Lame is the term I have borrowed from a younger generation to  describe some of the ineffective, cloying attempts I have made at entertaining  my radio audiences. Today I recall one of the primary examples.  
In September of 1990 I was paired with a co-host against my will, mainly. I had worked solo almost exclusively up until that point. I felt it was a bad idea from the inception that I share my show with a newbie with a natural gift of gab named Angie Mabry.
In September of 1990 I was paired with a co-host against my will, mainly. I had worked solo almost exclusively up until that point. I felt it was a bad idea from the inception that I share my show with a newbie with a natural gift of gab named Angie Mabry.
Her easy acclimation to radio made the forced pairing much more  tolerable. We seemed to mix well on the air and off. Our station owner/general  manager introduced our duo on the daily half hour Swap Shop program  with the intention of expanding her role as eventual morning show co-host.
We went to work in numerous procrastinating planning sessions  trying to conceptualize what the new morning show would sound like. Our boss  grew weary of our preliminaries and finally compelled us to begin the 6 am to  9:30 am program at the beginning of November. What we settled on was an emphasis  on fluff talk and downplayed our music format which we perceived appeasing the  “blue hairs”, our undesired elderly demographic. Most of our style was modeled  after the secular morning zoo shows of the day but stopped short and we were  limited by our aging southern audience and their obsolete traditions. As far as  I have known no attempt had ever been made on a southern gospel station for such  a show so our new enterprise was in uncharted waters amidst the brokered  religious programs keeping us afloat.
One of the most memorable episodes of Mabry and O’Neal show was  the Birthday Truck. My on-air partner feigned anxiety over her November 13th  birthday as the event neared. Her day was hyped over a week or so around the  office and on the air. By the 14th the semi bringing a mountain of gifts was a  day late and Mabry was “worried.” The birthday bit climaxed with a visit from  the red-neck truck driver (voiced by me) who had troubles finding the station  and struck her parked Honda Prelude while pulling into our tiny parking lot. The  skit was more lame than anything on Saturday Night Live, pretty  bad.
We had some chemistry. We were both in our mid twenties sharing  similar views. I skewed a little more conservative. Our ad libs were much more  entertaining than the prepared text we thought was funny. Interactions with our  sports & news director, Fred Brewer fared much better. He had a dry poignant  humor that would have been a better match for a morning show. Our boss saw  things differently favoring a male female duo. Had the show been played straight  with unforced comedy lacking in phony laughter we might have had a hit. We  simply tried too hard. 
The best conversations were the real ones involving our friendly UGA and Georgia Tech football rivalry. I was the long time Dawgs fan while she preferred the Yellow Jackets. To her credit Tech had the superior squad and was national champs that year. For some inexplicable reason sports coverage on a southern gospel station was considered taboo by listeners so the best element of our show seemed too secular. The outspoken Southern Baptist and Pentecostal based audience was resistant. We were viewed as sell outs. Our 2,500 watt AM signal disappeared into the haze that was too far on the fringe of the Atlanta environs to be competitive in the major market so our locals won in the end.
The best conversations were the real ones involving our friendly UGA and Georgia Tech football rivalry. I was the long time Dawgs fan while she preferred the Yellow Jackets. To her credit Tech had the superior squad and was national champs that year. For some inexplicable reason sports coverage on a southern gospel station was considered taboo by listeners so the best element of our show seemed too secular. The outspoken Southern Baptist and Pentecostal based audience was resistant. We were viewed as sell outs. Our 2,500 watt AM signal disappeared into the haze that was too far on the fringe of the Atlanta environs to be competitive in the major market so our locals won in the end.
I don’t recall the show lasting much past the new year. The  partnership ended on a sour note, I don’t remember the precise circumstances but  our radio savvy sales manager “Just” Janet Barcus  played Mabry’s understudy and  eventual replacement as the curtain fell on my third radio home in February of  ‘91. Click on the Mp3 below for the Birthday Truck aircheck...
  
The station now has a 50,000 watt construction permit that is wasted on the same old format with a playlist of obscure southern gospel tailored to those born sometime during the Civil War. Their signal reaches further now though. I don’t believe the current owners wish to program for the major market they now cover. What a shame.
Stay tuned.