George Junak "Greg Mitchell" Biography

Personal/Company Website: |
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Employment Dates(KFXM/KDUO): |
April 1975 - January 1976, April 1976-August 1976 |
Time Slots while at Station: |
Originally worked weekends and then 6-midnight; was fired & went back to KDES/Palm Springs in early 1976; was asked to come back in April 1976 and again worked the 6-midnight shift |
Stations prior to KFXM/KDUO: |
Did weekends at KDES/Palm Springs |
Stations right after KFXM/KDUO: |
KSOM/Ontario |
All other Stations after KFXM: |
KNDE/Sacramento, KERN/Bakersfield, KMEN/San Bernardino, 91X/San Diego |
Current Employment: |
Owner of California Aircheck |
Children/Grandchildren: |
1 daughter, 2granddaughters |
Education: |
Pasadena City College, San Diego State University, Cal State Northridge |
My Stories about KFXM
Bob West and I both did weekends at KDES/Palm Springs in
1974; Bob left and went to KFXM. One Sunday on my way home from KDES
to the San Fernando Valley in Los Angeles where I was going to Cal State
Northridge during the week, I heard Bob on the air at KFXM and pulled
off I-10 to use a pay phone to call him and say hi. Bob told me that
KFXM PD Ted Brown was really in need of a weekend jock so I sent Ted
a tape and was hired on the phone before the next weekend. That first
weekend I worked midnight-3AM on Sunday morning, drove to Palm Springs
to do 6AM-3PM (6-10AM was running public service tapes; 10-3 on air).
and then returned to KFXM to do 4-7PM. It didn't quite work out as it
took longer than 60 minutes to drive from Palm Springs to Colton and
I didn't get there until about 3:10. After that weekend, Ted Brown changed
my 2nd Sunday shift to 7-midnight and I continued to work 3 airshifts
each Sunday on two different stations. KDES paid $1.65 an hour (minimum
wage); KFXM was a whopping $5 an hour for part-timers.
Getting fired the second time (or maybe it was
the third) from KFXM was the only time I had a new job before I was out
of the building. I was hanging out with the ladies in the Traffic Dept.
while my final check was being cut by the book keeper. Before I was out
the door, Bob West called from KSOM to offer me 6-10PM. He had heard
I was getting canned that day and had cut the evening & overnight shifts to 4 hours to make room
for me. I gave him an immediate yes & started the next night at KSOM.
Unfortunately, KSOM threw all of its power south from Ontario into mostly
unpopulated areas so it had no chance of being a success; during the day
it covered Ontario, parts of Riverside and Corona; at night pretty much
just Ontario and Corona. By years end they had decided to flip it to Spanish
after softening it to a Hot AC from Top 40.
Howard Tullis seemed to think that those KFXM disc jockies would run
up his phone bill and use up all his copy paper. When the office closed
each evening, the phones all over the building would be turned off. The
only outgoing line was in the KDUO studio. While I did not run up Howard's
bill, I quickly figured out how to dial out on those old rotary phones
(the hotline phone in the studio would only receive calls - I think the
rotary dial was taken off the phone) - you could tap out the number you
wanted to call (kind of like a telegraph) using the plastic buttons on
the top that the hand-piece sat on. Worked like a charm in a pinch. And
the copy machine? It was turned off and locked each night but a letter
opener could be slid down to pop the on-off switch buried inside the copier,
should a late night copy ever be needed...Sorry Howard..
If someone like Ted Brown needed to call Howard
Tullis at his Los Angeles office, he had a similar system to his calls
to GM Bob Bunnell. Ted would call person-to-person for "Archie Tullis" and
Howard would refuse the call, usually with some story for the operator
like "Archie's
down at the pool hall; he'll be back in an hour or so" and would then
call Ted back at the station... G.J.