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Clint McKinnon – San Diego's early Democrat; Gloria Penner – KPBS voice of the mundane

Wolfman Jack, the Susan Golding-Dick Silberman marriage, Herman Baca – leader of local Hispanics, Bill Ballance – the seductive radio DJ, Otto Bos – Pete Wilson aide

McKinnon's own newspaper announces his 1948 congressional victory. "Mac was lucky in getting into Congress; he ran against a real boob. Charlie Fletcher was always saying the dumbest things."
McKinnon's own newspaper announces his 1948 congressional victory. "Mac was lucky in getting into Congress; he ran against a real boob. Charlie Fletcher was always saying the dumbest things."

Mac

“The Communists in San Diego had a little cell that was trying to take over the Journal. A general called me up one day; ‘Do you realize you have three Communists in your editorial department?’ One was a city editor, two were on general assignment. I called the president of the guild and told him I was going to have to fire them all, and he said, no, you can’t fire them.”

By Margot Sheehan, Nov. 12, 1992 | Read full article

Wolfman Jack obit in the New York Times, July 3, 1995

Ode to the Wolfman

Sounding like a cross between Ray Charles and a parrot in great pain, the Wolfman sang a complete verse of “Happy Birthday.” On the air, Annette giggled; off the air, in the control room, the engineer grimaced and covered both ears with his hands. The song finished, Wolfman Jack put on “Sixteen Candles.” And as the Crests wished Annette a happy birthday all over again, he wiped his sweaty brow with a tissue.

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By Thomas K. Arnold, July 6, 1995 | Read full article

Gloria Penner. Her radio personality is different from her off-air personality, the one that laughs so hard at her self-deprecating asides that she nearly chokes.

Gloria’s Glories

It’s odd to hear her, hammering away at some local city councilperson about the pros and cons of halfway houses in residential neighborhoods, or about potholes, Penner sounds driven. She elevates the most mundane local matters to Meet the Press status. And hammers and hammers away until she’s satisfied. Listening to this woman lavish her intelligence and extreme curiosity on county supervisors and other bureaucrats, you can’t help but wonder if maybe she has a point.

By Abe Opincar, Nov. 30, 1995 | Read full article

Susan Golding and Brage Golding (right). Golding, daughter of Brage Golding, a former president of San Diego State University, was a young divorcée with two small children and precious little work experience but a burning desire for influence and money.

All in the Family

"Desperate to avoid prosecution, Silberman, a consummate negotiator, made an offer: In exchange for leniency, he would provide incriminating information about Assembly Speaker Willie Brown, the San Francisco Democrat considered the state's second most powerful politician after the governor," according to the Los Angeles Times. "Silberman told the agents that Brown's law firm had connections to businesses with a stake in legislation under the powerful lawmaker's control, and he offered to expose the ties."

By Matt Potter, July 22, 1999 | Read full article

At Sweetwater High School in the late Fifties, he was president of “Los Solteros” (“The Bachelors”), from National City’s west-side barrio. They hung out at Bob’s Coffee Shop at Seventeenth Street and National Avenue, and maybe sling a bottle across the street at the Anglos.

Some People in This Town Don't Like Herman Baca

Baca's aptitude is in organizing his friends. At Sweetwater High School in the late Fifties, he was president of “Los Solteros” (“The Bachelors”), a club of boys from National City’s west-side barrio. The club's usual activity was to hang out at Bob’s Coffee Shop at Seventeenth Street and National Avenue, and maybe sling a bottle across the street at the Anglos — the lettermen and Key Clubbers — who hung out at Oscar’s hamburger stand.

By Joe Applegate, June 21, 1979 | Read full article

Home for Ballance is not in Coronado, the location he announces on the air; it is actually a few miles from the KFMB studios.

Billo: The Salubrious Life and Salacious (Well, Maybe) Opinions of Willis Bennett Ballance

He doesn’t go for large crowds, such as the one at Lehr’s Greenhouse, or “mass enthusiasms. I have a feeling never to move with the crowd. In fact, any time the general public is in favor of something — like astrology — I’m suspicious. I’m not really gregarious at all. Never have been. And I don’t like to go to parties where there is organized hilarity, like at those swinging-singles apartments, those desperate, stucco ghettos, where you are the stuccee.”

By Jeff Smith, March 26, 1981 | Read full article

The Wilsons. The service proceeded, concluding with the singing of “The Rose,” a Bette Midler standard, by Gayle, the governor’s blonde, vivacious second wife.

By Strangers Honored, and by Strangers Mourned

Under Pete Wilson, with the indefatigable assistance of a few close staffers like Otto, the city had grown enormously. Wilson had built a new downtown shopping center. He had finally assented to construction of a trolley line. Before the popular mayor left to become a United States senator, new subdivisions were marching across the hills in the northern part of the city, and the population was growing inexorably toward one million.

By Matt Potter, June 13, 1991 | Read full article

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McKinnon's own newspaper announces his 1948 congressional victory. "Mac was lucky in getting into Congress; he ran against a real boob. Charlie Fletcher was always saying the dumbest things."
McKinnon's own newspaper announces his 1948 congressional victory. "Mac was lucky in getting into Congress; he ran against a real boob. Charlie Fletcher was always saying the dumbest things."

Mac

“The Communists in San Diego had a little cell that was trying to take over the Journal. A general called me up one day; ‘Do you realize you have three Communists in your editorial department?’ One was a city editor, two were on general assignment. I called the president of the guild and told him I was going to have to fire them all, and he said, no, you can’t fire them.”

By Margot Sheehan, Nov. 12, 1992 | Read full article

Wolfman Jack obit in the New York Times, July 3, 1995

Ode to the Wolfman

Sounding like a cross between Ray Charles and a parrot in great pain, the Wolfman sang a complete verse of “Happy Birthday.” On the air, Annette giggled; off the air, in the control room, the engineer grimaced and covered both ears with his hands. The song finished, Wolfman Jack put on “Sixteen Candles.” And as the Crests wished Annette a happy birthday all over again, he wiped his sweaty brow with a tissue.

Sponsored
Sponsored

By Thomas K. Arnold, July 6, 1995 | Read full article

Gloria Penner. Her radio personality is different from her off-air personality, the one that laughs so hard at her self-deprecating asides that she nearly chokes.

Gloria’s Glories

It’s odd to hear her, hammering away at some local city councilperson about the pros and cons of halfway houses in residential neighborhoods, or about potholes, Penner sounds driven. She elevates the most mundane local matters to Meet the Press status. And hammers and hammers away until she’s satisfied. Listening to this woman lavish her intelligence and extreme curiosity on county supervisors and other bureaucrats, you can’t help but wonder if maybe she has a point.

By Abe Opincar, Nov. 30, 1995 | Read full article

Susan Golding and Brage Golding (right). Golding, daughter of Brage Golding, a former president of San Diego State University, was a young divorcée with two small children and precious little work experience but a burning desire for influence and money.

All in the Family

"Desperate to avoid prosecution, Silberman, a consummate negotiator, made an offer: In exchange for leniency, he would provide incriminating information about Assembly Speaker Willie Brown, the San Francisco Democrat considered the state's second most powerful politician after the governor," according to the Los Angeles Times. "Silberman told the agents that Brown's law firm had connections to businesses with a stake in legislation under the powerful lawmaker's control, and he offered to expose the ties."

By Matt Potter, July 22, 1999 | Read full article

At Sweetwater High School in the late Fifties, he was president of “Los Solteros” (“The Bachelors”), from National City’s west-side barrio. They hung out at Bob’s Coffee Shop at Seventeenth Street and National Avenue, and maybe sling a bottle across the street at the Anglos.

Some People in This Town Don't Like Herman Baca

Baca's aptitude is in organizing his friends. At Sweetwater High School in the late Fifties, he was president of “Los Solteros” (“The Bachelors”), a club of boys from National City’s west-side barrio. The club's usual activity was to hang out at Bob’s Coffee Shop at Seventeenth Street and National Avenue, and maybe sling a bottle across the street at the Anglos — the lettermen and Key Clubbers — who hung out at Oscar’s hamburger stand.

By Joe Applegate, June 21, 1979 | Read full article

Home for Ballance is not in Coronado, the location he announces on the air; it is actually a few miles from the KFMB studios.

Billo: The Salubrious Life and Salacious (Well, Maybe) Opinions of Willis Bennett Ballance

He doesn’t go for large crowds, such as the one at Lehr’s Greenhouse, or “mass enthusiasms. I have a feeling never to move with the crowd. In fact, any time the general public is in favor of something — like astrology — I’m suspicious. I’m not really gregarious at all. Never have been. And I don’t like to go to parties where there is organized hilarity, like at those swinging-singles apartments, those desperate, stucco ghettos, where you are the stuccee.”

By Jeff Smith, March 26, 1981 | Read full article

The Wilsons. The service proceeded, concluding with the singing of “The Rose,” a Bette Midler standard, by Gayle, the governor’s blonde, vivacious second wife.

By Strangers Honored, and by Strangers Mourned

Under Pete Wilson, with the indefatigable assistance of a few close staffers like Otto, the city had grown enormously. Wilson had built a new downtown shopping center. He had finally assented to construction of a trolley line. Before the popular mayor left to become a United States senator, new subdivisions were marching across the hills in the northern part of the city, and the population was growing inexorably toward one million.

By Matt Potter, June 13, 1991 | Read full article

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