Eckhartz Press co-publisher Rick Kaempfer is a former radio producer and host and still writes about the media regularly as the media columnist for Illinois Entertainer. This is his 30th year as a media writer, so we are featuring excerpts from the more than 200 current and former Chicago radio and television stars he has interviewed, including the following people who are celebrating birthdays this week...
Josh Liss celebrated a birthday on January 31. He is the morning sports anchor at NewsRadio WBBM (780 AM). Rick interviewed him for Illinois Entertainer in 2016, just after the Cubs won the World Series. Liss was in Cleveland to report on Games 6 & 7 of the World Series.
“I still have not come down from that high,” he admits, “and I hope I don’t. It was tough riding the fine line between supporting and reporting, being objective and all, but I think I did a good job. After going through that – the whole month of playoffs, going to Cleveland for Games 6 & 7, and the parade coverage, that buzz is still there – and I hope it lasts until spring training because it makes the rest of the Chicago sports scene more palatable.”
Though the Bears may be sliding toward mediocrity, and the Bulls may have a difficult time reclaiming their former glory, they can never take away this once in a lifetime experience from him. “That World Series is without question the greatest sports story I’ve ever covered and I don’t even sense one on the radar that can possibly top it. The generations of fans that stuck with this team—and some of them who didn’t make it to see the championship. To pop that cork with so many people hanging on it for so many years and carrying the emotional investment – to see it pay off. I don’t think it will ever be topped in my career.”
Click here to read the entire Josh Liss interview.
Lisa Greene’s birthday is February 3rd. She lives in Los Angeles now, but when Rick interviewed her in 2008 she was a radio veteran in Chicago (WJMK, Love-FM, Shadow Traffic, etc.) and had just been named the midday disc jockey on WCFS (105.9FM) in Chicago. Rick asked about her favorite moment on the air…
I was doing WGN traffic on a Saturday morning with the big-voiced Lyle Dean on news. I called him ahead of time to alert him of a scanner report of a naked guy running in an intersection in Palatine, but couldn’t confirm it yet. He said to run with the item and follow his lead. When I generically reported “police activity” in Palatine, he matter-of-factly asked, “and, *what* is the activity?” I replied, dryly with a smile, “that would be…a…naked guy running in the street. Details as they become available.” He called me off-air and said, “that was SO good!” Maybe you had to hear it, but it was hilarious.
Click here to read the entire Lisa Greene interview.
Steve Bertrand’s birthday is February 3rd. He is currently anchoring the afternoon drive slot at WGN Radio, a news magazine show. Steve has been with WGN for 35 years and has seen it all. When Rick interviewed him for Chicago Radio Spotlight in 2012, Steve admitted there were a few bumpy eras during his long run.
I’m not going to insult you or your readers by pretending there weren’t a couple hellish years. I think everyone who worked at the station knew we needed to shake things up but the atmosphere became almost oppressive. I’ve come to hate the phrase “change is good.” Change for the better is great but change just for change sake, without forward direction, is demoralizing. At one point I was told to stop pronouncing the “t” in President Obama. It sounded too newsy. So for more than a year I referred to the President of the United States as “Presdeh-Obama.” I’ve pretty much kept my feelings to myself until now but am comfortable saying this knowing we are headed toward brighter days.
Read the entire Steve Bertrand interview here.
Mitch Rosen’s birthday is February 5th. He is currently the program director at the Score, WSCR AM 670, the flagship station for the Chicago Cubs. Rick interviewed Mitch ten years ago (2011) shortly after he started in that position. Rick asked Mitch about his early days, producing for the legendary Chicago Ed Schwartz.
Eddie was flat out the best teacher I ever had in radio. He taught me how to chase a story, to be on top of the news of the day, how to track down guests, and the urgency radio is. No doubt he had his quirkiness, but he taught me radio in Chicago. He was an aggressive personality and at one time had a 20 share in overnight radio. I think the secret was that Eddie treated overnight like a prime time day part. I wrote him a note as a high school senior, then ended up interning at WGN, and then became a full-time producer. In a weird way, it was a radio dream come true.
Read the entire Mitch Rosen interview here.
Ed Tyll’s birthday is February 6th. He was part of the legendary AM Loop lineup in the early 90s. He hosted the late night slot. When Rick interviewed him in 2010, Ed was living in his native New York and working as a stand-up comic and a radio talk show host. He had great memories about working in Chicago at the Loop.
Working at the Loop was like working on radio’s Mt. Rushmore. I even got to interact with Johnny B, because I stayed late after my show working on stuff, and so I was still there when the caravan would arrive. Johnny B introduced me to Gary Busey once. After my first show on the air at the Loop, Steve and Garry crank-called me out of bed the following morning—they got a big kick out of that. I was in the station during the day for meetings and what have you, and would run into Kevin Matthews. He and Shemp and Jim Shorts, that show was just magical. These are the flashbacks, and positive ones too. What about Chet Coppock! Chet’s intro to my show used to be three minutes long. It was a riot. He would wind up this huge buildup by calling me BIG ED TYLL, and in would walk in this 5’6, 115 pound guy. Working on the Loop was like being on tour with all famous guys, all the time. I do remember one night when all of us got together for an event on the same night, and it was awesome. They did a poster for Budweiser with all of us, and we came out on stage at the same time. That was something.
Leave a Comment