it might be interested in maintaining a contemporary music format on WAVA if Don & Mike would stay on as the morning show. When the duo accepted a better offer from crosstown WJFK, Salem later announced that it would be changing WAVA's format to Christian music & teaching.
WJFK era, and national syndication
The show debuted in the afternoons on WJFK on October 1, 1991. After a two-month hiatus, the show had changed time slots, stations and producers, with Diana Silman replacing Frank Murphy. Mike Elston, known on the show as Buzz Burbank, joined the show in December 1991. The program evolved after the move, adding Burbank and traffic reporter Shari Liquour (real name Shari Elliker) to the cast. Robb Spewak joined the show as an intern in 1992. He would perform various stunts.
The program was added to the lineup of WNEW in New York, and moved to mid-days in 2001. The move was billed as an opportunity to maximize the show's potential, and promote fellow Infinity Broadcasting network program Opie and Anthony. It didn't work. The program garnered low ratings in New York. The show was #1 in Washington, DC during its last ratings book for mid-days but was removed from the WNEW lineup.
The last day in mid-days was August 21, 2002. The program returned to afternoons on September 3, 2002, in most of the markets where it had been broadcast before the move. In late 2006, the show went on an extended hiatus without explanation.
When the show started broadcasting again live on January 2, 2007, it was revealed that Don had been angry since the death of Freda, and he felt that he had not had time to properly grieve. Don was also feeling guilty about feeling happy without Freda. For all intents and purposes Don and Mike thought that the show was done, but after a few weeks Don accepted his bosses' offer to take the rest of 2006 off, get his head together with the help of a counselor, and then return in 2007. [1]
Don's retirement
Don Geronimo announced on February 4, 2008, that he would leave the show on May 30. That date was moved up to April 11, 2008,[8] in a surprise announcement from the WJFK program director which also included the return of Beth Ann McBride as producer.[3] The show was then known as The Mike O'Meara Show. It continued along with a similar format, minus Don, up until July 2009 when the show was cancelled following the decision to turn WJFK into a sports talk station.[9][10][11] Westwood One also continued to syndicate the show in its new lineup up until its cancellation. The Mike O'Meara Show took a 5 month hiatus and returned as a daily podcast in December 2009. Don Geronimo broadcast out of Washington D.C. WJFK 106.7 The Fan from 7-11 PM EST until Oct 3rd 2013. In April 2014, Geronimo joined former D&M partner Buzz Burbank's RELM Network to host his own podcast, "The Don Geronimo Show", only to leave four months later, citing RELM did not pay him. Burbank denied the claim, saying Don "was paid every penny he was owed to that point”.[12]
Geronimo now hosts and owns his own show.
Controversies
This article's "criticism" or "controversy" section may compromise the article's neutrality. (March 2014) |
On August 17, 1999, the show called an El Cenizo, Tex. city councilwoman and lampooned the community's decision to conduct official business in Spanish. The FCC fined Infinity Broadcasting $4,000, the minimum amount, for "willful violation of Section 73.1206 of the Commission’s rules, the unauthorized broadcast of a telephone conversation."[13] TD&MS 8-17-1999
On February 3, 2004, a pair of expletives ("bullshit"--twice, and the word "masturbation"[14]) spoken by Geronimo were not censored by the usual delay, resulting in a shakeup of the show. The show was subsequently suspended for two weeks. When they returned on February 20, 2004, their first show included four consecutive hours of music.
The move toward reverb fluctuated throughout the life of the show. When Don became program director of WJFK-FM for a short time, he ordered reverb be added to the entire station, and years before that, when the duo first appeared on WJFK in October 1991 a caller asked, "Where's the reverb?" The show on WAVA-FM had used heavy reverb. [citation needed]
On December 16, 1994, the program broadcast live from the El Dorado Casino in Reno, Nev. In 1996 the show produced "Sex, Pies and Videotape", a video which featured Don and Mike taking a bus full of listeners to a local nudist colony for an Olympic style event, during which all of the contestants were nude.
In July 2003 the Don and Mike Show also collaborated with Brocket 99 radio station to promote the self-deprecating humour of Ernie Scar, a supposedly Native American aboriginal that stereotypes life on the local reserve nearby. A 2005 documentatory titled "Brocket 99 - Rockin' the Country", by Nilesh Patel illustrates this point by raising the issue in an effort to bridge the cultural divide. However, the segments featuring Brocket 99 on Don and Mikes' Radio show triggered no public outcry.
The show developed both good and bad relationships with several Hollywood celebrities over the years. Leah Remini was a great friend of the show. Don and Mike have visited with Leah in her home and appeared on the King of Queens. Leah's appearances were so frequent on the show that she had an ISDN line installed in her home; however, she was unable to contribute to the show at the same level for longer periods of time. Max Baer, Jr., star of The Beverly Hillbillies, feuded with Don and Mike after they made fun of his idea to open a Beverly Hillbillies casino in Reno, Nevada. He claimed on local radio he would "spend the rest of [his] life badmouthing Don and Mike."[15]
External links
- The Don & Mike Show Radio Archives A website with Podcasts of Old Don & Mike Shows
References
- ^ "2007 Heavy 100". Talkers Magazine. Retrieved 2007-08-04.
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(help) - ^ "Don Geronimo's Sayonara Song". WashingtonPost.com. 2008-02-23. Retrieved 2008-06-08.
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(help) - ^ a b Stern, Mike. "Geronimo Pulls The Rip Cord". Radio and Records. Retrieved 2008-04-03.
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(help) - ^ "Obituaries". Washington Post. 2005-07-13. pp. B05.
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(help) - ^ "Barry". Washington Post. 1988-06-22.
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(help) - ^ The Don and Mike Show, December 11, 1995
- ^ 12/11/95, ibid
- ^ "WJFK's Don Geronimo to Retire This Month". Express. Washington Post. Archived from the original on 2008-04-06. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
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(help) - ^ Rowland, Kara (2008-02-05). "Don Geronimo to leave talk-radio show". Washington Times. Retrieved 2008-02-05.
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(help) - ^ "Legendary Don Geronimo to Exit WJFK-FM on May 30". Radio Online. 2008-02-05. Archived from the original on 2008-05-04. Retrieved 2008-02-05.
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(help) - ^ "O'Meara out in WJFK format change". InsideNova.com. 2009-07-14. Retrieved 2009-07-16.
- ^ http://thedailyrecord.com/2014/08/15/radio-god-leaves-the-relm/
- ^ "NOTICE OF APPARENT LIABILITY FOR FORFEITURE". Orders of the Federal Communications Commission. FCC.
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(help) - ^ The Don & Mike Show Tues, Feb 3, 2004 (Via Paintyourbaldspot.com) At about 01hr 45m into the show Don rants about how they have a delay for the show and yet they won't let them say the word for "getting your jerk on"--masturbation--but yet all other euphemisms for that word are permitted. Don then begins to describe the hypocrisy that [[Don Imus]] and drop the BS-bomb ("bullshit") and nothing happens except a small apology from the station. Don proceeds to call this "bullshit": Don: "That's bullshit! That's bullshit! I'm gonna see if they're gonna hit the [delay] button when I say it." Buzz: "Repeating it won't help." [at 1hr 48 20sec]: Don: "They probably just hit it again because I just said 'masturbation'."
- ^ The Don and Mike Show: January 18. 2007