Humble & Fred
Genre |
Talk Comedy |
---|---|
Running time | 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m., Monday through Friday |
Country of origin | Canada |
Home station | Canada Laughs |
Hosted by |
Howard "Humble" Glassman Fred Patterson |
Starring | Show staff |
Created by |
Howard "Humble" Glassman Fred Patterson |
Original release | August 1989 – present |
Opening theme |
"Icky Thump" by The White Stripes "Straight Outta Compton" by N.W.A "Tighten Up" by The Black Keys |
Ending theme | "Where It's At" by Beck |
Humble & Fred is a Toronto-based Canadian radio show, featuring co-hosts "Humble" Howard Glassman and Fred Patterson, which has aired on a variety of Greater Toronto Area radio stations since 1989.
History
Background
What eventually became the Humble & Fred show got initiated in 1989 by the incoming CFNY-FM program director Danny Kingsbury who wanted to stabilize the station's morning show situation that had been in flux ever since longtime Pete & Geets show went off the air in 1987.[1] After the aging duo left, the slot was taken over by 27-year-old MuchMusic VJ Steve Anthony who did the morning radio show in parallel with his music television job; due to a non-competing clause in his MuchMusic contract, in order to take the CFNY offer, he had to obtain MuchMusic's permission.[2] Different factors — such as having to fill the beloved morning duo's shoes, choosing to devote more attention to his TV job than his radio gig,[1] and maintaining a party lifestyle that on multiple occasions resulted in him missing work in the morning[3] as well as facing a situation in which the radio station suddenly switched to a Top 40 format — led to Anthony's relatively quick departure from CFNY by the end of 1988.[2] A number of hosts were then given the morning slot, including Scot Turner and Randy Taylor, none of whom panned out either,[1] which is when the newly arrived program director Kingsbury began looking for a more permanent solution.
CFNY's morning show instability during the 1987-1989 period reflected the station's management and ownership turmoil that began after longtime program director David Marsden got moved to the director of operations position in 1987. Taking over the PD post was his longtime deputy and on-air personality Don Berns who continued the "Spirit of Radio" concept that Marsden himself largely created and fostered over the years. However, the station's corporate parent, Selkirk Communications (itself going through a process of being sold to Maclean-Hunter media conglomerate), wasn't happy with the way things are at CFNY, letting Marsden go during 1988 followed by ordering a format change to Top 40 hits late in the year and installing general sales manager Jim Fonger to oversee the switch by promoting him to Marsden's post.[4] The switch resulted in a tarted up playlist that suddenly included acts and tracks like Madonna, Michael Jackson, Bon Jovi, Janet Jackson, George Michael's "Monkey", etc. — something unthinkable up to that point.[5] Berns resigned his program director duties shortly though staying on as DJ, and even though the format change quickly resulted in station's overall listener ratings increasing from CFNY's average 500,000 to 700,000, research showed this new audience to be mostly composed of those who listen for very short periods of time that were thus of limited appeal to advertisers.[4] Since it failed to bring in new revenue, in addition to alienating CFNY's loyal listener base,[5] the Top 40 experiment was discontinued by summer 1989, only seven months after implementation.[5] By this time, Selkirk Communications' sale to Maclean-Hunter had been finalized and the new owner ordered a return to the alternative format along with bringing in new management that included new director of programming and operations Reiner Schwarz and new program director Danny Kingsbury.
In summer 1989 when Kingsbury offered him the CFNY morning show in Toronto, 29-year-old radio DJ and comedian Howard Glassman had been working for a year at Montreal's CJFM-FM, hosting a program with Jeff Lumby. CFNY's original offer was for both Glassman and Lumby to move to Toronto to host the proposed Jeff & Howard Show — with the additional plan to attach Fred Patterson as the sports guy, a role he performed on previous CFNY morning shows with Turner, Taylor, Anthony and even before that with Pete & Geets — however, Lumby turned the offer down while Glassman called Kingsbury back to express interest in coming over by himself.[6] Patterson was then flown to Montreal in order to be introduced to Glassman and to determine whether they mesh enough on a personal level to broadcast together on a daily basis.[7] Soon after, the deal was made.[6]
In addition to bringing in a new morning man Glassman, the station also promoted its overnight host Alan Cross by moving him to the afternoon drive time shift and hired Dani Elwell as the new evening host Mondays through Thursdays from 8pm until midnight, giving her the freedom to musically program the last hour of her shift, named Alternative Bedtime Hour, as she pleased.
CFNY years
The morning drive time program began in August 1989 on CFNY-FM with Glassman as the sole host and Patterson as sports anchor. As the comedic banter between the two became an increasingly prominent feature of the show, Patterson was eventually promoted to full co-host. Another frequent on-air contributor was the show's producer Dan Duran who simultaneously with working at CFNY and Humble & Fred also pursued side jobs as voice performer, TV personality, and aspiring actor.
The new morning show posted solid ratings from the get go despite facing some opposition even from the station's staff, including the afternoon drive time host Alan Cross who wasn't a big fan of Humble & Fred at the time.[6] With the legacy of the "Spirit of Radio" concept looming large over CFNY and especially with all the organizational turmoil the station had experienced over the two years since legendary program director and creator of "Spirit of Radio" David Marsden's 1987 removal, many of the remaining staff were intent on seeing CFNY continue to be run the way it had been under Marsden.[1] They mostly saw the station's new morning man Glassman and his show as more examples of conventional corporate trends being injected into CFNY, generally treating him with contempt.[1] Though Marsden's "Spirit of Radio" concept had officially been laid to rest — with CFNY FM 102 "Toronto's Modern Rock" now used in promos and playlists being rotated more often than before — the station still retained a lot of its old essence, playing The Pixies, New Order's "Round & Round", and Depeche Mode while also championing the emerging Madchester scene as well as Nine Inch Nails' debut Pretty Hate Machine.[5]
In May 1991, only year and a half after taking the CFNY job, Glassman left the station for CKFM-FM, citing dissatisfaction with CFNY's overall organizational structure and the way it was being run day to day:
“ | I wasn't really well received by the CFNY staff. It was weird for me because even though I was only 29, I had been in mainstream radio stations for almost 12 years already and I didn't really get and appreciate the way they did radio at CFNY. Over the years since then, I've had multiple epiphanies about what a gem that radio station I walked into in 1989 was. However, at the time, having no prior knowledge of the place, it didn't mean anything to me and I just thought the people were weird and their attitude towards radio was more free form than what I understood. Working there day-to-day gave me a lot of anxiety about the decision I had made to come there because in my mind I was coming to a major market in Toronto to work at this big radio station and I now found myself working in a strip mall in Brampton where everyone's attitude was like 'hey man, let's play what we want'.[6] | ” |
Patterson remained at CFNY, getting paired with Skot Turner while Maie Pauts acted as the third voice on the newly launched show to replace Humble & Fred. The setup didn't last long as Turner got fired in 1992 and a temporary host took his place alongside Patterson.
Humble returns, The Edge years
At the end of 1992, only 19 months after leaving, Glassman returned to CFNY[8][9] that had several months earlier finished re-branding into CFNY 102.1 The Leading Edge along with a new format and management, including new general manager Vince DiMaggio and new program director Stewart Meyers that Maclean-Hunter put in charge of implementing the changes.[10] The format change was accompanied with a large reduction in staff, either through resignations or layoffs, including departures of some well-known on-air personalities such as Chris Sheppard, Lee Carter, and Dani Elwell. Dissatisfied with the changes at the station, Elwell famously resigned on the air in August 1992 followed by reading out her resume while Carter wrote a scathing rebuke of the station's new direction from an insider's perspective that got published by a Toronto alternative weekly newspaper.[4] Glassman's return to CFNY was facilitated by Patterson who survived the layoffs as well as the new general manager DiMaggio and program director Meyers who sold Glassman on the idea of a new format despite him not originally being interested in going back.[6]
Unlike the station's 1980s "Spirit of Radio" days under David Marsden, when no song would be played twice in a 24-hour period, the new format CFNY became a highly programmed station with current hit songs by then popular acts like Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, Alice in Chains, Stone Temple Pilots, Red Hot Chili Peppers, etc. in heavy rotation throughout the day including in the morning during Humble & Fred. Jumping on the bandwagon of the rapidly emerging alternative rock and grunge musical genres, the station's new format became an immediate ratings winner while the irreverent Humble and Fred morning duo was also proving a good fit. Not long after their late 1992 reunion, Humble and Fred introduced a bit called "Number 1 in '97", sarcastically announcing their intent of becoming "number 1" without really going into the specifics. Playing up their perceived underdog status while mocking their own supposed low ratings, it implored the audience to stay with the show because it was going to be number 1 by 1997, becoming the signature Humble & Fred bit for a few years. Another regular bit was 'The Humble Report', delivered by Glassman each morning as a funny five-minute take on the news.
By summer 1993, the show built a sufficient profile in Toronto that CFNY 102.1 The Leading Edge's main rival radio station Q107 approached the duo, offering a move for substantially more money. Glassman and Patterson accepted the terms in principal, however, once CFNY learned of Q107's offer, they matched it and Humble & Fred stayed. Years later, without specifically mentioning whether this is in jest or not, Humble talked on the air about doctoring Q107's offer by adding an extra C$10,000 to it before showing it to CFNY, which they then matched.
With a group of interns like Danger Boy (Jason Barr) and Chicken Shawarma (Jeff Domet), both of whom would get regular on-air opportunities via promotional stunts, as well as the show's third voice Mary Ellen Beninger who read news and traffic reports in addition to occasionally bantering with the guys, the morning zoo show was steadily gaining listeners among the 18 to 34 year old demographic. Humble & Fred producer Dan Duran, by now fairly established Toronto radio and television personality, also frequently got on the microphone, adding to the show's popularity. Comedian Pete Cugno a.k.a. Scary Pete was also associated with the show, recording comedic commentaries and satirical songs. At the time of his late 1992 return to CFNY, Glassman had already been part of The Dini Petty Show, a nationally broadcast daytime television program in Canada airing on CTV, making weekly appearances every Thursday in a comedically framed 5-8 minute segment titled 'Professional Husband'. The two shows, owned by different companies and aimed at completely different audience demographics, had no direct cross promotion, but shared some of the staff including Humble & Fred producer Dan Duran who simultaneously worked as announcer on Dini. Furthermore, Glassman's Dini segments often contained mentions of the Humble & Fred radio show including an entire segment on it in addition to featuring occasional uncredited appearances by Patterson. The weekly segment eventually ended in 1995.
In 1994, the show's producer Dan Duran left Humble & Fred after getting promoted to co-host on Dini. Danger Boy (Jason Barr) took over the producing duties. Throughout the same year, Maclean-Hunter, the corporate conglomerate that owned CFNY 102.1 The Leading Edge was in the process of getting acquired by another large corporate entity Rogers Communications. After being announced in late March 1994, the sale wasn't approved until December with the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) ordering Rogers, in accordance with Canadian media concentration laws, to sell off some of its newly acquired individual assets, including CFNY, to its competitor Shaw Communications. The station thus got its fourth corporate owner in just five years.
By fall 1995, Humble & Fred became the number one morning show in Toronto among the 18-to-34-year-olds with both males and females, however, on suggestion from program director Meyers they chose to ignore this information on air in order to continue with the popular "number 1 in '97" bit.[6] With his profile increased, Humble began getting television offers that led to him joining Ed's Night Party, weekly late-night comedy talk show that aired on Citytv, which he did in parallel with his daily radio morning show duties; however, his involvement with the programme ended amid acrimony with its creator and star Steven Kerzner after only a season.[11][12]
Humble & Fred got named the best morning show in Canada in early 1997, an award given out by the Canadian Association of Broadcasters.[13] Though never guest intensive, the show's increased profile brought more promotional guest segments with actors and musicians plugging projects aimed at the younger demographic, either via in-studio appearances or phone-ins. One such phone-in during February 1997 with venerable Canadian stage actor Al Waxman of the King of Kensington fame — whose thoroughly uncooperative attitude quickly devolved the conversation into an uncomfortable and awkward exchange — gained long term notoriety on the show with both hosts often bringing it up in years to come.[7][13]
With the highly publicized 2 September 1997 arrival of a multimillion-dollar American syndicated radio juggernaut The Howard Stern Show to Toronto via 102.1 The Edge's main rival station Q107 (owned at the time by Western International Communications),[14] most players on the city's radio market, especially rock format stations aiming their content at young male demo, braced themselves for a potential hit in terms of the listeners they were likely to surrender to high-profile and raunchy Stern. Following a huge start ratings-wise along with a shocking one content-wise that caused a lot of negative reaction in Canada,[15][16][17][18][19] Stern's Toronto numbers on Q107 somewhat sagged and stabilized by Christmas 1997,[20] though he undeniably managed to establish himself as major player on the city's radio market,[21] taking a significant chunk of Humble & Fred's audience in the process.[22] In response, 102.1 The Edge hired the services of various radio consultants for the purposes of tweaking the show's content in order to better compete against Stern. As a result, Humble & Fred put together a listener contest consisting of scatological and/or otherwise disgusting tasks put before contestants competing for prizes ranging from $25,000 to a used car. Its popularity spawned a series of such contests on Humble & Fred all throughout the late 1990s.[23] By the June 1998 ratings book, Humble & Fred managed to recover most of the audience they lost to Stern, regaining their customary 4.7% of the overall market in Toronto after being pushed down to 3.5% the previous fall when newly arrived Stern dominated the ratings.[22] Simultaneously, in the first four months of 1998, Stern lost 20% of his Toronto audience or 100,000 people, majority of them women.[24]
In 1998, Mary Ellen Benninger moved on to another station and got replaced by Sandra Plagakis. In 1999, Shaw Communications decided to carve out its media assets, including 102.1 The Edge, Q107, and Talk 640 into a newly created corporation called Corus Entertainment.
Move to AM: Mojo 640
Humble & Fred remained with 102.1 The Edge until April 2001, when they got re-assigned to Mojo 640, another Corus Entertainment asset, while getting replaced on 102.1 The Edge by Dean Blundell who got brought over from the Windsor market. Their move to Mojo 640 took place as part of its makeover from the old Talk 640 and heavily promoted re-launch that included a call letter change. Now billed as "Talk Radio for Guys", the AM station ambitiously set about going after the 25 to 54 male demographic with a whole new on-air lineup that in addition to Humble & Fred included some well-known Toronto radio personalities such as John Derringer, Maie Pauts, Scruff Connors, Spider Jones, etc. featuring "talk, sports, health and fitness, career and investment tips, gear, gadgets, cars, and sex".[25] Jumping on the early 2000s lad culture bandwagon, the station looked to build an audience by catering to consumers of Maxim and FHM, high-circulation men's magazines whose content relied on semi-nude women, cars, and sports.[26] That being the case, Mojo's on-air personalities were encouraged to be risque and push the envelope.[1] Corus further obtained radio broadcasting rights of the Toronto Maple Leafs games, programming much of Mojo's schedule around them with added content such as analysis shows like Leafs Lunch.
Humble & Fred's particular move to the AM dial got initiated by the Corus president John Cassaday who approached Glassman and Patterson in December 2000 at Corus' Christmas party to personally inform them of the company's plans to completely retool its AM asset Talk 640, offering them the re-launched station's morning slot as "a job that they could potentially do until retirement".[6] Being 40 and 43 years of age at the time, respectively, Glassman and Patterson talked in later interviews about such line of thinking — youth-oriented 102.1 The Edge perhaps no longer being the best fit for their show as they age into their 40s and a resulting feeling they'd have to leave it sooner or later anyway — resonating with them at the time as they pondered moving to a station targeting a bit older crowd.[6] Their additional motivation in joining an AM talk station was a chance to broadcast without having to play 7-8 songs per hour, something they grew extremely frustrated with at 102.1 The Edge over the years and ultimately unsuccessful in trying to get their bosses to scale back.[6]
However, the Mojo 640 move soon presented other problems such as the station's entire schedule continuing to suffer from low ratings even after the much-publicized makeover and re-launch.[27] Initial reviews of Humble & Fred in the new setting weren't stellar either with William Burrill, a Toronto Star columnist who previously collaborated with Humble on Ed's Night Party, feeling that Humble and Fred were much better than the "early Mojo mould of jocks dumbing it down for 'da guys'",[28] further quipping that "putting Humble Howard on the all-guy, sports-oriented radio station is kind of like putting Wayne Gretzky on a team that plays nothing but hockey's so-called neutral zone trap".[29]
By fall 2001, Corus brought in famous radio executive John Hayes in radio division president capacity who reportedly wasn't a fan of the Mojo concept from the get go.[1][30] Steady number of complaints over the station's tone and its basic 'men only' format resulted in the language being toned down, gradually leading to watering down of the on-air product. This trend particularly intensified after even the Maple Leafs president Ken Dryden complained to the station's management about several things said by Mojo on-air personalities.[1][30] Though the station slightly improved the size of its target 25-to-44 demographic audience in the fall 2002 rating reports, it was still ranked only 16th in a 33-station Toronto market.[26]
Glassman and Patterson can be seen in the 2003 documentary film Flyerman, which features footage of the duo broadcasting live to air at Mojo.
Back to FM: Mix 99.9
In August 2003, Humble & Fred, by then named Best Morning Show in Canada four times by the Canadian Association of Broadcasters,[31] moved to Mix 99.9, an FM station owned by Standard Broadcasting, replacing Carla Collins who reportedly decided to leave due to finding it too difficult to continue doing a daily morning radio show alongside her television obligations.[32] After Jeff Marek filled in initially,[32] John Oakley became the duo's permanent replacement at Mojo.[33]
The Humble & Fred transfer from Mojo to Mix, one of several high-profile radio morning show changes in the Toronto market during summer 2003,[34] received due coverage in Toronto-based print media including Mix program director Pat Holiday's quote about the duo's move being motivated by their desire "to be in the top echelon of morning shows with numbers and listeners" while Mojo's program director Scott Armstrong stated they left "due to being interested in a music format, which Mojo obviously couldn't offer".[32] Years later, in different interviews, Glassman and Patterson talked about the details of their Mix 99.9 transfer that were not public knowledge at the time, including a revelation that their primary motivation to move was Standard Broadcasting's offer of a 5-year guaranteed contract for each performer along with a significant pay raise and better bonus structure compared to what they were getting from Corus Entertainment at Mojo 640.[1][6][30] They also discussed behind the scenes events during their unsuccessful contract re-negotiations with Corus that dragged throughout late 2002 and the first part of 2003 before Standard came in with its generous offer that they took as well as Corus' last minute attempt to keep them, which the duo rebuffed having already signed with Standard.[1][6][30]
Despite being back on the FM dial whose dynamics they were well familiar with having had a successful program on an FM station for a long time, arriving at Mix 99.9, a station programmed around the contemporary hit radio format with a conventional and somewhat conservative listener base, required significant adjustment in their performance style that had prior to that generally been geared towards offbeat humour and risque conversations. Furthermore, Mix's promotional strategy included frequent lavish giveaways that Humble & Fred now had to participate in[35] thus further interrupting the show's flow. The station gave the duo a big promotional push that most notably included transit poster ads placed prominently on the Toronto subway. However, their ratings were consistently tepid as it became clear that very little of their audience from the 102.1 The Edge and Mojo 640 days followed them to Mix 99.9 while they also had trouble attracting new listeners.
In August 2005, Patterson was relieved of his duties with Mix 99.9 (though he remained under contract), with struggling ratings cited as a factor in the station's decision to shake up the show.[36][37] When Patterson was released, there was significant curiosity about the true story behind the occurrence. Glassman was not able to say anything on the air, but he did offer contact information for his personal BlackBerry and readily invited those curious to contact him for the actual story.
Humble continues at Mix 99.9 without Fred
The show got re-billed as the Humble Howard Morning Show with Judy Croon as the new co-host and Bingo Bob who continued as producer. However, less than a year later in July 2006, Humble was fired and the show was removed from Mix 99.9's schedule due to poor listernship.[38] It was temporarily replaced by Steve Anthony. Mad Dog and Billie took over the slot on a permanent basis on 8 August 2006.
After reuniting for a Christmas show podcast in 2006, their first time on-air together since being separated in August 2005, Glassman and Patterson continued the practice of occasionally reconvening for one-off podcasts. The initial podcasts were recorded at former producer Dan Duran's house, before deciding to do one as a small event on location with special guests and a live audience — their May 2009 podcast at Dominion on Queen pub, celebrating the 20th anniversary of Humble & Fred going on air with guests Nick Kypreos and Tyler Stewart of Barenaked Ladies.[39] Altogether, eight podcast shows were recorded and released between 2006 and 2010.
The Christmas show tradition
One of Humble & Fred annual traditions on terrestrial radio was its "Gift of Christmas" show. Broadcast live from location, usually a downtown Toronto hospitality establishment, multiple Christmas shows were done from the Horseshoe Tavern while the last few were held in the Courthouse restaurant. Longtime performers on the Christmas shows included the Doo Wops comedy group, and various members of Barenaked Ladies.
The last Christmas show on terrestrial radio took place without Patterson on 23 December 2005. One year later, when neither Humble nor Fred were on radio anymore, the 17th annual Humble & Fred Christmas show was held and recorded at former producer Dan Duran's house on 16 December 2006 and subsequently made available from the duo's website as a free podcast.[40] In December 2010, now employed at different radio stations, the duo reconvened to do another Christmas show, this time at the studio of Toronto's 103.9 Proud FM, that was again released as a free podcast.[41]
Re-launch on the internet
On 15 October 2011, more than six years removed from the last time they were on air together (other than the occasional one-off joint podcast in the meantime), Humble and Fred re-launched the daily show, this time distributed online as a podcast.[42] Their reunion came in the wake of both their recent individual firings from terrestrial stations — Humble got let go from his morning show job at Boom 97.3 in Toronto earlier that year in April while Fred was released from Peterborough's The Wolf 101.5 in July where he worked behind the scenes as program director.[43] Now producing daily content in a stripped down podcasting operation they launched by reportedly investing only C$3,500 in equipment[44] with initially no paid employees other than themselves and a business model based on keeping costs low, Humble and Fred stated from the start that they would welcome a return to a corporate-owned commercial radio entity.[43] To that end, the duo made a conscious decision to approach their daily internet podcast the same way they produced their morning show on corporate radio for 16 years, which entailed renting a space to create the podcast from as opposed to doing it from either one of their homes, converting the said space into a makeshift studio, and striving for broadcast-quality daily content that could potentially be played on radio.
Soon after launching, the addition of Bill Herz, recently retired former vice president of sales for Standard and Astral Radio and the duo's good friend, to the podcast in consulting capacity was announced.[45] His work on the show mostly involves selling advertising spots via a personal network of contacts he managed to develop in the business over the years and his compensation is commission based.[30] The podcast also began providing unpaid internships for a school credit, mostly to radio and television students at Greater Toronto Area post-secondary institutions. One such intern, Phil Hong, eventually got added to the paid staff as a technical producer.
Barely a few months into their podcasting, the duo's limited return of sorts to terrestrial radio was announced via a deal with Rogers Media that saw their podcast being promoted on 19 of the company's radio stations' websites across the country, and on the stations themselves as well as on Rogers' smartphone app.[27] It came about via Rogers Media executive Julie Adam who, having been a fan of the duo's previous work, reached out to them and eventually agreed the deal that she referred as company's "experiment with digital content".
Brief returns to terrestrial radio
In June 2012, Humble & Fred joined K-Rock 105.7, a Rogers Media owned station from Kingston, Ontario, to fill in its morning slot for the summer. Though now commencing production of a 6-9 a.m. terrestrial radio morning show for the Kingston market, they also continued with their daily internet podcast. They did their K-Rock 105.7 show from Toronto rather than moving to Kingston, which aroused some controversy in Kingston's local print media.[46]
In January 2013, the duo announced a deal with Astral Media for a late-night terrestrial radio comedy show, featuring a mix of their new and previously podcasted material.[47] As part of the deal, the duo additionally got to do guest segments on Astral's various properties such as John Moore's morning show on Newstalk 1010 and John Tory's afternoon drive time program Live Drive on the same station. The new program — a cleaned up version of their daily internet 2-hour podcast with profanity taken out and reformatted into four 25-minute bits that can be played with terrestrial station breaks in-between[48] — began airing on 21 January 2013, weeknights 12-2 a.m., on Astral's two comedy-format radio stations, Funny 820 in Hamilton and Funny 1410 in London, as well as on Newstalk 1010 in Toronto. Potential expansion via syndication to other stations was also announced.[49] and within weeks they got added to the Newstalk 610's (another Astral station, serving Niagara Region) nightly schedule from 10pm until midnight.[50]
Expansion to satellite radio
On 7 May 2013, Humble & Fred got announced as the new 7 a.m. morning show on Sirius XM Canada's newly re-branded Canada Laughs channel that had been known as Laugh Attack up to that point.[51] They began two days later on 9 May as a two-hour live weekday morning broadcast. The latest deal put the duo in a unique position of being on three different platforms every day — first broadcasting their daily 2-hour show live on satellite radio every morning, then making the same content available as a podcast followed by having the slightly altered version of the same content air that evening on AM terrestrial radio. Soon after getting on satellite, the show added Eileen Ross (formerly with Rogers Media where Humble and Fred previously collaborated with her on promotional material as part of their Rogers deal) as a third on-air voice while her duties also involved booking guests.
In late April 2014, Humble & Fred got into a mini-controversy with the Sirius XM's flagship show, Opie and Anthony. Their on-air statement "Opie and Anthony aren't funny but Jim Norton is..." caused a mainly one-sided mini brouhaha. The duo were worthy of mention on the O&A panel discussion on a May 23 Jocktober show where Opie's fans defaced and overloaded Humble & Fred's website and Facebook page. The four morning hosts made up on the May 28th show when Humble & Fred called into O&A to discuss the misunderstanding, morning radio and the city of Toronto.
The show celebrated its 25th anniversary with an event at the Horseshoe Tavern that aired live on SiriusXM Canada starting at 8pm on 5 November 2014 featuring numerous guests, including the newly inaugurated Mayor of Toronto and the duo's former radio colleague John Tory and Hockey Night in Canada's recently hired new host George Stroumboulopoulos.[52]
After airing for two and a half years, the nightly AM radio show that came about as part of the content licensing deal with Astral Media got cancelled in July 2015[53] with Toronto's Newstalk 1010 putting Art Bell's Midnight in the Desert in the timeslot.
In early June 2016, after performing as the show's third voice for three years, Eileen Ross got released. Her release was announced by co-hosts Humble and Fred midway through the 6 June 2016 show without providing any details other than it being part of the show's "re-positioning". After some negative listener reaction, they further discussed her departure the next day live on air in an 11-minute segment, stating they're now doing so despite originally not planning on addressing the reasons they're no longer working with Ross "out of wanting to be discreet, sensitive, and empathetic". Without going into specifics they further stated that a lot went into the decision including "personal issues and circumstances" and "their desire to take the show into a slightly different direction by concentrating on some Humble & Fred hallmarks that involve just Humble and Fred".
Show staff
Current
- ″Humble″ Howard Glassman (co-host 1989–2005, 2011–present)
- Fred Patterson (co-host 1989–2005, 2011–present)
- Phil Hong (intern 2011, technical producer 2012–present)
- Amanda J. Barker
Former
- Mary Ellen Benninger (news and traffic 1989–1998)
- Dan Duran (producer 1989–1994)
- Marla West
- Sandra Plagakis (news and traffic 1998–2001)
- Danger Boy (Jason Barr) (intern 1993–94, producer 1994–2001)
- Chicken Shawarma (Jeff Domet) (intern 1994–97)
- Bingo Bob (Bob Willette) (intern 1997–98, associate/technical producer 1998–2001, producer 2001–05)
- Todd Shapiro (intern 1999–2001)
- Kelly Cutrara (third voice 2011–13)
- Eileen Ross (third voice, show booker 2013–16)
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Boon, Mike (18 April 2013). "Toronto Mike'd Podcast Episode 34: Freddie P.". TorontoMike.com. Retrieved 24 July 2016.
- 1 2 Boon, Mike (27 May 2015). "Toronto Mike'd Podcast Episode 123: Steve Anthony". TorontoMike.com. Retrieved 29 July 2016.
- ↑ Boon, Mike (4 February 2016). "Toronto Mike'd Podcast Episode 157: Ivar Hamilton". TorontoMike.com. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
- 1 2 3 Carter, Lee (27 August 1992). "CFNY Insider's Report". Eye Weekly. Retrieved 24 July 2016.
- 1 2 3 4 Reynolds, Bill (10 July 2009). "Martin Streek was a rock 'n' roll original". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "Toronto Mike'd Podcast Episode 36: Humble Howard". TorontoMike.com. 1 May 2013. Retrieved 22 July 2016.
- 1 2 Boon, Mike (27 April 2009). "The Definitive Humble and Fred Interview". TorontoMike.com. Retrieved 24 July 2016.
- ↑ An Interview with Humble Howard
- ↑ Spirit of Radio page for Humble Howard
- ↑ Archer, Bert (25 July 2009). "The Ballad of Martin Streek". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 23 July 2016.
- ↑ Boon, Mike (23 August 2006). "An Interview With Humble Howard". TorontoMike.com. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
- ↑ Boon, Mike (8 March 2013). "Ed the Sock on his Feud with Humble Howard and his Return to MUCH". TorontoMike.com. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
- 1 2 Goddard, Peter (21 February 1997). "Into the smooth ride of morning radio comes this screeching crash toward the edge". Toronto Star. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
- ↑ Pevere, Geoff (30 August 1997). "Stern just wants to be loved (and paid well)". Toronto Star. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
- ↑ Goddard, Peter (3 September 1997). "Stern stuff: Shock jock rips into Canada First broadcast north of border brings flood of complaints". Toronto Star. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
- ↑ Slinger, Joey (4 September 1997). "Taking a Stern view of Canadians". Toronto Star. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
- ↑ Editorial (5 September 1997). "Take Stern measures: Tune him out". Toronto Star. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
- ↑ Goddard, Peter (5 September 1997). "CRTC reeling at taste of Stern's spice". Toronto Star. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
- ↑ Letter to the editor (9 September 1997). "Stern abuses his welcome". Toronto Star. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
- ↑ Goddard, Peter (17 September 1997). "Stations dispute Stern's claim". Toronto Star. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
- ↑ Ferguson, Rob (17 December 1997). "Despite Stern warnings, CHUM keen on Howard". Toronto Star. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
- 1 2 Goddard, Peter (4 June 1998). "Light rock beats shock talk in radio ratings". Toronto Star. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
- ↑ Toljagic, Mark (20 May 2000). "Radio gods give to those from whom it has been taken away ; Edge 102 car giveaway unleashes tales of woe". Toronto Star. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
- ↑ Goddard, Peter (4 June 1998). "Women turning Howard Stern off". Toronto Star. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
- ↑ "Corus to launch "guys only" radio station". Broadcaster Magazine. 20 April 2001. Retrieved 21 July 2016.
- 1 2 Whyte, Murray (29 April 2003). "Can Mojo Radio keep it up?; Ratings still rising as station hosts 2nd birthday bash Uncertain future with evidence of guy culture decline". Toronto Star. Retrieved 5 August 2016.
- 1 2 Ross, Brendan (25 January 2012). "Former DJs Humble and Fred Return to Radio, But Not the Airwaves (For Now)". Torontoist.com. Retrieved 21 July 2016.
- ↑ Burrill, William (14 November 2003). "Radio DJs difficult to identify in a crowd" (PDF). Toronto Star. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
- ↑ Burrill, William (10 May 2001). "Humble Howard not dialed for mojo". Toronto Star. Retrieved 5 August 2016.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Boon, Mike (9 December 2014). "Toronto Mike'd Podcast Episode 100: Humble & Fred". TorontoMike.com. Retrieved 3 August 2016.
- ↑ "Humble & Fred jump to The MIX". Broadcaster Magazine. 9 July 2003. Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved 20 July 2016.
- 1 2 3 McCabe-Lokos, Nick (11 July 2003). "Humble and Fred join MIX after Collins leaves a.m. spot; Morning show duo leaving Mojo Carla too busy to host everyday". Toronto Star. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
- ↑ "Mojo names Oakley new morning man". Broadcaster Magazine. 30 July 2003. Retrieved 21 July 2016.
- ↑ Gray, Jeff (18 September 2003). "Radio's battle for the breakfast club". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 2 August 2016.
- ↑ "Standard Radio Toronto gives a million". Broadcaster Magazine. 20 April 2004. Retrieved 4 August 2016.
- ↑ Menon, Vinay (6 September 2005). "Howard is humbled but Fred is fired; Anemic ratings split MIX morning team". Toronto Star. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
- ↑ Boon, Mike (6 September 2005). "Humble Sans Fred". TorontoMike.com. Retrieved 17 July 2016.
- ↑ Bielski, Zosia (15 July 2006). "Mornings end for Humble Howard". National Post. Archived from the original on 8 May 2013. Retrieved 24 July 2016.
- ↑ Boon, Mike (2 May 2009). "Humble and Fred's 20th Anniversary Podcast of Memories". TorontoMike.com. Retrieved 17 July 2016.
- ↑ Boon, Mike (17 December 2006). "The 17th Annual Humble & Fred Christmas Show". TorontoMike.com. Retrieved 17 July 2016.
- ↑ Boon, Mike (18 December 2010). "Humble and Fred's Gift of Christmas Podcast (2010)". TorontoMike.com. Retrieved 17 July 2016.
- ↑ "Humble and Fred are coming to wreck the Internet!!!!". Canada Newswire. Retrieved 17 October 2011.
- 1 2 Menon, Vinay (14 October 2011). "Humble (and Fred) beginnings". Toronto Star. Retrieved 16 July 2016.
- ↑ Powell, Chris (5 November 2014). "Humble & Fred's Silver Lining". Marketing Mag. Retrieved 5 August 2016.
- ↑ "Bill Herz Joins humbleandfredradio.com". Broadcaster Magazine. 21 November 2011. Retrieved 21 July 2016.
- ↑ Murphy, Jan (21 June 2012). "Making (air)waves". Kingston Whig-Standard. Retrieved 19 July 2016.
- ↑ "Humble and Fred land new radio gig at Newstalk 1010". Toronto Star, January 11, 2013.
- ↑ Boon, Mike (11 January 2013). "Humble and Fred Join Astral Radio". TorontoMike.com. Retrieved 21 July 2016.
- ↑ "Humble And Fred Return To Radio Via Astral Media, CFRB". Mediabase, January 14, 2013.
- ↑ "Newstalk 610 CKTB Welcomes Humble & Fred to Niagara Region". Broadcaster Magazine. 4 February 2013. Retrieved 21 July 2016.
- ↑ Star staff (7 May 2013). "Humble and Fred land show on SiriusXM Canada". Toronto Star. Retrieved 16 July 2016.
- ↑ "SiriusXM Canada to Broadcast Humble & Fred’s 25th Anniversary Live". Broadcaster Magazine. 4 November 2014. Retrieved 21 July 2016.
- ↑ Boon, Mike (13 July 2015). "Newstalk 1010 Cancels Humble & Fred Radio". TorontoMike.com. Retrieved 20 July 2016.