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  2. Off the Hook (radio program) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Off_the_Hook_(radio_program)

    [4] As an April Fool's Day prank in 2009, the show staged a mock shutdown and takeover of WBAI by a new country station. Rather than the show's intro, the hour opened with an apparent station sign-off followed by the introduction of "New York's New Radio Station," playing a "10,000 song marathon" to celebrate the birth of "Country 99.5".

  3. Bob Fass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_Fass

    Fass continued to do his show as New York City and WBAI went through radical changes. In the 1970s, the Movement split into factions and new program directors and station managers began to alter the thrust of the programming, apportioning blocks of airtime to feminists, gay rights activists, African-Americans, Hispanic-Americans, Native ...

  4. Bill Weinberg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Weinberg

    For twenty years he was the primary producer of a weekly late-night radio show on WBAI in New York, called The Moorish Orthodox Radio Crusade [3] [4] (founded in 1988 by Peter Lamborn Wilson, who is also known as Hakim Bey). [5] He has won three awards from the Native American Journalists Association. [6] His basic political orientation is left ...

  5. WBAI - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WBAI

    WBAI's broadcast of Seven Words became a landmark moment in the history of free speech. In a 1978 milestone in the station's contentious and unruly history, WBAI lost a 5-to-4 U.S. Supreme Court decision (FCC v. Pacifica Foundation) that to this day has defined the power of the government over broadcast material it calls indecent. [10]

  6. Talk:WBAI - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:WBAI

    Also included are a regular science fiction program: Hour of the Wolf presented by Jim Freund, Off the Hook, a program presented by the 2600 hacker group, The Personal Computer Show with Joe King and Hank Kee, assisted by Mike, Stevie Debee, Dannyb, and a bunch of friends (which first aired August 6, 1984), and the economics journalism of Doug ...

  7. Lynn Samuels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lynn_Samuels

    Walter Sabo, in a tribute on the Alex Bennett program (hosted by Richard Bey) on December 27, 2011, stated that Lynn first worked for WOR on Saturdays from 4–6 p.m. "for quite some time". Samuels was heard on WABC from 1987 until 1992, 1993 until 1997, [ 3 ] and 1997 [ 4 ] until 2002, [ 5 ] including two breaks in which she was fired and then ...

  8. Steve Post - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Post

    Post was a pioneer and a trailblazer in freeform radio at WBAI-FM in New York in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Bob Fass, drawing his inspiration from Jean Shepherd, initially transformed and redefined the form and its possibilities, and Fass, Post, and Larry Josephson, a sort of informal, free-floating, quasi-magical creative triumvirate, then pushed the possibilities significantly further ...

  9. Computer Chronicles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_Chronicles

    Logo as The Computer Chronicles from 1983 to 1989. The series was created [4] by Stewart Cheifet (later the show's co-host), who was then the station manager of the College of San Mateo's KCSM-TV (now independent non-commercial KPJK). The show was initially broadcast as a local weekly series beginning in 1981.