Misplaced Pages

Garry Meier: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 17:42, 17 April 2007 editAdamKB (talk | contribs)79 editsm Cleaned up some awkward language, re-added WLS-AM tenure← Previous edit Revision as of 18:07, 17 April 2007 edit undoAdamKB (talk | contribs)79 edits Added photographNext edit →
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Garry Meier''' is a ]-based radio ] host. '''Garry Meier''' is a ]-based radio ] host.

]


Meier started out as a ] at ] in 1973, then moved to ] in 1974. He left WYEN in ] and joined ] in 1977 as their overnight jock, where he eventually was teamed up with morning man ] in ]. Years later, they were billed as "Steve & Garry." During their tenure at The Loop (1979-81), the team was number one and continued that success at ] & ] from ] through ] in afternoon drive.<ref>"Radio: Baby Boomers Looking for a Great Personality," Strazewski, Len. Advertising Age. (Midwest region edition). Chicago: Aug 29, 1985.Vol.56, Iss. 67; pg. 22</ref> In 1986, they returned to The Loop AM 1000, and then back to the Loop's FM 97.9. <ref>"Meier, Dahl Spill the Beans about Loves (?) & Hates That Drive Them," Ingram, Bruce, Segers, Frank. Variety. New York: Dec 14, 1988.Vol.333, Iss. 8; pg. 43</ref> They later shifted back to mornings on WLUP until Garry left in ]. One of Steve & Garry's most famous events was ] on July 12, 1979.<ref> "Anti-Disco Rally Halts White Sox" New York Times New York, N.Y.: Jul 13, 1979. pg. A16 </ref><ref>"No anniversary party for disco debacle;" Rod Beaton. USA TODAY. McLean, Va.: Jul 12, 2004. pg. C.03</ref><ref>"WLUP Chicago Reminisces," Billboard. New York: Apr 22, 1989. Vol. 101, Iss. 16; p. 10</ref> Meier started out as a ] at ] in 1973, then moved to ] in 1974. He left WYEN in ] and joined ] in 1977 as their overnight jock, where he eventually was teamed up with morning man ] in ]. Years later, they were billed as "Steve & Garry." During their tenure at The Loop (1979-81), the team was number one and continued that success at ] & ] from ] through ] in afternoon drive.<ref>"Radio: Baby Boomers Looking for a Great Personality," Strazewski, Len. Advertising Age. (Midwest region edition). Chicago: Aug 29, 1985.Vol.56, Iss. 67; pg. 22</ref> In 1986, they returned to The Loop AM 1000, and then back to the Loop's FM 97.9. <ref>"Meier, Dahl Spill the Beans about Loves (?) & Hates That Drive Them," Ingram, Bruce, Segers, Frank. Variety. New York: Dec 14, 1988.Vol.333, Iss. 8; pg. 43</ref> They later shifted back to mornings on WLUP until Garry left in ]. One of Steve & Garry's most famous events was ] on July 12, 1979.<ref> "Anti-Disco Rally Halts White Sox" New York Times New York, N.Y.: Jul 13, 1979. pg. A16 </ref><ref>"No anniversary party for disco debacle;" Rod Beaton. USA TODAY. McLean, Va.: Jul 12, 2004. pg. C.03</ref><ref>"WLUP Chicago Reminisces," Billboard. New York: Apr 22, 1989. Vol. 101, Iss. 16; p. 10</ref>

Revision as of 18:07, 17 April 2007

Garry Meier is a Chicago-based radio talk show host.

Meier started out as a DJ at WFYR in 1973, then moved to WYEN in 1974. He left WYEN in 1977 and joined The Loop in 1977 as their overnight jock, where he eventually was teamed up with morning man Steve Dahl in 1979. Years later, they were billed as "Steve & Garry." During their tenure at The Loop (1979-81), the team was number one and continued that success at WLS-AM & FM from 1981 through 1986 in afternoon drive. In 1986, they returned to The Loop AM 1000, and then back to the Loop's FM 97.9. They later shifted back to mornings on WLUP until Garry left in 1993. One of Steve & Garry's most famous events was Disco Demolition on July 12, 1979.

After leaving the "Steve & Garry" show, Meier hosted his own show on The Loop for one year. In 1994, Meier left WLUP to join WGN-TV in Chicago as a feature reporter on their morning show. He left the show in 1995 to join WLS-AM. The show enjoyed a successful 8-year run.

On Friday, August 18th, 2006, during a remote broadcast by Dahl, Meier stopped by for an on-air visit on WCKG. Garry was eating lunch at the Oak Street Beach, the site of the remote, when Steve learned of Garry's presence there. Steve invited Garry to appear on the air with him, and Garry accepted. Garry wound up staying for the entire remainder of the show. The history-making reunion was covered widely throughout the Chicago media that evening and throughout the next week, landing front page news on both the Chicago Sun-Times and the Chicago Tribune.

On April 2, 2007, Garry joined WCKG to host a late morning show from 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM. The announcement, on March 27, 2007, was made during the Steve Dahl Show.

References

  1. "Radio: Baby Boomers Looking for a Great Personality," Strazewski, Len. Advertising Age. (Midwest region edition). Chicago: Aug 29, 1985.Vol.56, Iss. 67; pg. 22
  2. "Meier, Dahl Spill the Beans about Loves (?) & Hates That Drive Them," Ingram, Bruce, Segers, Frank. Variety. New York: Dec 14, 1988.Vol.333, Iss. 8; pg. 43
  3. "Anti-Disco Rally Halts White Sox" New York Times New York, N.Y.: Jul 13, 1979. pg. A16
  4. "No anniversary party for disco debacle;" Rod Beaton. USA TODAY. McLean, Va.: Jul 12, 2004. pg. C.03
  5. "WLUP Chicago Reminisces," Billboard. New York: Apr 22, 1989. Vol. 101, Iss. 16; p. 10
  6. "Beach awash in strange radio waves: A funny thing happened on the way to the air and water show: Steve and Garry reunited," Phil Rosenthal. Chicago Tribune. Distributed by Knight Ridder Tribune Business News. Washington: Aug 19, 2006. pg. 1
  7. WCKG's Garry Meier page.


Stub icon

This biographical article related to radio is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: