FACTOID # 49: Kazakhstan is the world's largest landlocked country.
 
 Home   Encyclopedia   Statistics   Countries A-Z   Flags   Maps   Education   Forum   FAQ   About 
 
 
 
WHAT'S NEW
RECENT ARTICLES
More Recent Articles »
 

SEARCH ALL

FACTS & STATISTICS    Advanced view

Search encyclopedia, statistics and forums:

 

 

(* = Graphable)

 

 


Encyclopedia > Dale Sommers

Bruce Dale Sommers[1], better known as "The Truckin' Bozo," is an American radio personality, best known for his long-running country music show geared toward truck drivers. Sommers is credited with being the first Truck Show Host who discontinued playing music on his nightly show and commenced focusing all his energies on truck news, news and talk from his listeners. a Radio Personality is the modern incarnation of the disk jockey, or DJ. In the 1990s, successful radio stations began to focus less on the musical expertise of their hosts and more on the individual hosts personalities. ... Country music is a blend of popular musical forms originally found in the Southern United States and the Appalachian Mountains. ... // There are two major types of truck drivers: Owner operators are individuals that own the trucks they drive and can either lease their trucks by contract with a trucking company to haul freight for that company using their trucks or haul loads for a number of companies and is self...


Sommers' radio career began in 1959 at Cincinnati's WAEF-FM where he aired music of the big bands nightly from 7 till Midnight. He then jumped over to Country when Ray Pennington hired him as the afternoon drive time host at WCNW in suburban Cincinnati. Sommers used the name, Jim Young at the stint due largely to Pennington's insistence that the name "just sounded country." He left WCNW after a year and then pulled stints at WJPS-Evansville, Ind, WCKY and WUBE in Cincinnati, WLAC in Nashville and according to Sommers own comments,"I worked at a total of 48 radio stations between 1959 and 1984. "I was known as a journeyman broadcaster and as a hard act to work with." Sommers apparently found a Program Director who was able to keep Sommers happy and performing at his best when he went to work for Randy Michaels at 700WLW in 1984. Their relationship lasted despite the flambouyant egos of both men all the way until the time Michaels was pushed out of the CEO slot at Clear Channel. Sommers stuck around WLW after Michaels departure "although it was never the same" until poor health got the best of him in 2004. "I was only 15 days into a 5 year, no cut, guaranteed contract with WLW and I had to call it quits. The doctors had ordered him to stop work or his life would only last a couple of more years. "I sat around the house for several months and then one day I got a phone call from Kevin Straley at XM Satellite Radio. Several of the doctors had stated that if I confined my work to the daylight hours and limited it to no more than 3 hours, then they would sign off on a release to allow me to return to work. Kevin offered me the 4 till 7pm shift on XM and my life had meaning again, says Sommers. Although 2007 was a very bad year health wise for Sommers, his doctors are trying some innovative new tricks to try and keep the Addisons Disease under control. During October and November 2007, Sommers spent most of the two months in the hospital and fought with the Devil to stay alive. At one point, the Doctors were ready to send Hospice to his home and care for him as they felt he was only going to last a few more days. One of his trucking listeners, upon hearing of Sommers plight, took off two weeks from work and went to Florida to help out his friend. Sommers wife had to go away on an essential business trip and while she was gone Sommers health turned for the worse. "I told Rusty Wade that if Hospice came to the door to tell them that they weren't needed because the coroner had already taken my body to the morgue." When asked if Hospice did show up, Wade and Sommers both laugh out loud but won't answer the question.


LOOKING BACK IN TIME: Sommers' show was first heard on WLW-AM in his hometown of Cincinnati, Ohio, where his overnight show was a fixture for the clear channel powerhouse for two decades. WLW's powerful nighttime signal covered most of the eastern and central parts of the country and much of eastern Canada, and his show consistently pulled in high ratings against his main competition (primarily Art Bell's Coast to Coast AM and Bill Mack's Midnight Cowboy Radio Network). WLW-AM is a radio broadcast station based in Cincinnati, Ohio. ... Cincinnati redirects here. ... A clear channel, in the general sense, is a communications channel (such as a radio frequency) on which only one transmitter operates at a time. ... Arthur Art W. Bell, III (born June 17, 1945) is an American broadcaster and author, known primarily as the founder and longtime host of the paranormal-themed radio program Coast to Coast AM. He also created and formerly hosted its companion show, Dreamland. ... Coast to Coast AM is a late-night syndicated radio talk show in the United States which deals with a variety of topics, but most frequently ones that relate either to the paranormal, or to alleged conspiracies. ... Bill Mack born Bill Mack Smith II, in Shamrock, Texas, known by the nickname The Satellite Cowboy (formerly Midnight Cowboy) is an American radio personality and country songwriter, based in Fort Worth, Texas. ... The Midnight Radio Network is a talk radio program currently hosted by Eric Harley and Gary McNamara. ...



In 2004, after celebrating 20 years at WLW, Sommers stepped down from the show due to health concerns, handing the microphone over to his son Steve, who had been doing the weekend version of the show for some time. The elder Sommers' retirement was short-lived, though. After a five month break to recuperate, he signed on with XM Satellite Radio, and he now broadcasts a three-hour daily show on XM's Open Road channel 171 from a studio in his Citrus Hills, Florida home. Ironically, almost all of his former rivals are also on XM: Dave Nemo and Bill Mack, who hosted rival trucking shows, are now both on channel 171 with Sommers, as is the Midnight Radio Network (the show Mack formerly hosted). Coast to Coast AM is heard on XM 165. Dale's son, Steve, is also heard on XM 173 through the WLW simulcast. “XM” redirects here. ... Open Road is a truckers talk radio channel on the XM Satellite Radio service. ... Citrus Hills is a census-designated place located in Citrus County, Florida. ... Bill Mack born Bill Mack Smith II, in Shamrock, Texas, known by the nickname The Satellite Cowboy (formerly Midnight Cowboy) is an American radio personality and country songwriter, based in Fort Worth, Texas. ... The Midnight Radio Network is a talk radio program currently hosted by Eric Harley and Gary McNamara. ...


Sommers is adamant when asked if XM is his last job and he answers that question by asking in return, "who the hell is going to hire a 64 year old man who is in poor health and misses a few days off from time to time. I have converted over to a talk show host and don't play music any longer but I still sound like I am only in my 30's, so thank God my voice hasn't been affected, but it I have any say in the matter....This is my last stop in a long career.


Fellow XM Personality, Bill Mack makes jokes about Sommers having "bags of money" hidden in his attic & Sommers replies that he has his money hidden somewhere else besides in his home. It is rumored that Sommers doesn't need to work due to wise investments in the markets and a healthy inheritance from his parents. Sommers replies, "yes, it's true that I don't have to work to keep body and soul together but XM provides me with Medical insurance which is very important and secondly I love my job and if I quit working I'd probably die from boredom in a matter of months."


Sommers' youngest son, Sean Compton, is Vice President of Programming for Clear Channel Radio and was fill-in host for Sommers program on WLW from 1992-1996. Sommers says, "I guess radio is in the blood. I started out in my early teens, Steve started out at the age of 15 and Sean (who is Clear Channel's biggest deal maker with people like Donald Trump, Rush Limbaugh, and others) started calling Randy Michaels when he was just 17 and fresh out of high school. He would call me and tell me that Randy wouldn't call him back, so I told him to call Randy 12 times the next day and it worked. Randy called me at home and I simply told him that if he didn't hire Sean that Sean would simply drive him crazy and I would give him lessons on how to do it. Sean worked with Michaels until he was pushed out by the Mays family as CEO of radio and Sean decided to stick with the company and his immediate boss, Tom Owens. Sean was appointed as Vice President of Radio Programming and Network Operations at Clear Channel before he was 30 years old." Sean Compton is an American radio executive born and raised in Indiana. ...

Contents

Catching a robber

"The Bozo" made national headlines when he helped to catch a robber at a convenience store in Camilla, Georgia. Sommers was talking live on the air with regular caller Linda Driskill, known as "Mississippi Lady" to listeners, when he heard Driskill admonish someone not to come behind her counter. She then hung up the phone. Sommers was concerned for her safety, so he called the Camilla police (who knew Driskill from Sommers' show). The police responded to Driskill's store and quickly apprehended the robber.[2] This article does not cite any references or sources. ... Camilla is a city located in Mitchell County, Georgia. ...


Health problems

Sommers suffers from severe Addisons Disease, for which there is no cure and is treated by ever increasing doses of steroids that help to keep the disease under control.Sommers is considered by those who are close to him to be a virtual recluse and is rarely seen out of his Florida or Cincinnati homes. He says, "I can't afford to get around someone who may have a bad cold or flu and then wind up catching what they have, I can see it on my tombstone, "The Bozo went outside to play and died from a bad cold." He ends that statement with a hearty laugh.


References

  1. ^ Truckin' Bozo Group ::
  2. ^ Kiesewetter, John. "WLW turns 80", The Cincinnati Enquirer, 2002-03-17. Retrieved on 2007-02-20. 

The Cincinnati Enquirer is a daily morning newspaper published at Cincinnati, Ohio, the larger of the two dailies of that city. ... Also see: 2002 (number). ... is the 76th day of the year (77th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ... Year 2007 (MMVII) was a common year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar in the 21st century. ... is the 51st day of the year in the Gregorian calendar. ...

See also

Americas Trucking Network is a syndicated nightly radio broadcast heard across the United States. ...

External links

  • The Truckin' Bozo official site
  • Dale Sommers on XM Open Road


 
 

COMMENTARY     


Share your thoughts, questions and commentary here
Your name
Your comments

Want to know more?
Search encyclopedia, statistics and forums:

 


Lesson Plans | Student Area | Student FAQ | Reviews | Press Releases |  Feeds | Contact
The Wikipedia article included on this page is licensed under the GFDL.
Images may be subject to relevant owners' copyright.
All other elements are (c) copyright NationMaster.com 2003-5. All Rights Reserved.
Usage implies agreement with terms, 1022, m