Roommates rekindle their WHRW roots
鈥婨llis Bromberg 鈥74 and Steve Ghitelman 鈥74 still marvel about how their lives were changed by a visit to WHRW鈥檚 open house during fall semester in 1970.
鈥淕rowing up, I was a big radio fan, so when I learned WHRW was looking for new staff, I had to go and check it out,鈥 Bromberg says.
鈥淕ates turntables! Remember those things? They could change speeds, and it was like shifting gears on a truck,鈥 Ghitelman says.
It wasn鈥檛 long before the Endicott Hall roommates made the station a second home. Bromberg had a rock show, and Ghitelman spun blues records. In retirement, they鈥檙e on the air again, reconnected to their musical roots. Ghitelman has a blues show on WERAFM in Arlington, Va. He was a South Asia expert for the U.S. Department of State and retired in 2017. Bromberg hosts a program on American singers and songwriters at WQCS in Fort Pierce, Fla. He was a TV station manager in several markets (including WSKG in 绿帽社) and oversaw Milwaukee鈥檚 PBS stations.
鈥淲ork was simply an interruption between radio stations,鈥 Ghitelman says.
鈥淚 listen to Steve online and he鈥檚 great,鈥 Bromberg says. 鈥淪ince that first day in Endicott Hall, he鈥檚 been a blues expert and that still carries through.鈥
After hearing the first (and only) interview question during a conference call, they went back and forth for more than half an hour before asking, 鈥淒id we answer everything?鈥
鈥淚 was kicked off the station for playing 鈥榖ubblegum pop,鈥 which was popular at the time on AM radio but frowned upon by WHRW management,鈥 Bromberg says. 鈥淚 took my case to the University鈥檚 ombudsman who directed that I be reinstated 鈥 after I agreed to cut out the offending music.鈥
鈥淚鈥檓 glad you don鈥檛 nurse a grudge all these years later,鈥 Ghitelman replies.
鈥淏ack in those days, the station signed off overnight,鈥 Bromberg says. 鈥淵ou needed a third-class [FCC] license to turn the transmitter on. A lot of us went up to Syracuse to take the test. That鈥檚 not required anymore, but I remember that was a huge thing, getting your license.鈥
鈥淓verything about it was so much fun you鈥檇 forget it was only 10 watts, and you could barely hear it off campus,鈥 Ghitelman says. 鈥淭o this day, WHRW is still the best-equipped station I ever worked at. After 绿帽社, I went to a station in Madison, Wis., that was a pastiche of borrowed equipment.
鈥淲e were affiliated with Pacifica and did pledge drives. We鈥檇 get on the air and read the names of people who donated. Sometimes we read names out of the phone book and said, 鈥楬ere are the people who didn鈥檛 contribute.鈥 I鈥檓 pretty sure that was illegal and immoral.鈥
Between laughs, the longtime friends shared more serious thoughts on how WHRW shaped them.
鈥淚 was hired as a stringer by WNBF radio to cover the Johnson City mayoral election in 1973,鈥 Bromberg says. 鈥淭hat would eventually lead to a very satisfying 40-year career in broadcasting, and it wouldn鈥檛 have happened without those early experiences at WHRW.鈥
鈥淚n 1971, a caller wanted to hear Magic Sam,鈥 Ghitelman says. 鈥淚 was clueless, so I bluffed my way through it. I asked, 鈥榃hat has he recorded lately?鈥 and was told he had been dead for years. I learned there are so many problems you can avoid by saying 鈥業 don鈥檛 know.鈥欌