Circling The Drain

Johnny B, Jay and Jim welcome radio veteran Matt Murphy for an unforgettable conversation spanning his upbringing in Georgia, the twists and turns of his eclectic radio career, and the hard-won philosophies that animate his celebrated talk shows. Matt recounts personal battles, including family struggles, memorable firings, and the deeply moving "Liberty Bell" segment that reveals radio’s power to change lives. The team explores the joys, challenges, and responsibilities of modern radio, with plenty of behind-the-scenes laughs and heartfelt moments along the way.

Timed Highlights:
- [00:00:00] Matt Murphy’s introduction and the heartwarming story of "Liberty Bell"
- [00:03:14] Growing up in Thompson, Georgia: Family challenges and radio dreams
- [00:06:10] First steps into radio: Following in his father’s unpredictable footsteps
- [00:09:03] From college theater to talk radio: Early lessons and live mishaps
- [00:14:25] Firing stories and resilience: Lessons from early radio stations
- [00:18:13] Building a career in Montgomery and Birmingham; launching Talk 99.5
- [00:25:10] "Liberty Bell" story in depth: Impact, love, and community response
- [00:31:49] The importance of making radio about the audience, not the ego
- [00:49:13] Discussing radio host safety after on-air tragedy
- [00:56:10] Changing political views: From "Joe Liberal" to Liberty-first values
- [01:04:27] The art and emotion of caller-driven radio, live moments, and staying unscripted
- [01:08:34] Best firing stories: Humor and humility behind the microphone
- [01:15:30] Wrapping up: Podcast promotion and mutual admiration


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https://www.facebook.com/john.e.bozeman
Follow Jay Harper:
https://www.facebook.com/harperjeff
Follow Jim:
www.jmvos.com

Circling The Drain is produced by It's Your Show dot Co
www.itsyourshow.co

What is Circling The Drain ?

Circling The Drain is a show about the current state of the music and radio businesses as well as culture in general!

Hosted by John E. Bozeman and Jay Harper along with Jim McCarthy as Co-Host/Executive Producer.

John has had a storied career in music and talk radio, most notably as the Executive Producer for the late and legendary Phil Valentine.

Jay also has has a long career in radio as Announcer, Play-by-Play, Voice and On-Camera Actor. He was also an Artist Rep for MCA records.

Jim McCarthy ALSO has had a tremendous career in radio since 1996 and has since brought his consulting/producing skillset to the podcast world.

Circling the Drain is produced by ItsYourShow.co

Unknown: JB, I knew that if he
would, if I could get him into

the studio, I knew how much love
he would be showered with, yeah,

and so I got him in the studio,
and he told his story, and his

story was that he was in the
Navy for four years. He served

on Navy submarines in the 1970s
he served his nation in a way

that we, you know, beg people to
do on the regular, and I wanted

to make sure that people
understood that backstory and

understood some of the issues
that he went through. And

frankly, I think many of them
were horribly unfair to people

that were just trying to live
their lives back in the day, I

got him to tell that story and
the level of people that came

out of the woodwork. And I'm not
talking about just listeners.

I'm talking about, you know,
mayors and Congress people

calling up and saying, We love
you. We appreciate you. Thank

you for your service and and he
didn't kill himself.

Welcome to a podcast about music
and entertainment before it all

goes down the disposal. This is
circling the drain.

Hey, welcome back to circling
the drain. You know Jay Harper,

yeah. Hi there, Johnny B, that's
right. And now you got

Jim McCarthy over there. Hello.
And of course, me. Johnny

Bozeman, who cares? Johnny B is
here, and we've got, we've got a

special guest, a superstar, a
superstar from Super talk. We do

seven. WTM, can't wait to meet
him. Matt Murphy,

thank you guys, thank you for
inviting me, yeah, but thank you

for coming. And we can't pay you
anything, but by gosh, we got

you. You got your cardboard box.
Cardboard box. Thank you.

Just as long as there's no drug
sniffing dogs around, we'll be

fine. Yeah, you may want to, you
may want to wait till you, wait

till you get home to try some of
that.

Well, I regularly, I regularly
expect that I'll be fired soon.

So this cardboard box will come
in

handy for packing up my things.
You don't have many things,

apparently, not a lot of things.
Well,

he works in radio, right?

But speaking of we have worked
together for a brief moment. We

did, it was a couple of years we
did at Super talk, 99 seven.

WTN, where, you know Jay Harper
still?

Yeah, I still hang around. He's
around

very often. He does the traffic
reports with popcorn going on,

with the old school teletype
going on in the background, fill

in on news occasionally. Oh
yeah, we love having Jay. We

love Jay. Yes,

well, we love you. Well, thank
you. And we've been wanting to,

you know, because I, even though
we worked together for so long,

I never really got to get the
matt Murphy story? I've heard

some of it, and that's why we
wanted to have you in, because

we want to learn more about Matt

Murphy. I didn't think this was
that type of show.

This is your life. Matt Murphy,
no, because you came to us from

you actually were born in
Georgia. I was in Tom, Thompson,

Thompson, T, H, O, M, S O N, no.
P, in time. No. P, there you go.

Thompson, yeah, but everybody
tries to put a P in Thompson.

And there's also a Thomas stun.
There's a Thomasville, there's a

Thompson Ville, boy, there's not
a lot of, not a lot, not a lot

of thinking going on in

Georgia. Didn't have creative
people behind that.

We're rubes over there, across
the state line. So, yeah. So

Thompson, Georgia, which is just
outside of Augusta, it's a

suburb of

Augusta, Georgia, yeah. So you,
how long did you live there? And

I was born

in mcduffy County Hospital,
September 1, 1973 the world has

known no peace nor quiet ever
since. And I grew up there and

lived there until I went to
college at West Georgia College

in Carrollton. So what got you
into radio? My friend, my dad.

So my dad, my mother, had
malignant brain cancer in 1978

when I was five years old and my
father left the family. It was

me, my older brother, my older
sister, and my dad decided that

the quote that I always heard
growing up was I can't handle

this, so he left, and my mother
went through brain surgery. She

was given a 20% chance to live
two to five years. She lived 25

years. She died at the age of 53
so she lived a lot longer than

people thought, and it was an
absolute miracle that we had her

for the length of time that we
had her that we had her, yeah,

but all of that to say, my
father was a radio guy, and he

was kind of a wanderer as as
folks in the 1970s and 80s were

want to be, right? We're Gypsies
in those days, and socially

radio, yeah, well, and my dad
would jump from town to town,

and God love him. I mean, he's
passed away now too. But my dad

would, would jump from town to
town until the point that he

would, he would reach a level of
irresponsibility in the

building, and people figured him
out, and then he would get out

of it, right? So he would BS
people for a while, get about a

year or two out of a radio
station, and then move on to the

next town. And so he was in
Macon, Georgia, Charleston,

South Carolina, Valdosta,
Georgia, Greenville, South

Carolina, Augusta, a couple of
times. Thompson, of course. I

mean, just all of Milledgeville.
I mean, he was just jumping all

over the place. And the sad part
about it was he was a great

radio guy. I mean, he was
fabulous on the air. So, long

story short, I didn't know my
dad very well until I was 12

years old, and my dad came back
into my life, unbeknownst to us,

because of court order, because
he wasn't paying child support.

And eventually he had to go to
court, and the judge said,

you're gonna need to start
paying. He owed like, $50,000

for the three kids in child
support, and he said you're

gonna have to start paying on
this start paying on this. He

wanted to put him in jail. And
my mother actually spoke up for

him and said, No, he's no good
to us in there. But a part of

that, and once again, we didn't
know any of this, was that he

had to take us for the summer,
for two weeks for the summer.

And, you know, we got to
experience a dad. I didn't know

this guy. He left when I was
five, but we went to, he lived

in Macon at the time, and worked
at, I think it was W, D, E N, in

Macon, Georgia.

Oh, yeah, a big deal. Yeah. I
used to call that station. Did

you really MCA record?

Oh, there you go. Yeah. So my
dad went, he was music director

over there, and he was the
afternoon drive guy, and he,

they called him Dr Lee. I mean,
it was, it would, you know, Dr

Lee, curing all your country
music, blues, you know, I like,

oh, it was this hook, right? And
so he it was the whole Dr

shtick, yes, and, and so I went
in. I was almost 12 years old.

It was the summer of my Yeah, I
was right before I turned 12.

And, and I went to work with
him, and I watched what he did,

and I was fascinated. And he
told me, he said, When the

light, you know, he had one of
those light bulb, you know,

switches that when the mic comes
on, the light bulb goes on. And

he said, when the light goes on,
you've got to be quiet. You've

got to pay attention. And so I
had this perception that when my

dad started talking, everybody
had to be quiet and pay

attention to him. And I'm like,
I want that. That's what I want

that in my life. And so I became
fascinated with it, and I went

home and I just I didn't see my
dad a lot. After that summer, we

kind of went back to normal. But
when I was 14 years old, I

applied to the local radio
station in Thompson, Georgia, W

T, H, O, W t, WA, and it was an
am FM combo. You guys will get a

kick out of this. I thought it
was big time, right? 3000 watt

FM country music station. Who
your better? Country FM, which?

We're not the best, but we're
better. And and W, Tw is a 1000

watt full service am radio
station. It was called the heart

of Thompson, your favorite easy
listening hits from the 40s to

the 80s. So they were, you know,
full service. They had, but

here's the fascinating thing,
guys, and I might be getting

ahead of this a little bit, but
they had, back in the day, they

had a news director. They had a
continuity director. I mean,

this is a 1000 watt, 3000 watt
combo. Sure, local, you know, a

town that serves, I mean, these
radio stations served a county

of about 25 to 30,000 people,
and they had all of these

positions. But anyway, I
applied. I was too young.

Obviously. I was 14. I didn't
realize that when I turned 15, I

was working at Winn Dixie and
and and Mike wall, the general

manager and eventual owner of
the radio station, called me,

and I did not real. I did not
realize that he had worked with

my dad when he called me up and
he told me later on in life, he

said, I didn't really want to
hire you, because I figured if

you turned out anything like
your dad, you would just be a

big old piecing Jim.

No wonder we got along with my
dad. Every time I meet somebody

in Nashville that worked with my
dad and radio, it's always, oh,

you're not like, yeah, I have to
go into that. So what got you so

you you did end up going to
Montgomery, Alabama. I know that

you is that where you started
talk radio?

Montgomery was where I started
talk so, you know, I worked in

high school at W t, w, T, H, O,
and I knew I loved radio, I

loved performing, and that's
what I looked at it as

performance. And so I decided
that I wanted to be an actor,

and that's when I went to
school, went to college, I I was

a theater major, and I also
worked at the college radio

station. And at a college radio
station, I learned the freedom

of doing whatever the hell you
wanted to do, whenever you

wanted to do it and ask
forgiveness later, yes, which

was a very, very nice lesson.
But I also learned the very

important lesson that there are
there are lines. One of them i i

regularly would play. We were
still playing records. We were

still like a college jukebox
before they turned us to NPR.

And we would, you know, so we're
playing, you know, we've got

these stacks of records. And I
would play live cuts off album,

so I could go to the McDonald's
and get better. I put in the

morning. Yeah, that's radio

I was playing. That's why red so
vine became so big, because

those songs were so long.

So no, I was live version of
whipping post is 22 minutes. So

I would put on live version of
whipping post, get my car and go

to McDonald's. And so I got into
a fender bender. I got into a

fender bender the parking lot of
McDonald's, and the cops are

there, and I got my radio on
listening to

that record. I'm looking at a
cop going, can I go back to the

race? Like, no, I've got
paperwork. What are you talking

about? You talking about at a
radio station? So that was a

little bit of a line that I
couldn't go back from that.

So, you know, I loved when they
switched the format. It's kind

of funny. My the director of
mass communications, Dr Chester

Gibson, which was a complete,
you know, I don't know, hard ass

is what he was. But he, he we
had a love hate relationship,

because I think he saw potential
in me, but he was also just

really, really hard on me. And
when they flipped the radio

station to Public Radio, not,
you know, it was, it wasn't NPR,

I think it was Public Radio
International, is what they

called it within, you know, all
of us that just used it as

jukebox we're kind of out of a
out of a gig for, for lack of a

better term. And he brought me
in, and he said, Have you ever

thought about doing a talk show?
And I said, Well, no. And he

said, I think you would be good.
And I invite I was liberal as, I

mean, you know, I was, I was a
sophomore in in college, and I

was in the theater program. I
mean, I was as liberals, as as

they come at that point. Yeah.
And he said, I think you do a

good job, and we want some local
programming. So why don't you

think about it? So I did it. I
did a one hour daily radio show

on the college radio station.
It. I still have tapes. No, you

can't hear them because they're
horrible. It's just really bad.

But in that, I got a bug out of
that. I got just a buzz and

that, you know, that's like a 50
watt, or whatever it is, one of

those college things where it
gets to the Student Center, and

that's,

right, yeah, you could put
speakers on top of the building

and reach more people.

But, man, I thought it was big
time, right? Everybody's

listening to me and, and so, you
know, I traveled a little bit. I

moved to Connecticut for about
nine months. If you have nine

months to live, move to
Connecticut, because by the time

the nine months is up, you'll
want to die. We're in

Connecticut. We lived in
Middletown, okay, I grew up in

Danbury. Oh, well, see, yeah,
Jim knows, yeah, Jim's 25 years.

I get it. It was, it was a no
Connecticut. It's a beautiful

state. The people are different.
That's what

it's basically just like. It
looks like Tennessee, just with

a lot more taxes and jackals.

That's a great, great way. But I
was at Middletown for about nine

months, and could not get a gig
in radio up there to save my

life, because in the in the
south, right? I don't have a

southern accent. In the south, I
sound like everybody else, but

let me promise you, in
Connecticut, they're like, What?

Radio rubber band in his mouth.
Who's this hillbilly?

I moved back home to Georgia. I
was looking for something to do.

I worked part time in Georgia.
Time in Georgia, and I got a

call from a buddy of mine that I
worked with. I got my first full

time gig in country music radio
in Augusta, doing seven. So my

arc there was just mark was I
got the job doing seven to

midnight, and they liked me, and
so they promoted me to mid days,

and they liked me there, and
they promoted me to afternoons,

and they didn't like me so much
there, so they moved me back to

mid days, and apparently I
wasn't good enough for mid days

anymore either. So they moved
they moved me back to seven to

midnight, and then they changed
the format of the radio station

to urban. So that ended that,
and that was like all in the

span of 18 months. But the one
note that I remember getting

from my program director all the
time, guy by the name of Bob

Raleigh, was, would you please
shut up? Nobody, I mean, nobody

cares what you think about
anything they want to hear.

Shania Twain.

He's like, Yeah, haha. He went,
he came

into the studio one day, and he
goes, he goes, these are the

words I want you to coming out
of your mouth. Here's Garth

Brooks.

That's it. So I gave you cards.
That's what I got. Cards. Read

these cards, liner, liner cards.

We did that for a minute, and I
realized, well, maybe this music

radio thing is it for me. And it
was around that time I got a

call from a buddy of mine and he
Well, the format flipped. And I

went back working at Waffle
House trying to figure out what

to do. And a buddy of mine
called in Montgomery and said,

Hey, we're we're. Starting up
this talk radio station to

compete with the heritage talk
station, and if you're

interested, you can produce the
morning show. And so I went over

there to do traffic in the
afternoons. I did some news in

the afternoons, and I was
producing the morning show. And

about five months into that,
they fired me too because they

felt like it wasn't working. But
Don Markwell in Montgomery,

Alabama, had heard me. He was
the guy that ran the heritage

talk station, W, A, C, V, and he
called me up, and I'll never

forget it, the first meeting
that we had. Markwell was a very

imposing guy with this huge,
deep voice. And, you know, I'm a

young like 25 I'm 25 years old,
and the Bob gamba curta was the

guy that had started the morning
show, and he had been a

television guy who thought he
could do radio. And talk radio

is littered with TV people that
think that they can do talk

radio, and then they find out
it's a little bit harder than

paying for it. And gambacurta
called his show gambacurta

against the morning. He thought
it was oh, gamba curtain against

the morning. The morning against
the morning. He thought it was

combative and it was tough.
Yeah. And so I sit down with

Markwell, I'm interviewing for a
job. And he said, So you

produced gamba curta against the
morning. And I said, Yes, sir, I

did. And there's this long
pause, and he said, the morning

won.

Yes, sir. He took a shot. And
here's the wonderful thing, he

created an afternoon news
position for me. He created a

local afternoon show. Oh, wait,
a morning news position for me.

He created a local afternoon
show for me, because, and, you

know, look, I think that there
are plenty of other people that

are far more talented than me in
the business, but he saw a

certain amount of talent in me.
And he said, You're wasting your

talent doing what you're doing
over there. You need to come

over here, and we need and he
was one of the old school guys

that would literally look for
talent and try to bring it in

and cultivate it in a way that
radio does not do anything and

hasn't for some time. Yeah,
that's right, that's a concept.

So so, you know? So I went to
work in Montgomery at wacv, you

know? I worked briefly for the
competitors, interestingly

enough, at cumulus, who are the
guys that fired me. And at wacv,

I would get up in the morning, I
did an hour of like news, which

was really just rip and read. I
had no interest in making it a

good product. It was between six
and 7am so I would rip and read

for an hour of it was a news
hour. Just here's what's

happening in the news, here's
what's happening in sports,

here's what's happening in
weather, here's what's happening

in traffic. And then at seven
o'clock, I would produce the

sports show that came on from
seven to nine, and do news for

them from nine to 11. I produced
Don Markwell show. I would take,

get a break from noon until
four, and then I come back and

do my own show four until six
o'clock. We did that for a few

years before Birmingham called

and you went to Birmingham, and
you actually worked at 99.5

which I actually worked at
before it was a rock station, k

99 and then it became a country
station,

and people still talked about K
99 when I was there. What? 20

years later? Oh, yeah,
Birmingham.

I don't know if you've got the
same feeling. Birmingham was a

great radio town right at the
time I was down there, radio was

like, You were above TV to them.

Well, they had, they had people
like Johnny B they had people

like and I got to meet some of
these folks before. I mean, now,

sadly, a lot of them are gone,
but people like Doug Layton, who

was the voice of Alabama, he was
a color guy for Alabama

football, and Doug did morning
radio, John Ed, Willoughby,

Tommy Charles, were two guys who
were just absolute. I mean, it

was back then when, when these
guys were absolute, just

monumental icons.

Well, they were the ones. I
think it was TC and John Ed, or

maybe one of them that began the
Beatle burning. You know, the

burning the Beatle records over
John Lennon's, you know, Jesus

Christ remark.

It was, I think it was, it was
Doug Layton, and it was one. It

was two of those three, because
Tommy Charles and John Ed did

stuff together. Doug did stuff
by himself. And then eventually

John Ed and Doug. I think it was
John Ed and Doug, one way or the

other. I asked him about that
before Doug passed away, and

Doug and Doug said, I mean, it
was a radio stunt. Oh, sure. I

mean, it was 100% a radio stud.
It became huge. It exploded. He

said, We had no idea that it
would explode, explode in the

way that it did. Oh, yeah, he
said, but when it did, man, we

were like, Let's go. I.

I need all these southern girls,
you know, burning their album if

they're gonna talk about Jesus
like that, John Lennon needs to

go to church. But what did it
become a talk station? Because I

did know when that happened.

So it was actually when, when I
first, when I first got to

Birmingham. Work for a number of
years at Crawford broadcasting,

who's primarily a religious
broadcaster, but he wanted to

branch out into secular radio,
and he did it too. He created a

radio station, and they put me
on in mid days, and then

eventually I got afternoons, and
eventually I got fired there

too. So, I mean, because you get
fired? Well, I mean, I got let

go because they changed formats
again, sure. Well, I hooked up

with WAPI 1170 AM, oh, yeah, and
99.5 was, let's see. They went

from light rock to country, then
back to soft rock and then back

to country. Wow, in the span of
like, four years. Wow. And they

were Nash icon. It was
Birmingham's version of Nash

icon, and it was cumulus
broadcasting that was doing it,

and it was not working. And it
wasn't it wasn't working just

for I think these are issues
systemic with radio right now,

that music radio is having its
own, you know, set of issues,

and it's 100,000 watt radio
station, and I knew that to be

successful, I was a program
director of 1170 and I was doing

the morning show. We had an
afternoon host and we had a news

person, that was it. And I knew
that in order to generate any

level of success, we had to have
an FM it was it was just the

nature of what we were doing.
This was, this was back, I

guess, in 2012 2013 and so we
got a new general manager in the

building, and the old General
Manager made a lot of promises

that were a lot of lies to me,
and that's fine, but, I mean,

they were, I mean, he just, you
know, he just that. I was like,

Hey, would you I didn't think
that happened. No, you would go,

you would go to this guy, and I
would say, Listen, I really

need, can you just pitch this
FM? Here's my concept. We really

need an FM signal. We can make a
lot of money. Oh, I, you know, I

do it. But you know, you know
the corporate guys, they say no.

And I, you know, I made the
pitch again. And you know, you

find out later on that he never,
he never even talked to well,

the new guy comes in. Is a great
man by the name of David walls,

and we sit down with him and my
good buddy Ryan Haney, who's the

Program Director of the sports
station and the operations

manager, said, Don't hit him
with the FM thing yet. Just let

him get his feet underneath him
before you go off on because he

knew how badly I wanted that
99.5 signal to be taught, yeah.

And he said, Don't hit him with
it yet. And so we sit down, and

he's like, all right, what do
you need, Matt to make, you

know, W API successful? And I
said, Well, you know, we had

made some changes. I said, well,
we need to move me back here,

and we need to do this, and we
need to invest here. And, you

know, I gave him kind of the
pitch. And he said, and we do

these things, API makes me
money. I was like, Oh no. And he

was like, what? And I said, No,
no, you're not gonna, you're not

gonna make any money. I said,
this will probably get us a

little bit better ratings, but
you're not gonna make any money

on it. And he goes, What do you
mean? I was like, no, no. The

only way you're gonna make money
on this is if you give me that.

FM, Ryan, these eyes get really
thick. And he was like, what?

And I said, we needed an FM
signal. And he said, and he

said, Why aren't you pitching me
that? And I pointed to Haney. I

was like, because he told me
not. So he said, Tell me what

your idea is. And I pitched my
idea, and I told him, and this

was a it was a miracle. It was
in 2015 by then, I said you, if

you can convince the powers that
be to invest $300,000 a year

into that signal above what
we're already spending on

current talent, it will make you
money. And he convinced them,

and so we launched talk 99 five.
And it's ironic that one of the

radio stations that I used in my
presentation to corporate to

prove to them, to demonstrate to
them that the concept works. Was

super talk, 99 seven. WTN,
interesting. And I was like,

this is working in Nashville,
Tennessee, exactly what I want

to do in Birmingham, Alabama is
already succeeding. And you tell

me that it's not making money.
And they, they bought it, and we

launched it in the we launched
it in the spring of 2016 and we

could not have launched it at a
better time, obviously, because

of, well, no, no, I'm sorry, am
I right? 2016 2015 my gosh, I'm

getting old. My dates are
getting missed. No doubt. I

guess they're nine years old. So
it was, it was It wasn't 2016 no

doubt. So the funny thing is, is
that we wanted to really hyper

focus on local issues, and
Donald Trump came along and just

blew on.

Well, the cool thing about you
that I've always loved, I. And

this story really grabbed me.
Was a story out of Birmingham

while you were at 99 was Liberty
Bell. Oh yeah, yeah. Tell us

about Liberty bill. That was a
very touching

story. Well, you know, if we you
know, people ask, you know, and

you guys get asked this all the
time. If you've been in radio

for as long as you know,
collectively, all of us have,

you have these moments and these
experiences, and people want to

know You know, the best people
that you've ever best people

that you've ever interviewed and
the best moments that you had in

radio. And I've always felt like
the best moments come a

organically and B, for me, at
least, they're the moments that

truly touch people and that
impact and affect lives. And so

this guy, Liberty Bell, was a
regular caller. And we all, if

you've been around talk radio,
you listen to talk radio long

enough, you know, you understand
that we have regulars and we

have, you know, and you they
come on, they call every day.

They want to talk every day. And
I had a number of regulars that

would call the show, and Liberty
Bell was one of those regulars.

Liberty Bell was a liberal.
Liberty Bell was a drag show

queen. I guess his real name was
Sean or Ron Ronald, Sean Simon,

oh yeah, and he, he was a
longtime gay activist in the

1970s and 1980s in in Birmingham
and in the 90s and 2000s he had

translated that into just
harassing talk radio hosts, you

know, calling us up. And he was
a great caller and a great

personality, very flamboyant
personality, but he would, he

would come to our events in full
drag. I mean, it was hilarious,

and Ron was not an attractive
man.

Why is that much less

go that way, doesn't it? Why is
always some guy that's, you

know, sitting at home, that's,
you know,

just does not he's not a good
looking man to begin

with. What will make this look
better? Something was

sparkles. So he was a regular
caller, and I just, you know, I

appreciated the dynamic and his
tenaciousness. And one day he

calls me up and he tells me that
he wanted, he said, I just want

to tell you goodbye. And he just
didn't sound like himself, and

he said, I want to tell you
goodbye. And I was like, oh,

what's going on? Are you, you
know, I'm thinking, are you

leaving? Are you are you moving
out of town? What's happening?

And he said, Well, he said, I'm
50. I said, eight. I think he's

58, years old. And he said, The
gay people don't want me

anymore. They don't have any
respect for what I did for them

in the 70s. They don't have any
respect for what I did for him

in the 1980s they just think
that I'm an old I won't use the

word that he used, but I mean
that I'm just an old drag hag,

an old queen, an old queen, and
they don't like me. Said, you

the straight folks are never
going to accept me, so I'm going

to kill myself. And I was like,
what? And he said, I'm going to

I've decided that I'm out of
here. I'm going to get out of

here. And I said, and I get
emotionally just telling the

story, but yeah, I said, I said,
Well, do me a favor. And, and I

said, do me a favor. I said, do
me a personal favor before you

kill yourself. And he said,
What's that? And I said, Would

you mind coming to the studio
before you do it and just

telling everybody your story?
Because I don't think everybody

knows it. And I did, yeah, and
he agreed to do that. And I knew

JB, I knew that if he would, if
I could get him into the studio,

I knew how much love he would be
showered with, yeah, and so I

got him in the studio, and he
told his story, and his story

was that he was in the Navy for
four years. He served on Navy

submarines in the 1970s he
served his nation in a way that

we, you know, beg people to do
on the regular. And and I and,

and I wanted to make sure that
people understood that backstory

and understood some of the
issues that he went through. And

frankly, I think many of them
were horribly unfair to people

that were just trying to live
their lives back in the day. And

we, we told he, I got him to
tell that story and the level of

people that came out of the
woodwork. And I'm not talking

about just listeners. I'm
talking about, you know, mayors

and Congress people calling up
and saying, We love you. We

appreciate you. Thank you for
your service. And and he didn't

kill himself. He I felt, I feel
like every every person has

value, whether they know it or
not, and I My goal was to show

him the value that he had, and
we managed to do that

well. And that's why I've always
been a big fan of yours, because

that's what I got out of you.
And I think, I think, I think

you even said it in a article I
read that covered you when you

were coming up here, that you
when you first got into radio,

was all about you, which we're
all like that. The whole reason

you get into it is kind of an
ego thing. But when you get into

talk radio, you start to learn
it's not all about you. It's

actually helping people. It's
the audience, and that's what

really turned me on about you.
In fact, when you were going to

come up here to Nashville, you
were about to start and you were

at a welcome center, the Welcome
Center down, you know, by the

state line, right? And my wife
and I were listening in the car,

and we about just wanted to
drive down there and welcome you

to I dug you from the minute I
heard you on the radio. I became

a fan.

Well, thank you. And I dug you.
I dug, I dig, both of you guys.

I mean, I think it's awesome.
No, the realization was because

it was, I mean, and I still have
an ego. I mean, we all have,

well, you have to, I mean, we'll
have a certain level of ego if

you're involved in this
business, in any level of

broadcasting. And I still have
that. But it I realized that it

became so much more fun. And I
didn't realize it at the time,

but I recognized that if I made
it about the people that were

calling in, if you make it about
the issues and the people, then

the people are drawn to you
more. But then slowly but

surely, I realized that I was
having so much more fun. It

became so much more important to
me when it wasn't so much about

me, right, and it was about the
people that gravitated to us for

whatever reason, for
entertainment purposes or for

very important reasons, or for
the news that they get from talk

radio or the camaraderie or the
fellowship. And I think a lot of

people gravitate to what we do,
or at least they used to,

because they sincerely want to
be around people that they feel

like, understand them and get
them and they you truly become

family to a lot of these folks.
That's what

I love about. I think WT ends
audience is very unique. And I

think that's that's why when,
when you would I think it was

the first time you were on WTN,
and not that my, what my, my

opinion mattered to anybody. I
remember texting Dan mandis, and

I said, Man, this is your guy,
and I think he already knew that

anyway. But,

I mean, I don't know. I think
the jury might still be but I

will say this, and not to get
terribly maudlin on the subject,

but there were very, very few. I
didn't know Jay at the time. We

met a little bit afterwards, but
there were there. I felt like

that. I had the goods to be
successful in Nashville, but

there were very few people in
that building that I wanted to

impress, and you were one of
them. I mean, there's no

question about it. I wanted
Johnny B's approval. Still do,

as a matter of fact, but now, I
mean, because I have such

respect for the people that did
it in the way that we have done

it, and that's not to say that
there weren't other people in

the building that have done I
mean, I love Dan Mantis to

death. I mean, I love all those
guys. I'm not I'm not knocking

any of them, but I knew your
backstory enough to know that

you came through in the way that
you did, and I had such respect

for your relationship with Phil
and for what you and Phil built

over the years in Nashville. And
I'm like, Well, if I can't get

this guy on board, then I'm
probably screwed. I think it

was pretty obvious that you had
made it, because we were having

a bad snow day, and Matt and I
were sitting, we were against a

wall there, just talking and the
and the operation the operations

manager is never gonna forget
this story. The Operations

Manager comes up to to Matt and
goes, Hey, man, we got you all

set up across the street. You
know, just drop my name.

Everything will be taken care
of. And I'm waiting on him to

say the same to me. All he does
is come to me and go, Hey John,

good luck getting home. My
version of that, my version of

that story. I tell that story.
Jay, yeah, he's told me that a

number of times. Charlie comes
around the corner and he goes,

Matt, and it's like, it's a five
minute diatribe. Matt, we

appreciate you so much. Thank
you for sticking in there with

us. We know we've got you always
blah, blah, blah. We got you set

up the Best Western and just you
just say, money. If there's

anything you need, you just give
me a call. And we appreciate you

so much. And just, God bless you
and everything you're doing. And

we appreciate you. Do you need a
couple of dollars? And then

there's a pause, and he looks,
he goes, Oh, hey, Johnny, do you

think he did that on purpose?

Well, can you tell the story
about how you came up to

Nashville, how you got to talk
to Dan? Because I love that

story.

So, I mean, it's obviously very,
I mean, it starts off in a very

sad way, because, and it's sad
the way that some people, you go

back to talking about egos,
yeah, it's sad the way that.

Some people do their business in
this business. And what I mean

by that is that Dan, Dan told me
later, Dan Mantis, who is our

morning guy on Super talk 99 and
he's a great guy, Marconi award

winner. And I told him that was
gonna happen. Oh yeah, there's

no question about it. And, and
Dan was just named the by the

way, let me give it a little
shout. Oh, I love those. I saw

that the Nashville scene is a
liberal rag in Nashville, and

they do these annual best Dubs,
and they have the best

conservative category,

which Phil used to win
regularly, right? Yeah, number

one all the time.

So this year, the winner of the
Best conservative of Nashville,

according to Nashville scene,
was none,

and in second place Dan Manders.

So Dan said, this morning, oh,
it's great. I'm second to none.

Well, I guess you are. And I
told him, I said, I got I called

him. I said, I've got that beat.
He goes, What do you mean? And I

said, last year, you know, the
Tennessean Does, does these,

best of visual things, best of
music, city things, and they had

a best radio personality
category. And I have no idea how

it happened, but I won the Best
radio personality category for

last year. This year, they don't
have the category, the category,

good Lord, if Bobby bones can't
win every year.

No, so, so I, you know,
obviously we none of, I mean, we

were all praying for Phil and
hoping that Phil got better. And

when, when Phil sadly passed
away. You know, I had been, this

was going into the sixth year of
doing morning radio in

Birmingham and being the Program
Director of talk 99 five. And I

felt like we had conquered the
mountain. We had beaten the

heritage talk station, the
quote, unquote rush station in

the market. And, you know, I
kind of had felt like I had done

everything that I could do, and
I never wanted to be a program

director. And five years of
managing people when you don't

really want to manage people, is
exhausting, and I got a great

deal of satisfaction out of it,
and I got a great deal back, but

I was ready to move on, so I
knew that, and I was watching

what was happening in Nashville,
and I knew how similar, or at

least I felt that I knew how
similar the markets were. And so

I wrote when after Phil passed,
I wrote Dan a message, and I

said, I know you're getting
inundated with people right now,

but let me know if I can help
you out in any way. And you

know, the next day, he wrote
back and said, Thanks,

appreciate it. And so about two
days later, three days later, I

wrote him a note, and I said, By
the way, I'm looking to move on.

I work for cumulus. I would love
the opportunity to sit down and

talk with you about possibly
being the guy to replace Phil

and or at least being considered
for the radio station. And he

didn't write me back, and so I
followed up, like, two days

later by saying, Oh, by the way,
I'm going to be in Nashville

this weekend. I'm visiting some
friends in Nashville this

weekend, so I'm there anyway. If
you want to sit down and talk,

let me know. And this was, like,
on a Tuesday or something, and I

didn't hear back Wednesday. I
didn't hear back Thursday. Now,

knowing Dan, I know exactly why
I didn't hear back, but then I'm

thinking, well, he's just
sloughing me out, yeah. But Dan

would just, was being buried. He
was just, there was so much

going on at the time. Oh, yeah.
And finally, like, on Thursday

afternoon, he wrote me back and
he said, Hey, did you did you

say you were going to be in
Nashville this weekend? Because

if you are, we maybe can get
together. And I was like,

Absolutely, I'll be there
visiting friends. If you want to

get together, we can. And he
said, Sure, Saturday morning.

And he told me where to meet
him, at a Starbucks in

Hermitage. And and I got off the
phone, and I told my wife,

Erica, I said, I gotta book a
hotel,

because this guy bit I really

got to go to Nashville for the
weekend. I

really do so get some friends.
It

just so happened that I booked a
hotel right across street. It

was unbeknownst to me. It was
right across the street from the

radio station. Was the Best
Western Thank goodness. Oh yeah,

not the Comfort Inn with the
marble

rye guy. That was an experience.

So I went, and I met with Dan,
and Dan was 30 minutes late,

which was great for me, because
he was very, I mean, but it was

a great week. We spent like two
hours together, and then he

asked me if I would do some some
filling work in the mid days.

And I did, and they offered me
the job. And like, three months

later, Dan and I are sitting
talking to somebody, I forget

who. And he said, You know I
knew. He said, I want to tell

you something, man, I knew that
day that we met for coffee, he

said, I made you do the fill in
stuff. And he said, but I knew

that day you were my guy. And I
was like, really, that means a

lot to me. Dan, I appreciate
that. I was like, I've got

something to tell you. And he
said, what? I said, I don't have

any for. In Nashville.

He thought from and he goes. I
knew

it. But

the point is, and this is the
message, right? Figure it out.

There are plenty of ways to
crack a nut. And I knew if I

asked him if he would beat for
me, with me, and I told him I

was driving to specifically do
that, he would say no. Exactly.

I knew that he would say no, but
I felt like, if I told him I was

already there, that it would get
me in the door. And I truly felt

like if, if we sat down and we
met, that I could get the gig,

and it

worked out, and you did, it
worked out, and I'm so glad it

did, because, and I'm glad you
know, I loved, you know, of

course, you know, I loved Phil
Valentine. I loved working with

him, and I love Brian Wilson,
but you being in that afternoon

slot is just, that's just

perfect. Well, I mean this
sincerely. I mean, well, I ain't

saying that because, you know,
Why would, why would why would I

say it if I didn't mean it
sincerely? But the biggest

compliment I know that Phil and
I did not do, not do the same

type of show, no. But the
biggest compliments I get is

when people tell me that I
remind them of Phil and I and

what that means to me, because I
know that Phil and I don't do

the same type of show, so I know
I can't possibly sound like

Phil, right, but I hope that I'm
giving them the same feelings,

and I think that's what they
mean. Well, that's what I get

out of it, right? Because people
don't. And this is another

lesson that it took me a long
time to learn, that because,

believe it or not, for anybody
that's listening to my show, I

used to be a lot more bombastic
and forceful, and I would say

negative, than I am now. And I
realized at some point that

people don't walk away from your
radio show, remembering what you

say. They walk away from your
radio show, remembering how you

made them feel exactly, and you
can either make them feel good

and hopeful, or you can make
them feel bad and down. You can

make them feel anxious. I mean,
so i hope that i i can come

anywhere in the same orbit to
the impact emotionally from a

feeling standpoint that the way
that Phil, Phil Valentine, was

able to do it, well, I

think you do, because anytime
I've listened to you, I always

fill up, and that's why I was
telling you one time, whenever

we were talking on the phone
about Phil on the air, Phil was

an upper I mean, every time that
dude walked in a room, he lifted

it up. You do the same thing. I
used to. I used to just treasure

when I would be working, you
know, after the morning show,

and I would pray that you would
come to work, because every time

you did, it was like it lifted
the place up. Man. And I love

one day when, when I had trace
Atkins on the phone, oh, man.

And I noticed Matt was just he
wouldn't move. He was sitting

behind me the whole time. That's

Trace Access. I'm a kid, man,
when it comes to that kind of

stuff, I'm a kid. But you know,
you know, we talk about a lot of

hard edged stuff on the show,
and I get very passionate, and I

get very frustrated, and I get
very angry at some of the things

that are going on. And so we
have those times of anger. But

in generally, in life, I remind
myself every day. I get up every

morning and I get to do this
every day. Yes, I mean, I get to

do something that I've always
loved doing anyway we get and,

you know, I y'all know, y'all
been around plenty of radio

stations. That radio station,
there's a bunch of hens, man,

they get around, and those hen
circles start going, and

everybody hates this guy, and
everybody's that guy, and

everybody, everybody hates
management, yes, you know, but,

but if we just step back for a
moment and recognize what a

blessing it is that we get to do
this on a daily basis, I just, I

try to come at it with that
attitude. Well,

Phil used to use a great analogy
to me. He when things be kind of

going haywire with management,
it was kind of on the negative

side to go, Johnny, put on the
blinders. Let's just have fun,

and we would, right. And that's
what you got to do, and that's

what you're doing every
afternoon,

you know, being in talk radio,
you know, especially moving over

from music radio and getting
into talk radio and having

political talk for the most
part, the conversations that you

have, you mentioned, instill
feelings in people, and that's

what they remember. You know
you're going to have your

detractors, and how have have
you? Well, you always have to

have somewhat of a thick skin to
some degree to do what you do.

And do you let the detractors?
Do they get to you at times? Or

how have you learned to just let
that roll off, you know, roll

off your back? Or does

it, no, I mean, haters are
motivators, right? I mean, if

you believe in what you're
doing. Doing. And if you have

the courage of your convictions,
there have been, I will say

this, there have been times, and
I, you know, if I sat here long

enough, I could probably think
of an instance or two, but there

have been times when I took a
position on an issue and maybe I

hadn't fully thought it out. And
some people came at me earnestly

and maybe even passionately, and
said, I think you're wrong. And

so you you reevaluate. I mean,
you think about the

presentation, you think about
the positions that you're

taking. You think about is this
best for the people, best for

the country, best for the
whatever. But you know, as far

as the haters go, I mean,
they're, they're just, they're

just that. They're, they're,
they're folks that, you know,

I'm all about starting a
conversation. So, you know, I

have a long standing policy that
anybody that is of interest to

the listening audience that
wants to come on my radio show

is allowed to come on the radio
show. And I don't care what your

politics are, and I don't care
how much we disagree. I feel

like I have the courage of
conviction. And, you know, I

have, you know, my foundation
grounded enough that I can

present my argument. You can
present your argument. And, you

know, the audience can decide
who they agree with who they

don't. But, you know, as far as
the detractors go, I mean, it's

just a lot of the same old
stuff, you know, it's, oh,

they're, you know, it's hate
radio, you know, and none of

that. And, you know, and it's
just not true. No, it's also

just not true. I mean, are we
passionate? Sure we're

passionate. Do we believe that,
you know somebody, somebody

called me up one time and say,
You know what your problem is?

Murphy, I was like, what it is,
you always think you're right.

Well, well, yeah. I mean,

why wouldn't I? Why wouldn't I
always think I'm right? That's

why we're on here. Do you want
me to say things that I think

are wrong? Yeah, maybe you

should have a segment called I
could be wrong.

Charles Barkley had a great good
friend. Charles Barkley had a

great book called I might be
wrong, but I doubt it.

I So, you know, as far as that
goes, I mean, you know, for me,

it's very rarely reached a level
where I thought, I mean, they

get personal. You know, of
course they get personal. You

know, they'll, you know, your
detractors try to take you off

your game by, you know, doing
that kind of thing, but it has

rarely gotten to the point that
I was worried about. It was a

couple of times in Birmingham, I
haven't had anything in

Nashville. There were a couple
of times in Birmingham, I had my

window busted out at the radio
station once during a pretty

heated issue with the City
Council. We're pretty sure we

knew who did that we wouldn't
have any security cameras. And

then I had, there was one time
where I had a guy who, you know,

I made the point that none of
our utilities were in my name,

just as kind of a way to
protect, you know, it was all in

Erica's name. And your wife, my
wife and and her maiden name too

at the time, and someone, I got
a letter in the that wasn't

mailed, that was just put in my
mailbox to Matt Murphy, and it

was a letter detailing what they
had seen me doing over the last

like, 48 hours. And so these
people had followed me around 48

hours. It was like, I saw you go
into the grocery store and blah,

blah, blah. And that was, that
was a moment that it was like,

Okay, what am I supposed to do
with this? And you know, you

just, you have to protect
yourself as best as you possibly

can. I mean, in light of the
Charlie Kirk situation, you

know, I, I know that we at
cumulus, you know, we received

an email after that incident
saying, you know, we're beefing

up security. And you know, for
our conservative well, for

everybody, it's a station, but
especially the conservative talk

show hosts. I mean, have you
felt any since the Charlie Kirk

assassination? Have you felt any
more threatened? Quote, unquote,

and how does your wife react to
all of this stuff does? Is she

concerned?

Yeah, she you know, when the day
that Charlie Kirk was

assassinated, I was on the air,
and that was tough, because we

have Chris hand on the radio
station who worked with Charlie

and turning point USA. And Chris
had actually, just months

before, dissolved his formal
relationship, and he still had

an informal relationship with
him, but part of what Chris did

was coordinate those events, he
would help set up the logistics

of those events, like flights
and security apparatus and

communication. So he was
intimately in touch with the

security team. He knew the
security team had all their, you

know, cell phones and whatnot.
And so Chris had a. Um, he had a

line of communication in with
those folks, I think, unlike

really, anybody else in the
country at the time. And so he

told me, I went on air at three
o'clock. We knew that Charlie

had been shot. We knew it was
serious. And Chris told me, just

after I got on air that Charlie
didn't make it, he texted me, he

said, but please don't say
anything about it yet, because I

want to make sure that you know
that's okay. And about I don't

know. 15 minutes later, he
texted me and said, you can, you

can say that Charlie's no longer
with us, and so I had to go on

the air and say that Charlotte,
Charlie was no longer with us,

and and that was just a very
tough day, obviously, because

you knew it was one of those
moments where you know that,

well, everything is going to
change now. I mean, you know,

permanently, in terms of how we
do our business, in terms of

interactions and but I never
thought about myself. I never,

you know, concerned. I was never
concerned about my own security

until I got I got home that
night in Mount Juliet, and I get

my bag out of the truck, and I
walk in, and I walk through the

door, and Erica's in the
kitchen, and she's washing

dishes, and she says, Hey,
honey. And I said, Hey honey.

And she looked at me and burst
into tears, wow. And, and I'm

like, it's gonna be okay. And I
go over and I, you know, I hug

on her, and she was like, I'm
just worried that, you know,

they'll if they kill Charlie,
you know, what about you? Blah,

blah, blah. And my line to
Erica, and it's true, I was

like, Baby, yes, it's true that
we live in a dangerous world.

Yes, it's true that there are
crazy people out there. And yes,

it's true that they killed
Charlie Kirk, and you're right

that I swim in that pond. That's
the pond that I swim in, I said,

But you have to understand,
Charlie Kirk was a whale in that

pond, and I'm an itty bitty
Guppy. If they get to the

guppies baby,

if they get from the whales all
the way through the fish down to

this little bitty Guppy. We're
in a hell of a lot of trouble.

They're not going to get to this
Guppy for a long, long time, you

know. But the thing that I say
all the time is that, you know,

when people talk about security
or whatever, I appreciate the

security apparatus that they're
putting in place, but I've also

never in my life, they talk. I
hear talk about these signs that

say you can't take guns into
places. I've never seen one.

Never seen one in my life. I see
those signs about how you can't

Arm yourself to ultimately
protect yourself. And there's

certain people tell me all the
time, there's these businesses

that don't want you to I've
never seen one of those signs,

really, not in my life. I've
never seen one. John, I haven't

never seen I've never seen one.
Can't say I'm looking but I've

never seen one.

All it is, is a bull's eye.

Maybe it's obviously, you know,
it's a concern. But I, you know,

there have always been mentally
insane people, and sadly, not to

get terribly deep into it, but I
would say this, that one of the

things that Donald Trump has
managed to do, he's managed to

have such success against a
group of people that are not

accustomed to others fighting
back and winning right, that

they have lost their minds. They
have absolutely lost their

minds, and all they know to do,
and they've been doing it for

years, is to elevate, elevate,
elevate, elevate, and push. And

now we're seeing the chickens
come home to roost based on the

language that they've been
using. So if I'm an unhinged

person and I hear Alexandria
Ocasio Cortez or Chuck Schumer

or Kamala Harris telling me that
Donald Trump is Adolf Hitler.

Well, who wouldn't want to kill
Adolf Hitler? Exactly, right. So

these things matter. And I think
we've reached that inflection

point in American society where
we've got to, we got to tone all

of that down. And frankly, one
side seems to be willing to tone

it down, and the other side
doesn't seem to care.

Well, you know, the whole thing
is, I'm tired of the of the

comparisons to Adolf Hitler
because I heard it with Obama

too, yes, and neither, neither
Barack Obama or Donald Trump are

anywhere near being like Adolf
Hitler. No. I mean, you can't

compare the two.

Well, I mean, it's, it's the
lack of a better argument. I

mean, there's a, there's a
phrase for it, that if you, if

you reach the point that
someone's calling you Hitler,

that you know you've won well,
your argument, because they have

nothing else to talk

about. Yeah, they have, excuse
the expression. They have no

more ammunition. That's right,
that's it. That's 100%

correct. But, yeah, I mean,
it's, it's a different time. But

I, you know, I don't think we're
changing, you know, what we're

doing one bit. I mean, I don't
pretend to have all of the

answers, but I absolutely love
what I do. I love one of the

things, you know, we talked
about, you know, my changing

attitude about it's not being
about me, it's being about the

audience. One thing too, is you
would listen to other people,

and I think Phil had this
approach before. I knew. Him,

and before I listened to him,
but I would listen to the knock

on Rush Limbaugh. And the knock
on Rush Limbaugh is that he was

a hater, and he was all and he
was always yelling and screaming

and all this. And I would listen
to Rush Limbaugh, and I'm like,

this is the most optimistic guy
I've ever heard in my life.

Yeah, that no matter what, no
matter what is in front of us. I

believe in America, no matter
what we are facing, no matter

what trials or tribulation. I
believe in the concepts of the

United States of America, and I
believe in the American people.

He always believed that the
American people would be better

than any issue that was in front
of them. And I remind myself of

that is don't get too down,
because my natural tendency is

to be pessimistic. My natural
tendency is to be like we're

host

man, we're circling the drain.

But I try to remind myself that
the people are better than the

government that represents them,
and frankly, they're a heck of a

lot better than some of the
media outlets that want to

proclaim

our doom the 24 hour. I'm so
sick of the 24 hour news cycle.

Oh, I am.

Matt. You said, when you were a
young man, you were, you were

Joe, liberal, what was what
changed you?

Neil Bortz, so I mean it, to put
it really, really succinctly. I

was living in Carrollton,
Georgia. I had started doing

this talk show, when the station
flipped, and I knew that I was

not doing it very well, and so I
was trying to absorb people who

were successful. And I started
listening to WSB in Atlanta, and

Neil Bortz had just left WGST,
had to sit out a six month non

compete and move over to WSB.
And I listened to this guy, Neil

Bortz. Was Neil Bortz informed
me that I was a libertarian by

listening to him on the radio. I
thought, I just thought that I

was liberal. And listening to
him, he just made a tremendous

amount of sense. And so I
started doing what he told me to

do, which is, go do my reading
and go do my homework and and

reading up on, you know, the
differences between

libertarianism and conservatism
or whatever. And it kind of

informed me that I'm a Liberty
first guy, and I'm naturally a

contrarian. So, you know, I like
to say that I, you know, Groucho

Marx used to say this, and I say
it about myself, that I wouldn't

belong to any club that would
have me as a member. And so that

includes good, you know, club
Republican. So I don't really

belong to that club, because I
feel like my viewpoints deviate,

you know, quite a bit from from
Republican or conservative

values. So, you know, that's why
I started calling myself a

libertarian with a small l,
because, frankly, Libertarian

Party is a little wacky too, but
I believe in the basic concept

of, you know, government serves
best when it serves least, and

the people themselves are
responsible for their own

futures and their own fates. And
with liberty comes that level of

responsibility. I just, I just
wish we'd get to that too. I

wish politicians would learn
that they work for us. It's not

the other way around.

Well, there's no money in you
know. I was saying this

yesterday that you know, because
we had this race that, you know,

the special election race that
concluded. And I'm like, you

know, I don't want a politician
to tell me what, if you're a

conservative or a libertarian,
why in the world would you want

a politician to tell you what
they're going to Washington DC

to do exactly? I want them to
tell me what they're going to DC

to undo, exactly, right,
exactly. We have far too much

government in our lives as it
is, but you don't win re

elections telling people what
you didn't do. And that's part

of the problem, is that they get
up there and they get

washingtonized, and they become
convinced, because of all of

these consultants, oh, you've
got to bring something home,

whether that's a project or
money or whatever it is, and it

just it feeds the problem. It's
called

potemic Fever, 100% exactly what
it is. I also want to share

something that's a little more
light hearted. But when Matt

started at this station, you
know, my wife and I really

became big admirers of his show
and loved him as a person, and

his wife, Erica. So Erica and
Glenna, my wife, started this

horrible habit of making food,
and it grew. It went out of

control. It got to the point
where I was walking in. I mean,

I have to go out to my car
several times to walk in with so

once again, Matt, we've started
it again. My wife has made you

and Erica some goodies of some
kind. I

love it. Should I open this?
Now, whatever you want to do,

I'll open it. I'll give it, oh
yeah, toss it over

here. But it got out of control.
It got to the point to where I

talked to both women, in fact, I
talked to Matt one day. I said,

we've got to put an end to this,
because we're both getting fat,

and we were getting fat, and
then we were having to carry all

of this stuff.

So Glenna, I'll tell the quick
story that. Glenna, have you?

Have you? Do you like pickles?
Oh,

yeah. Well, I've, we've already
received, yeah, I've. Out of the

Glenna special in pickles, and
they're

fabulous. I am a huge pickle
fan. I'm a pickle aficionado. I

would say I subscribe to pickle
aficionado max. And these are

the best pickles that I've ever
had, the best pickles that I've

ever had. And I accused Glenna
putting crack or something in

them at one because they're so
good well. So Glenna,

recognizing how much I love
them, she gave us, like, several

jars, and one was this huge jar
of pickles, yeah, that we lost.

So Erica put that up in the
Erica put that up somewhere that

we don't normally keep food,
because that's the only place

that that huge jar of pickles
would fit. And we found it, like

two months ago, and so I
immediately ate them all and and

we cleaned the jar, and we set
it aside to get back to you and

Glenna when we saw you next. And
so Eric is out of town, and I'm

talking to her this morning, and
I'm I say, Where's the jar? I'm

going to see Johnny B and Jay
Today. We're doing a podcast,

and she got so angry at me.

Like, what? Why didn't you tell
me, you guys were what? What did

I'm like, Why are you so angry?
I would have made something to

send to give to Johnny.

Now it continues on. So this is

you're welcome to drop anything
off with me if you need oh my

gosh, well,

let's John, let's not get crazy.
There's even putting

Oh,

wow. Thank you. God, bless you.
You're an angel from heaven, and

not just because you have to put
up with Johnny

B that's awesome. If it weren't
for her, I wouldn't be here,

trust me. Well, buddy, you can
listen to Matt Murphy every

afternoon from three till seven
on the big, super talker, 99

three to seven central time.
That's, of course, tell them all

the ways they can listen. You
don't have to be in radio.

So, I mean 99.7 FM, anywhere
from Alabama to Kentucky and all

points in between. You can also
get us on anywhere that you

download music or information on
the internet. You can get us

right. So that's, you know,
podcast, Spotify. Tune in. I

heart. We have our own app. And
then super talk TV. Super talk

TV, YouTube, Facebook, Twitter,
Twitch and rumble. YouTube,

Facebook, Twitter, Twitch and
rumble. I encourage you to go

over to YouTube, because those
people on the YouTube chat are

insane. They are insane. They
can say anything they have even

over there,

and you, when you meet them out
in public, they're pretty wild.

And I

tried, I tried to do this as
best I can. I can. I try to

remember, to remind people, if
you go over to the YouTube page

and you engage in the YouTube
chat, that is not a monitored

chat, we don't know what those
people are going to say. No, we

don't vouch for them. We have
nothing to do with what some of

the language that's being used
over there, some of the concepts

so but it's a it's a pretty
rowdy bunch. I absolutely love

the audience. I love Middle
Tennessee. I have fallen in love

with it. I fell in love with the
state as soon as I got

here. Well, I think the feeling
is mutual. Yeah, I'm and Johnny

can vouch for this. I mean, I'm,
I'm a member of the matt Murphy

fan club, and when I first
started at the station, I, you

know, and Johnny and I didn't
really know each other that

well. And I told Johnny, I said
that Matt Murphy guy, that dude,

that dude is a he's a major
talent. We both, we both talked

about that.

We both have said that if
there's anybody that could be

syndicated on that radio

station, that right

here, are you guys still
charging the same fees for this

that y'all

always Yeah, seriously, Matt. I
mean, yeah, you're a major

talent. Yes, you just have a
good time. I remember, there was

one particular episode where you
started speaking about a veteran

or something along those lines,
that had passed away or

something, and you were talking
about a funeral or what have

you. But, and I remember after
that particular episode, I went

to you and told you, I said that
that was the most compelling

hour of radio that I had heard
in years, I mean, and what

really fascinates me, I mean, I
know you do some show prep, but

you don't script anything, and
your ability to just speak from

the heart and speak
extemporaneously, it makes you

so great at what

you do now. I mean, I don't know
about that great part, but I

will say this, that I like doing
a show that is more free

flowing. It's and I still
really, really love caller

interaction. I love engaging the
callers and getting them

involved in the show. I've
always felt like, you know, my

producers say, Well, do you want
me to screen this person or that

person? I was like, I don't want
you to screen anybody out. I

mean, there are obviously
exceptions, you know, there are

certain people that don't know
how to act, or people that call

chronically, right, right? But
other than that, I was like, it

is my job to make it
interesting. Interesting, right?

And, and if I get a caller that
is not so interesting, I either

need to make them interesting or
go on to another caller at the

same time. It's really about the
voice of the people. And I love

the flow of a show where you
don't where you end up in a

place, and you look back and
like, how in the heck did we get

here? Yeah, how in the world did
we go from there to here, you

know? But as I get older, I
remember the show you're talking

about. And I think it was me
relating the story of I happened

upon. It might be a different
one, but I happened upon a

funeral at Arlington National
Cemetery, and watching a veteran

be buried at Arlington National
Cemetery. And I tell that story

quite a bit, and because it
moves me so much. Yeah, it moved

me. But man, oh man, as I get
older, I get I've gotten I get

so sentimental and so soppy, and
I can't tell those stories so

much anymore, because I start

crying. Oh yeah, he started, you
turn into Damn man.

Nobody wants that, Johnny,
nobody. There's only one dead

man

Well, you know, and that's one,
you know, that's the that was

the heartbreaking thing about me
having to leave the station was

that I loved everybody there.
Yeah, you talk about a great

group of people and a great
audience. I would urge anybody

to listen to WTN, because it's a
very interesting station.

They've got a very interesting
take. Everybody's different.

Every talk show host is
different. But I just I love

listening to you, plus you have

Ken Weaver. Oh, man, Ken Weaver
is an absolute Jim. I wish we

could get him on here, but he's
always busy. Well, he's got a

lot of things

going on. He lives down there in
Murfreesboro, and he hates

driving on i 24 so much.
Probably, he probably won't come

see I will say that in this
business, you learn on the

inside of the business, you
know, the part that a lot of

listeners don't see. You try to
learn to have thick skin and and

not allow these things to
personally affect you, the way

that you handled what happened
between you and cumulus was the

most gracious professional
manner that I can possibly

imagine. I will say this on or
off the air. I've never heard

Johnny B say a bad thing about
what happened to him and Johnny

B. There are plenty of

well, those episodes, those
episodes,

besides, and there are plenty of
reasons why you could,

because there's an unfortunate
side to this business where

there are, oftentimes, and I
won't speak about my own

employer, but I'll just say,
generally speaking, there's a

complete disconnect between what
they do crunching numbers

somewhere far, far away,
exactly, and how it impacts real

people. And I'm not just talking
about you or me, I'm talking

about the listening audience. Oh
yeah, and it was incredibly

impactful when you, quote,
unquote, left the radio station

and it was bothersome and, and
just personally bothersome,

because I felt like you meant so
much to the radio station. And

you know, you just have to kind
of suck it up. And yeah, you do,

and keep going on well.

And plus, yeah, you know, I
would say that the program

director, he, you know, I mean,
I was treated with respect and

kindness, and I appreciated
that, and they were nice enough

to say, you know, you can say
goodbye tomorrow, and because

most places would just say,
Yeah,

bring your headphones. Can I
tell you

my best firing story? Though?
Sure. So. I was in Birmingham. I

was working for Crawford
broadcasting, and that's another

one that, if you only have nine
months to live, go to work for

Crawford. Well, they, you know,
they were a religious based

radio station. They created a
secular news talk station that

you know worked for a while for
them, but they started kind of

encroaching on what we were
doing from a content

perspective, that made all of us
very uncomfortable, and

eventually it just wasn't going
to work out. So I was kind of

the last man standing. I was
doing my afternoon show. They

had let their program director
go. We had an interim program

director that had never done it
before. And mark a very nice

guy. He was in sales, and he'd
been elevated to PD for some

reason. And so my show started
at three. I was on from three to

seven, and I would get in about
two, and there was nobody before

me. So I would just go into the
studio and set up and

everything. And Mark, you know,
you could see people coming in

through the lobby. You can see
the receptionist through a

window, just to paint the
picture here. And then you go

around and you go into the
studio. And so every day I would

see Mark come in. He would come
in, he would sit down with me.

We'd talk for five or so
minutes. All is well, and then

he would go back to his office,
and I would continue prepping

for the show. Well, I found out
later that the senior vice

president of the company had
flown. Into Birmingham, Alabama,

from BLUEBELL, Pennsylvania to
fire me on a Friday. Wow. But no

one bothered to check whether I
was going to be there, and I had

scheduled a vacation day that
day, so I was out of town,

perfect. So she comes in to fire
me, the guy she was firing isn't

there. I don't know why they
didn't just pick up the phone

and do it that way, but
whatever. So that Monday, there

I am, be bopping into the radio
station, and I sit down, and I

knew the writing was on the wall
for me. I mean, I knew that, you

know, it was just a matter of
time, but I was not going to

quit, right? I was going to be
let go. And so Mark, this humble

fellow that had never done this
before we always say he walks in

like I see him walk in every
day, and he cuts me a look, and

then looks away, and then he
goes. And I see him talking to

the receptionist, and he's like
saying something to the

receptionist, and I see her look
up at me with these wide eyes

and and so Mark leaves and
doesn't come in like he does

every day. And I hit the talk
back button, and my my producer

was setting some things up, and
I hit the talk back button and I

said, Hey, I'm getting fired
today. And he said, What? And I

said, I'm getting fired today.
No, you're Shut up. I was like,

watch, like, five minutes after
Mark comes in, the receptionist

gets up and walks into the room
and says, Mark needs to see you

in his office.

This is not my first I swear
what

I'm about to tell you is true.
It sounds like it's not. I swear

this is true. So I walk in and
the business manager sitting in

the room, and that was, Oh, all
right. We got a witness. We got

the guy that's doing it, lack of
paperwork.

Got it going, let's go.

And Mark has just this look of
death on his face, and he's just

staring at me, and I sit down,
and he starts, Matt, well, you

know you weren't here on Friday
and so, and you know Laura was

in. He starts mumbling and
fumbling and he starts crying.

Usually it's the other way
around, right?

Like I said, I swear this trick,
I reached across the table and

patted his hand, and I said,
Mark, it's gonna be okay. I wish

you well in your future
endeavors. Mark, so if you've

ever been in management, the
first thing that they tell you

about this part of the job is,
Do not apologize. The first

words out of his mouth ever I
said it's gonna be okay is, I'm

sorry,

admitting wrong. If it's radio,
he probably got let go shortly

after

that was it being like fired by
Michael Scott or something. It

was the best firing ever. I
mean, it was so nice. I got my

paperwork. It's happened to you
a couple of times. I mean, you

ever think about just messing
with them?

You know, like me, I'm not, come
on. Oh,

whatever. I'm gonna go do my
job, right? What are you guys

talking about? You know, you at
the same time, you're like, my

concern is, let's, let's make
sure we're not burning the

bridges that we might need to
cross back over at some point.

So luckily, none of those
bridges matter at Carver

broadcasting anymore, so I can
tell the story I want so but

they did. But to your point,
they I'm like, Are you gonna let

me do this? Like, 230 my show's
a threat. It's like, are you

gonna let me do my show? And he
said, Yes, but you can't say

anything about you leaving until
the last 30 minutes. Yeah. And I

said, Okay, that's fine. And so
they, they, what they did. They

had they wasn't mark. It was
another producer that they

brought in to sit in the room
with me, in the studio, not in

the control room, but in the
studio with me. And they said,

he said, I'm here to make sure
you don't say anything you're

not supposed to say. And I was
like, What do you go are you

gonna do?

He pats the gun on his What are
you gonna do? And he says, I

think I'm supposed to pull the
plug to the microphone.

There's a guy in the control
room radio well. And then they

also, it was confusing as hell
to the audience, because they

put the delay on a 42nd delay.

And they said they did that just
well, just in case Matt says

something,

42nd delay, so do not be burning
that bridge all day long.

People, you know, it's a caller
driven show, so I got callers,

and they're listening on the
line. They have no idea what's

going on. They're 40 seconds
behind. And so I go to them,

Hey, Jay, you're on the phone.
And there's what we talking

about.

Jay, you're on it's

got to give the producer a lot
of comfort, though, if anybody

cusses he has please.

Plenty of time. George Carlin,
ask, Well,

dude, this has been so much fun,
and I'm so glad you came and

hung out with

I love you guys. I love I love
you guys. I love what you're

doing on the podcast. I watch
the podcast. I enjoy the

podcast. I encourage everybody
to like and subscribe to the

podcast.

Well, there you go, and Jay has
all the info.

Yeah, we are getting there in
terms of being on more

platforms. Of course, any audio
platform that you can think of

for podcasts, we're on it thanks
to Jim McCarthy or Chris Yes,

but yeah, you know, Facebook,
YouTube, we're on, we're getting

on Twitch, and we've got a
website that's about to be

debuted, and merchandise is
coming.

Merch? Are you buying? Merch is
ready?

Well, there we go. Should be
arriving in the next couple of

weeks.

Well, we want you to come back
to see the Triple J's again.

We'll have more interesting
people for you. Sometimes it's

just us, and we're interesting
enough, I think, of course, it's

circling the drone. Thanks for
joining you.