The Michael Hagerty Collection


Michael Hagerty, age 8
Michael Hagerty, Age 8

KIBS Van
KIBS (Bishop, CA.) shared a van with sister combo KMYC/KRFD in Marysville/Yuba City (hundreds of miles north of Bishop)

KSLY, 1974
The KSLY, San Luis Obispo studio building in 1974, originally the main house of a 20-acre ranch just south of downtown. Texan Homer Odom owned the station, and kept the tack room and horses. Jocks could saddle up for a ride in the foothills after their shifts.

Michael Hagerty and Jerry Lewis
Michael and Jerry Lewis doing a taping for Hagerty's first TV gig - Reno cut-ins for the MDA telethon.

Ronald, Michael and George
President Ronald Reagan and VP George Bush shown with a full-size cardboard cut-out of Michael Hagerty (1988 Convention)

Michael and Bobby
Michael Hagerty and Bobby Ocean after lunch in San Rafael, November 1998

Michael Hagerty, 2002
Michael Hagerty, 2002

Michael Hagerty, 2008
Michael Hagerty, TireKicker! 2008

Michael Hagerty, 2009
Michael Hagerty, 2009

Michael Hagerty, 2014
Michael Hagerty, 2014

Michael Hagerty, 2017
Michael Hagerty, 2017

Michael Hagerty is a first-year contributor to the Repository. His Collection debuted on June 2, 1996.

-  I was born in Los Angeles, a city with only one radio station. At least, as far as my parents were concerned. In the house, in the car, it was always KMPC. I liked the Angel baseball games and I idolized Captain Max Schumacher, their number one helicopter traffic guy. All that took a backseat one day in 1964 when I tuned in on my $2.99 transistor radio, found the Angel game was rained out, and heard Gary Owens, who'd recently replaced Johnny Grant in afternoons. At age 8, I wanted to be that funny guy with the deep voice on the radio.

When my dad died a year later, we moved 270 miles north to Bishop, California, a town with only one radio station. KIBS wasn't KMPC. Country music in the morning, a women's show called "Coffee With Virginia" for an hour at 9, Radio Bingo for an hour at 10, MOR the rest of the day and Top 40 at night. Signoff was at 10PM.

Soon I discovered that, in the wintertime, half an hour before sunset (and the pattern change), I could pick up Gary Owens on KMPC. I started dialing around... between dusk and dawn, there were all these amazing radio stations that my little "pocket radio" could pull in... I could hear Lohman and Barkley on KFI before school part of the year... and KFRC, San Francisco; KHJKRLA and KDAY, Los Angeles; KCBQ, San Diego... and at night... when I was supposed to be asleep... the transistor tucked inside the pillowcase, directly under my ear... I "mainlined" the corrupting influence of Wolfman Jack on XERB.

Still later, I found that if you put a radio really close to the cable for the TV, you could hear L.A. FM stations (though the closest to Top 40 on that band in those days was "HitParade '69" on KHJ-FM).

Small wonder that when a substitute teacher (Virginia of "Coffee With Virginia") asked me if I'd like a job at the radio station in 1971, I jumped at the chance. I was 15. My mom had to drive me to L.A. to take the FCC license exam. I rode my bike to work after school. Mom drove me home at 10pm... the bike in the trunk of her car.

During the next ten years I branched out to programming at KIBS and KSLY, San Luis Obispo (where I was music director) and, exposed to the example of Bobby Rich's KFMB-AM, San Diego, brought Top 40 pacing and production values to Adult Contemporary stations (KIOQ, Bishop; KUKI, Ukiah; KOLO, Reno).

I made the move to television news in 1981, just as A/C was devolving into "Continuous Soft Hits". But even a wonderful career in TV in Reno, Las Vegas and Phoenix couldn't lure me completely away from radio. The bug bit again in 1993, when I filled in for 10 weeks of Pat Powers' maternity leave on Sunny 97 and was teamed with Danny Davis (KIMN, Denver, KRIZ, Phoenix, KISN, Portland).

In '97, Sunny 97 had become Eagle 96.9 and Charlie Van Dyke asked me to be his partner for a new full-service morning show. Two months after we started, the station sold. And in '98, the local "Jammin' Oldies" station invited me to do one evening as part of a promotion featuring local TV news folks.

After all that, is it any wonder I found my way behind a microphone again? This time, at a truly great radio station, NewsRadio 620 KTAR, Phoenix, where I did weekend afternoons and fill-ins from 2000-2004.

In 2002, I was involved in the launch of a new independent television station in Phoenix as the producer and host of a weekly half-hour program about my second love — cars.

In October, 2003, they made me Director of Programming and Promotion. After two years of seven-day weeks and new responsibilities added to that, something had to give — namely, a regular radio show.

In August, 2008, I left and launched my own online venture about cars: TireKicker.blogspot.com. And from January, 2009 until May, 2011 I was the morning traffic anchor and reporter for ABC15 in Phoenix — taking me full circle. Remember, my first radio idol was KMPC's Captain Max Schumacher.

In 2012, I returned to radio, doing traffic reports for Total Traffic Network in Phoenix, Tucson, Las Vegas, Albuquerque, El Paso and Salt Lake City. In 2013, I transferred to TTN's 24/7 News service as a writer on the National Desk, and two weeks later was promoted to news anchor for 24 markets (including New York, Chicago, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C.) on Clear Channel's iHeartRadio app. All three of those jobs (traffic, National Desk and iHeartRadio) were in the same big newsroom at Clear Channel's Phoenix hub.

In November of 2013, I returned home to California, 36 years to the day I left — continuing to anchor for iHeartRadio in the same markets and adding overnight weekend newscasts for KOMO, Seattle from the studios of KFBK, Sacramento.

In February of 2014, I was asked to make another move (in the same building) and become Editor of The KFBK Morning News. A few months later, I became Assistant News Director, and then Managing Editor.

In October of 2016, I received the biggest honor of a 45-year-and-counting career---I joined The Afternoon News with Kitty O'Neill as co-anchor and was promoted to News Director of KFBK.

KFBK is a heritage radio station with a monster 50,000 watt signal at 1530 AM pumped through the only true Franklin antenna system in the United States — giving us the highest field strength of any U.S. station, and a groundwave that makes us resistant to skywave fade (I used to listen on the drive home from Clear Channel Phoenix on fall and winter nights — a distance of more than 700 miles). It has been serving Northern California (and most of Western America) since 1922. We're also on FM at 93.1, and on the iHeartRadio app for long-distance listening.

I am just as proud of my association with REELRADIO, and I tell anyone who'll listen just what Uncle Ricky and dozens of Reelpals have built---the finest museum of 20th century pop music radio imaginable. -

… . . . If you’re really sufferin’, I don’t think you need Anacin, Bayer or Bufferin . . . …

Not many people know that when Bill Lee left KFRC in 1983, his next stop was Fargo, North Dakota. He wasn’t there long, WLOL in Minneapolis grabbed him within months. This aircheck is actually a night that Bill did for fun and for free on a visit back to Fargo from Minneapolis. He brought along his new sidekick and future bride, Beth Bacall.

 

… . . . Happy Cinco de Mayo! . . . …

It’s a Fractious Friday fun fiesta as The Real Don Steele and KRTH-FM celebrate Cinco de Mayo and The Real Don Steele Star on The Hollywood Walk of Fame. Killer Charlie Van Dyke ID’s and promos.

 

… . . . the Thursday Thrust! . . . …

Great fidelity for broadband users! Stereo Slim – exceptional CHR in L.A., circa 1985, unscoped. Part Two is here.

… Okay, you got a cymbal for Christmas, now what? …

Tight, clean, fast and funny, Steve Goddard (here, celebrating “ten big ones in the biz”) made every show a blueprint for aspiring PM drive jocks. Even in the waning days of AM Top 40 in San Diego, Steve’s talent and PD Joel Denver’s programming (check the Beach Boy/Wolfman Jack soundalike promos) made KCBQ shine. Legendary KHJ newsman J. Paul Huddleston was at the Q at the time – he’s near the end of the aircheck.

Goddard is currently afternoon drive at country KNIX, Phoenix (following tours at CHR’s KZZP, Y95, Power 92 and Oldies Sunny 97).

… that’s a ‘nana shirt …
To me – this is the epitome of what a DJ is supposed to be! Listen to Jackson Armstrong talk up the entire intro of Papa Was a Rolling Stone! I used this aircheck to learn how to be a DJ. Jackson Armstrong is my favorite DJ of all time — and this is the only aircheck I ever had of him! Jack Armstrong passed away March 22, 2008 at his home in North Carolina.
… … Up a Lazy River in the key of ‘R’ … …
The Great Northeast Power Blackout of 1965 started as a brownout, as Dan Ingram demonstrates in this brief sample of WABC before the plug was pulled. Listen as America’s most powerful Top 40 station loses power, and Ingram – true to form – has fun with it.

… … they should have cut ‘Jingle Bells’ … …
Proof that there was definitely more than one school of Top 40 radio in the early ’70’s. Call it “East Coast and West Coast” or “Yin and Yang” – this aircheck would probably give Bill Drake hives. That doesn’t make WABC any less of an enduring legend, or PM driver Dan Ingram anything less than brilliant.

… . . . the only radio station in the world that is moving while you’re listening . . . …

KFRC, like many stations in the early ’80’s, bought one of those big GM motorhomes (dual rear wheels … big windows on the side) to use as a mobile studio. KFRC nicknamed theirs The Sturgeon.

PD Gerry Cagle decided to take “The Sturgeon”, equipped with a 14-channel Pacific Recorders console and nine cart machines – put the entire air staff (except Dr. Don Rose) in it, and drive it from KFRC’s downtown San Francisco studios to Sausalito, and back – bouncing the signal off a small plane circling over the motorhome during the two-hour round trip.

Jack Armstrong anchors the proceedings; it was his shift. He is joined by Bill Lee, Sandy Louie, Mark McKay, Sue Hall, Dave Sholin and Thom O’Hair.

Jack Armstrong passed away March 22, 2008 at his home in North Carolina. Thanks to The Slim One for providing a longer version of this exhibit.

… . . . do I get to play the bagpipes now? . . . …

The granddaddy of high energy Top 40 jocks (at it since 1960 on killer stations like WKBW, KFI and KFRC) in his last (so far) major market gig.

This is actually two airchecks: The first half is from March 1985, the second from October of the same year. PD Ed Scarborough, trying to make the station fly on a budget which is a fraction of rival KIIS-FM, is making changes. Midday jock Christopher Lance, there in March, is gone, and replaced by The Slim One (WLS, KFRC), and Armstrong’s been told to dump The Gorilla (his famous alter-ego). It ended up not mattering — KKHR was history within a year of this aircheck.

Jack Armstrong passed away March 22, 2008 at his home in North Carolina.

The studio hotline conks out — it takes a week to fix it, and when they fix it, it rings — out loud, on the air! Keep in mind that RKO General was owned by General Tire when you listen to Robert W. Morgan do the live spot for the tiremaker.

Welcome to the new ReelRadio!

This site is now operated by the North Carolina Broadcast History Museum. 

We want to thank the board of ReelRadio, Inc. for their stewardship since the passing of the founder Richard Irwin in 2018.  It has not been easy and they have maintained the exhibits for future generations to enjoy.

I met Richard Irwin, aka Uncle Ricky, when we were freshmen at East Carolina University.  We both had worked at local stations in our hometowns.  No one was more passionate about radio, especially Top 40 radio, than my friend Richard. 

Our goals with this site are to preserve the exhibits and make them available free of charge for people to enjoy.  Over time, we hope to add some airchecks to the site.  This will not happen immediately.  Time and resources will determine the future of new exhibits. 

Many thanks to the web folks at the Beasley Media Group for countless hours of work.  Again thanks to the board members of ReelRadio, Inc. for their faith in us. 

Richard Irwin’s hope was that his site would live on long after his passing. He said, “I hope REELRADIO will survive as my contribution to the ‘radio business’. The business is allowed to forget me, but the business should never forget the great era of radio that we celebrate here”.

We remember Richard and we thank him. If you enjoy this new site, we would appreciate a contribution. We hope you enjoy the new ReelRadio!

Carl Davis
Trustee
North Carolina Broadcast History Museum