Touch-Tone Terrorists

The Touch-Tone Terrorists is a series of prank phone calls comedy CDs.

Contents

About

The Touch-Tone Terrorists are actually one man, Pete Zoghi[1] who also goes by the name of "RePete". He purchased a series of 1-800 numbers, including ones that were one digit different than actual customer service numbers for companies such as (apparently) UPS, Jiffy Lube, an auto insurance "claims support line", a psychic hotline, a pen manufacturer, and others.[2] Using a Gentner SPH-3A telephone hybrid and a Yamaha SPX-90 electronic pitch transposer to alter his voice over the phone, he would take incoming calls from people who had misdialed the number and were under the assumption that they had dialed the right number. He created a series of characters, all of which were voiced by him.[2]

At one point UPS tried to stop the sale of the Touch-Tone Terrorists CDs through a series of letters demanding, among other things, that all inventory of Infestation Records' CDs be "delivered" to UPS lawyers "for destruction", because UPS believed that many of the TTT calls involved customers who thought they were speaking to UPS customer service representatives.[2] Infestation Records refused to comply on the basis that the CDs are a protected parody.[2] For legal reasons, all subjects give their permission to have their voices on the CDs; the subjects were "paid well."[2]

RePete was also a frequent guest on Howard Stern's radio show, usually crank calling Howard Stern staff and Wack Pack members, such as Crazy Alice, and High Pitch Eric.[3] Two phone calls were also featured in the first season of Crank Yankers.

RePete has not announced any major plans for more prank calls, as he claims the process of recording and releasing the calls as well as dealing with illegal file sharing of his tracks require over 2 years of full time work. When the 5th album Customer Care Creeps was released, RePete recorded an alternative, staged version of the calls in which he himself voiced the caller. Many people thought these fake calls were the actual album, but RePete stated that the staged calls were not the real album, but rather those downloaded from illegal P2P file sharing networks.[4]

Characters

The CDs and DVD

See also

References

External links