I used to have this AM headphone radio that I’d listen to from Oregon. Late at night these remote California stations would start to come in and I’d pick up things that my coastal small town living did not imagine existed. Like the good Doctor.
Well that and listening to my brother’s Firesign Theater albums.
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Ah. Archer twin speaker AM radio headphones. Impulse buy off eBay just now.
Lived a few of my growing up years on the Oregon Coast (Coos Bay) in the 70s. It felt like it was was so remote after living in other parts of the country - like we were on the outer edge of everything (which of course, we were). Radio and books helped me feel connected. Not that it was bad, that was the most beautiful place I've ever lived.
> Dr. Demento debuted in October 1970 on KPPC Pasadena, California
I was thirteen years old then and living in Pasadena. I remember hearing the regular rock music shows he deejayed on KPPC, and I must have started listening to the Dr. Demento shows from the very beginning. A song he played called “Shaving Cream” [1] was a big hit among the kids at Woodrow Wilson Junior High School.
When I was a kid my parents divorced (as did many). I moved away and lived with my mother. Every two weeks I'd stay with my dad, and he'd give me cassette tapes of Dr. Demento that he'd record because where my mom lived, we couldn't get the show on the radio. My dad has since passed, and just thinking about those tapes right now almost makes me cry.
Dr Demento was a huge part of my childhood in a way I'm sure he never intended. I really can't express how great his show was for a sad kid grappling with the world growing up.
I'm extremely thankful for all the laughs and joy he brought me.
A childhood favorite and warm, nostalgic memory as an adult. A good friend of mine and I taped a spoof of Copacabana by Barry Manilow and got a really lovely letter back from the good doctor saying he'd done his best but couldn't play our tape. My friend had gotten a tape splicing kit from Radio Shack and insisted we cut the tape down to just our demo. Somehow we botched it and sent Dr. Demento a blank tape. He said he repaired our splice job and even tried flipping the tape in case we'd done the same by accident. Which was a really kind and probably time consuming gesture for a random tape sent in by two fifth graders. The man is a gem.
The only lyrics I remember from our spoof are how it starts: Her name was Lola, she was a show bot, but that was many years ago, when her neon used to glow. Oh well. Time to download an MP3 or two and subject my wife to Fish heads and I'm looking over my dead dog Rover.
It always makes me happy to see that people have been following the same passion for literal decades. Though it’s a bit sad I always find out only when they stop.
I can only hope that I find something I can be so enthusiastic about.
I still have the Dr. Demento t-shirt that I received for having my request played on the air. I got the shirt but missed that show so I never heard it broadcast. I actually had people congratulating me at school the next day. Ah, fame!
35 years later with the assistance of someone in his organization we were able to pin down the show and I now have it as an MP3.
Dr. D's show was played by a local rock station at 10pm. That was past our bedtime when I was 10, so we'd tape it. I still remember hitting the monitor button and pressing record/play before bed. Next day we'd listen to the whole show. I think we witnessed the first playing of Weird Al 'Another One Rides the Bus' and were introduced of course to the great Tom Lehrer and so many more. What a great career this man had, bringing joy to so many.
There was something special about hearing music this weird over the air. Pretty sure I heard the Goofy Gold record by K-Tel before Dr. Demento, but once I did I stayed up and taped it religiously. Still somewhat amazed I heard Camper Van Beethoven ("Take the Skinheads Bowling") first on his show and not on MTV. When I moved to L.A. in the '90s one of the first things I did was pull out my Thomas Guide to figure out what the deal was with the intersection of Pico and Sepulveda.
Dr. Demento introduced me to artists, that my kids listen to now. The Residents and Negativland top a list. Son #3 is inexplicably on a Rutles binge this month.
I love the track on Escape From Noise that uses the gun control analogy to point out the inevitable housing crisis we now find ourselves in. When no more can be sold, you can see that the majority of adults will be virtually prohibited from ever owning one (a home): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4vPCIWbCOyY
christianity is stupid ... but in other news, always going forward, cause we can't find reverse.
I was blessed enough to see negativland live at a couple of subgenius devivals, and think about star trekking on a fairly regular basis due to being such a Star Trek geek, and I thank dr demento for so much.
I'm sorry you're offended by a song title by the band that we were discussing that is directly related to the article, but this is a direct response to what dr Demento was playing, not a religious or political response.
>I'm sorry you're offended by a song title by the band that we were discussing
You presented the title of the song as if it's a statement you're making, not as if it's the title of a song you want to discuss. It's to be expected that this would cause confusion.
>perhaps you'd also be interested in the _other_ reference
I think I'm missing something here. I don't see where your previous comment makes a reference to the EP U2 by Negativland.
oh. neat! thanks for the link! happily bopping my head to negativland now, will investigate tomorrow - I love it when HN devolves into fun new discoveries, a perfect use for these discussions.
If it has to be one of those two I would want Fish Heads.
If I could select a different song I would choose Poisoning Pigeons in the Park or I'm Looking Over My Dead Dog Rover. They're such happy, catchy tunes.
I used to record his show from the radio when I lived on Okinawa, it was my soundtrack for the week! Dr. Demento's show definitely shaped my humor and personality, he is a true gem.
Late 1970's for me. I set a timer on Sunday nights to record it and would listen to it after school on Mondays.
It's where I first heard gems like the Star Trek spoof by Bobby Pickett. "Plot complication showing up on ship's sensors now, Captain. Switching to visual."
A core memory of mine was listening to the Doc. The show was on late Sunday night so I rarely got to hear the Five Five. One week, it was the Memorial Day weekend. My two closest friends and I were all able to hear the whole show. We met the next day to ride the bus downtown to the big mall. We talked and laughed all day about the songs we heard. Good times :D
It's crazy how treasurable & enjoyable a good program is.
Little Stevie's Underground Garage comes to mind. I miss the heck out of Chromewaves radio & dozens of others on shoutcast. Spektremodule being gone has obstructed some of the most wild human energies from finding their sink.
Was at an event he was at CSUN ~1978. We were in the parking lot coming in and he was just coming out. He stopped and talked to us for a while. Super nice guy. My impression is he is exactly the same as he is on the air all the time.
Well that and listening to my brother’s Firesign Theater albums.
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Ah. Archer twin speaker AM radio headphones. Impulse buy off eBay just now.