I Got Your らどうぞ Right Here – Dennis

So, a post I made several weeks ago has been the subject of dozens of comments, way more then usual for any conversations about KCCK.
All in Japanese.
All nonsense in both Japanese and English.
The original posting dealt with the installation of our new 106.9 translator, which improves our signal coverage in Iowa City, and also extends our new HD Radio service. So, imagine my surprise when I open my email a few days later and read… (Read the rest of this posting on Dennis’s Blog)

Jerry Lewis and Bill Bell – George

The annual Labor Day Jerry Lewis telethon reminded me of a story the late mega-KCCK personality Bill Bell told me. Before coming to Iowa, Bill had run a recording studio in Los Angeles and rubbed elbows with Hollywood stars.

He told a story of Jerry Lewis coming to his studio to record some public service announcements, I believe it was. It seems there was a bit of a personality clash. When Bill tried to get Jerry to re-read some of the copy, Jerry snapped, “I’ve never done more than two takes in my life.” Which led to this retort from Bill, “I know. I’ve seen your movies.”

My Brush With Hayden – Dennis

With Fry Fest coming up Labor Day Weekend, I’m remembering how I learned first-hand what a caring person the Coach is, in addition to being an outstanding leader.

It was 1980, Coach Fry’s second year as Iowa’s coach. These were the days before there was one Hawkeye radio network. Instead, there were several stations that originated the game and fed their own small network. WHO had Jim Zabel, WMT Ron Gonder and KXIC (AM 800 in Iowa City) had Gene Clausen.

I was a sophomore at Iowa, working my first radio job, a part-timer at KXIC. One of my jobs was to help with the football broadcasts. This entailed running the board back at the station during the game and also producing a weeknight call-in show that featured Coach Fry answering questions posed by Gene and the sports directors of the other stations in our network, mainly stations in Southeast Iowa towns like Burlington and Muscatine.

Gene and Hayden were in the conference room, wearing headphones so they could hear the questions posed by the other sports directors. Everyone was connected by an open network loop. They could hear each other as well.

We taped the call-in show on Tuesday nights, which was the hardest practice of the week, the last time the team went full speed before tapering into the game. So, Hayden was usually tired after a long day and his conversations with Gene after the show ended were pretty free-wheeling. Listening in from the production studio was, shall we say, educational. But, that’s another story.

One Tuesday, there was an equipment glitch in the conference room, none of the microphones worked. So Hayden and Gene had to come into the tiny production studio with me.

To fully understand the story, you need to know just a little about radio studios are designed (Radio folks: Please feel free to skip to the next paragraph). In a radio studio, speakers are always automatically muted when the microphone is turned on, to eliminate feedback. This is why you always see DJs wearing headphones when they’re talking.

So, here’s the scene. Hayden and Gene are squeezed into two chairs in front of the control board, sharing the studio’s only microphone. I was perched on the edge of the counter. There was only one headphone jack, so my job was to keep the mic off so Hayden could hear the question, then turn it on so he could answer. And, that was how it went for nearly the full hour of the show:

Mic off: Hayden listens.
Mic on: Hayden answers.
Mic off: Hayden listens.
Mic on: Hayden answers.
Mic off: Hayden listens.

Then for some reason, I lost the rhythm, and turned the mic ON while the away SD was speaking, and clicked it off just in time for the three of us to hear:

“..at do you think about that Hayden?”

Oh, crap. I have just screwed up Hayden’s call-in show. My career is over.

Hayden signaled for me to turn the mic back on, and said “Y’all mind repeating the question? I guess I wasn’t paying attention.”

The guy repeated his question, obviously a little annoyed, but we managed to survive the show. Neither Gene nor Hayden mentioned my gaffe, and I wasn’t even fired. It obviously never occured to Hayden to blame technical problems, or the idiot kid who didn’t know how to do his job. He took it on himself. It was a little thing, but it was taking care of the little things that made him a great coach and a good person.

Hayden Fry went on to take the Hawkeyes to three Rose Bowls, become the dean of Big 10 coaches and this weekend will be celebrated by the entire state of Iowa at a festival in his honor.

But I will always remember the coach who took the blame for an error made by a green producer whose name he didn’t even know.

New Sunday Night Lineup – Dennis

We’re excited to debut a new Sunday lineup on Sept. 6, that we think you’ll like. We’re expanding one show and bringing another back by popular request.

Our new Sunday night lineup begins with the smooth sound of Cafe Jazz at 6pm.

Then at 8, a show we have had dozens of requests to bring back: The Putamayo World Music Hour. This innovative show features pop music from all over the world.

If you’re an astute fan, you’ll know that up till now we have only been able to bring you a single hour of Echoes, which actually is two hours long. Well, now you’ll hear the full show. Hearts of Space remains in its 11pm spot.

We hope you’ll like this lineup. As always, we’re interested in what you think of KCCK’s programming. Contact us by email, studio@kcck.org or make a comment on this article.

Jazz Under the Stars Videos

Anne Kinney of Illusions Fine Portraiture has created some neat video montages from photos she took at KCCK’s Jazz Under the Stars concerts, including music from the groups she photographed. Click here to see the video or the Fred Woodard Trio.
Click here for the video of the Al Naylor Quartet.

KCCK.org All Clean! – Dennis

KCCK fans who use Firefox or Safari as their web browser have noticed something very disturbing over the last few days. Whenever they surfed to our site, they received a warning screen saying that Google had rated kcck.org as an attack site that would download malicious software to their computer.

Well, I’m happy to report everything is fine. Our site was hacked a couple of weeks ago. It appears the attack came through the software that publishes our Concert Calendar. To fix the problem, not only did we scrub the problematic pages, but actually moved all of kcck.org to a totally different server, with new access codes and everything.

Unfortunately, even after the site was fixed, the warning still displayed. We had to request a site re-evaluation from Google, which took several more days. Finally, as of Aug. 7, it appears the warning has been taken off.

So, you can surf Jazz 88.3 in safety and confidence. Thanks for your patience.

Thanks to our web host, Royce Bennett at ABC Solutions, and Webmaster John Shulz for their quick action in helping us resolve the issues.

The New 106.9 – Dennis

KCCK’s Johnson County booster at 106.9 is back on the air after moving to a new tower. For nearly two decades, the translator broadcast from a leased towe northest of Iowa City. Recently, we lost our lease, and in advertising parlance, ‘everything had to go.’

Our new home is atop the Kirkwood campus on Lower Muscatine in Iowa City. The good news is that this puts the low-wattage (just 100 watts) transmitter much closer to town. However, we’re also not nearly as high up, which might decrease signal range.
Coming soon: An upgrade to the translator itself, which will enable it to re-broadcast our HD signal as well as the analog one.
Please let us know if this change makes a difference in your reception of KCCK in Iowa City or Coralville, good or bad.

What Lawrence Block taught me – Dennis


I recently had the pleasure of interviewing writer Lawrence Block on the Culture Crawl, who was in Iowa for a reading for the Metro Library Network’s “Out Loud!” series.  Block is the legendary crime fiction writer, winner of many Shamus & Edgar Awards (the Oscars of crime fiction), creator of the Matthew Scudder, Chip Harrison and Keller novel series.  I’m a big fan.

(Pictured:  Out Loud! coordinator Rob Cline, Lawrence Block and me)

I told him in the interview that in the first five pages of his latest book “Step By Step,” a memoir that chronicles his life through the lens of his hobby, racewalking, that he did something no one has done for decades:  Taught me a grammar rule I’d never heard before.
I’ll quote from the book:
“My wife, Lynne, and I flew down to New Orleans on Friday.  (Note, if you will, the commas before and after her name.  The sentence would flow better without them, but they’re there for a reason.  They indicate that Lynne’s my only wife.  I referred earlier to my daughter Amy, and was able to do so without the bracketing commas, because she’s one of three daughters.  If I had only one daughter, I’d have to use the commas.  If I didn’t use them for Lynne, you’d have the right to accuse me of bigamy.  Now, this is one of those linguistic niceties like, say, the subjunctive, that seem designed chiefly to make people who are aware of it feel good about themselves…”
I’d never heard that before, and am glad to now number myself among those who can feel good about themselves in the knowing. 
And when I tell my wife, Debbie, about it; she will be, too.
Hear the full interview in the Podcasts area of kcck.org