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Roy D. Mercer was a fictional character created by American disc jockeys Brent Douglas and Phil Stone on radio station KMOD-FM in Tulsa, Oklahoma.Douglas, who performed Mercer's voice, used the character as a vehicle for comedy sketches in which he performed prank calls.
KMOD is known as the nearly 30-year home of disc jockeys Brent Douglas and Phil Stone, who hosted morning drive time. The pair originated the character Roy D. Mercer, the notorious and popular prank caller who regularly threatened to "open a can of whup-ass" on the person he called for some fabricated wrong the person supposedly had done ...
It would be nice to find a way to mention him, perhaps back in the main Tulsa article under Tulsa in Entertainment. Of course, adding another bullet item would go against the objective of getting Tulsa's article to feature status. --N35w101 03:04, 9 July 2006 (UTC) I've added him to the Category:Fictional people from Oklahoma.
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I was around when Roy D. Mercer first started, and I know for a fact that Phil Stone and Brent Douglas created Roy and his family out of their common experiences with their families and friends in Oklahoma. Kooth 17:45, 27 April 2011 (UTC) You know you're a moron right?
The vaulted lobby ceiling is composed of large carved stone rosettes that were created in Italy and reassembled in the building by the same craftsmen that made them. [6] Originally built as a high-rise office building, floors 12–20 were converted to loft apartments in 2004, making the Philtower Tulsa's first mixed use high-rise. The building ...
In a photo provided by the city of Tulsa, a monument to honor people found or exhumed during a probe into the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre stands in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on Tuesday, November 12. (City of ...
Jerry Johnston (born 1959), Southern Baptist clergyman and university administrator, born in Oklahoma City; Charles William Kerr (1875–1951), first permanent Protestant minister in Tulsa, Oklahoma; Robert McGill Loughridge (1809–1900), Presbyterian missionary; Quanah Parker (Comanche, 1852–1911), Native American Church leader and advocate