Your Name: Courtney Subject: Old Bit Message: Hey Phil I don’t remember what year this was but it was early to middle years at KFI me and my mother listen to you do a bit about a black man who invented a machine to sound white so he can get reservations at fancy restaurants by squeezing his balls, I can’t remember but I think the machine was malfunction and hilarity ensued. I have been looking for it since I got my back stage pass a few years ago, but I can’t seem to find it. If you know the bit or the year and month played that would be great. Love you man keep up the good work.
Your Name: anthony Subject: weakest link Message: what was the name of the bit you did where you did all of your characters and they played the weakest link? I can’t find it on the site.
Please pardon the pathetic and repetive explanation of the show that we felt, back in 2003, was a really good idea since radio listeners then were as stupid as they are now. It didn’t help.
Jul 4 2003 Our best 100 calls of the year…not really 100 calls, more like 10 or 15 but a full three hour show of Phil reviewing the best calls of the preceeding 12 months, July 2002 to July 2003..The Best of The Best.
February 18 2005 Phil’s special guest is Don Parsley, an unemployed electrician, who claims he lost his son recently to an accidental shooting involving one of his son’s friends and a gun owned by Don that the boys were playing with. Then he changes his story to his son dying in an automobile accident.etc, etc, etc.
Plus our very first Classic Phil podcast is reprised…Plane Go Boom!
Dr. Ron Tarner of the Mountain Meadow Observatory in Colorado needs the publicity being one of the first in line at Best Buy after Thanksgiving will bring. Plus, he’s got a new black side by side to pick up because all they had was white. Wait til you hear who he has stand in line for him….while he delivers an important paper on a “vaccine that can blur the line between man and beast” at a professional conference in Boca Raton, Fla. Hoo boy. Later it’s David G. Hall telling Phil in his negotiations with KFI, a station with only three letters, he tried to get another letter for Phil to say. And Bud and Robert ask Phil if, in addition to studying psychopaths, the FBI has an “undead bureau.”
Phil is up on the video feed early tonight, 8:30pm. He’ll rip into the latest and newest syndication efforts in the world of radio (and that unfortunately includes people he knows) update you on the KFI videocast and deliver another “State Of The Business” address…Oh Jesus it’s gonna be bad…..
The syndicated genius of Phil Hendrie triumphantly returns to Clear Channel Talk monster KFI, Los Angeles, this time in handy weekend form. Hendrie will roll Saturday nights from 7-10pm. Elsewhere on the KFI weekend schedule, market vet Frosty Stillwell has been inked to do a solo shift on Sundays from 4-7pm. Stillwell is formerly one third of Frosty, Heidi and Frank last heard across the street on KABC
Hearing Voices? Yes, It’s Phil Hendrie, Saturdays on KFI
By GARY LYCAN
RADIO
THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER
If you hear strange voices when you tune in KFI/640 AM Saturday evenings, don’t touch that dial or pre-set. You have discovered Phil Hendrie and his new “live and local” show 7-10 p.m.
“Saturday night there are a lot of people driving around town. They’ll have some real radio to listen to. It’ll be local, live, funny and we’ll be mobile with our videocast of the show too,” e-mailed Hendrie.
Phil Hendrie, heard weeknights on KTLK/1150 AM, is also doing a “live and local” show 7-10 p.m. Saturdays on KFI/640 AM.
“It is an honor and a thrill to have Phil Hendrie back on KFI. Phil is a one of a kind talent and is a perfect addition to KFI’s more stimulating weekends,” e-mailed KFI program director Robin Bertolucci.
Now, don’t sweat it if you listen to Hendrie between 10 p.m. and 3 a.m. weeknights on KTLK/1150 AM. He’s still there. Both KFI and KTLK are Clear Channel stations programmed by Bertolucci. The difference is the weeknight show is aired on more than 100 stations across the U.S. The KFI show is local.
Hendrie was on KFI from 1996 to 2005. He has an incredible range of voices or “callers,” including “Bud Dickman,” “Craig Dooley,” “Father Dwayne Poppick,” “General Gayland Shaw,” and, well, the list goes on and on, but the fun is not knowing who will “call” in next.
Hendrie left radio briefly in 2006 to start an acting career. He also voiced characters on the animated shows “King of the Hill” and “Futurama.” He returned to national radio in 2007.
If you are a Hendrie fan, you know what you get. If you are a new Hendrie listener, check out his site: www.philhendrieshow.com.
You will also find out on his site about pre-show videocasts at 9 p.m. weeknights.
FROST STAYS AT KFI
KFI is also making other weekend changes: Frost Stilwell is on 4-7 p.m. Sundays and Wayne Resnick is on 7-10 p.m. Sundays. Bill Carroll, the station said, “will take weekends off,” but remains on the air noon-2 p.m. weekdays. More info: www.kfiam640.com.
Stilwell e-mailed, “Robin & I had lunch Monday. I remember the shrimp and scallops were delicious. So was the news of my new weekend slot on KFI. And I can’t think of a better person to add to the schedule than Phil Hendrie, I have been a fan of his unique show for years.
“Just look at that entire weekend line-up on KFI now. How are you going to compete with that? You can’t. We had raspberries with whipped cream & coffee for dessert, and talked for two hours. Nothing like a good meal with a side of good news, and talking radio over damn good coffee,” he wrote.
Hearing Voices? Yes, It’s Phil Hendrie, Saturdays on KFI
By GARY LYCAN
RADIO
THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER
If you hear strange voices when you tune in KFI/640 AM Saturday evenings, don’t touch that dial or pre-set. You have discovered Phil Hendrie and his new “live and local” show 7-10 p.m.
“Saturday night there are a lot of people driving around town. They’ll have some real radio to listen to. It’ll be local, live, funny and we’ll be mobile with our videocast of the show too,” e-mailed Hendrie.
Phil Hendrie, heard weeknights on KTLK/1150 AM, is also doing a “live and local” show 7-10 p.m. Saturdays on KFI/640 AM.
“It is an honor and a thrill to have Phil Hendrie back on KFI. Phil is a one of a kind talent and is a perfect addition to KFI’s more stimulating weekends,” e-mailed KFI program director Robin Bertolucci.
Now, don’t sweat it if you listen to Hendrie between 10 p.m. and 3 a.m. weeknights on KTLK/1150 AM. He’s still there. Both KFI and KTLK are Clear Channel stations programmed by Bertolucci. The difference is the weeknight show is aired on more than 100 stations across the U.S. The KFI show is local.
Hendrie was on KFI from 1996 to 2005. He has an incredible range of voices or “callers,” including “Bud Dickman,” “Craig Dooley,” “Father Dwayne Poppick,” “General Gayland Shaw,” and, well, the list goes on and on, but the fun is not knowing who will “call” in next.
Hendrie left radio briefly in 2006 to start an acting career. He also voiced characters on the animated shows “King of the Hill” and “Futurama.” He returned to national radio in 2007.
If you are a Hendrie fan, you know what you get. If you are a new Hendrie listener, check out his site: www.philhendrieshow.com.
You will also find out on his site about pre-show videocasts at 9 p.m. weeknights.
FROST STAYS AT KFI
KFI is also making other weekend changes: Frost Stilwell is on 4-7 p.m. Sundays and Wayne Resnick is on 7-10 p.m. Sundays. Bill Carroll, the station said, “will take weekends off,” but remains on the air noon-2 p.m. weekdays. More info: www.kfiam640.com.
Stilwell e-mailed, “Robin & I had lunch Monday. I remember the shrimp and scallops were delicious. So was the news of my new weekend slot on KFI. And I can’t think of a better person to add to the schedule than Phil Hendrie, I have been a fan of his unique show for years.
“Just look at that entire weekend line-up on KFI now. How are you going to compete with that? You can’t. We had raspberries with whipped cream & coffee for dessert, and talked for two hours. Nothing like a good meal with a side of good news, and talking radio over damn good coffee,” he wrote.