Here's another tale of my checkered radio career.    Back  in 1974 I was a screaming disc jockey (literally) at WDRQ, Detroit.    My tenure was short-lived but memorable.  
At the time I had been out of work as a disc jockey for about six  months.  No one wanted a high energy, “youthful”-voiced,  wise-ass-bordering-on-insane platter spinner (or, to be more accurate –  music cartridge inserter).  The program director of KYNO in Fresno kept  me dangling for months for an all-night gig and eventually gave it to  someone else.   Needless to say, I was depressed.  I mean, when they  don’t think you’re good enough to talk to empty fields at 3 AM you tend  to believe you don’t have a rosy future in this profession.  
I had even gotten a different job – working in the research department  of NBC.  But preparing test results for Bob Crane pilots didn’t seem  like the best way to fill five or six decades either.  
And then, out of the blue, I get a call from the new program director of  WDRQ.  How would I like to come to Detroit and do 6-10 in the evening?   This was unbelievable.  I wasn’t qualified for all-nights in market  #110 but was good enough to do a primo slot in market #5 or 6?      The  money was probably less than I’d get in Fresno but that was besides the  point.  I was heading to a major market!
The  program director picked me up at the airport and drove me right to the  station.  It was snowing.  This was mid-April.  He wanted me to do a  break-in show in the middle of the night – get used to the equipment and  format so when I premiered at 6 PM I knew what I was doing.  
I said, “Fine” without stopping to think – when am I going to sleep?  I  didn’t want to be rude and say, “I really should check into a motel  instead of drinking beer and smoking more joints with you” so I just  sucked it up.  And then at midnight he drove me to the station, wished  me luck, and drove off.  I went on the air – half-smashed, no  preparation, and having already been up for close to 24 hours. It was my  best show.  
“Oh, by the way”, I told him after we were both seeing mermaids at the  IHOP,  “I want to use the name Beaver Cleaver on the air.”  He was so  wasted he didn’t even ask me why.  The answer to that is I wanted a name  that stood out, was easy to say, and let’s be honest, was dirty.  
I got off the air at 6 AM, met the morning man – a surely bitter fellow  with a great voice and nothing else.   The fact that I was funny, he  hated me instantly.  The program director arrived, said he was thrilled  with how I sounded, and took me to breakfast at the IHOP, where it turns  out, those mermaids were just the cleaning crew.  
So after a good late morning sleep, the Beaver Cleaver show premiered on  WDRQ at 6 that night.  Got a call from the PD that I sounded great.  
Things were going well and would remain that way… for another eight  hours.  The program director called me into his office.  Apparently  there was a problem.   The station’s “consultant” had heard me and felt I  needed a slight adjustment in my act.   He wanted me to scream more.   By 
more he meant every time I opened my mouth.  The evening jock  should sound super high energy and the way to achieve that (according to  this moron) was to have the disc jockey scream.  And I had no choice.   Either scream or be fired after one day.  
So I did and I sounded like a complete idiot.  Imagine Sam Kinison  introducing Carpenters records.  I generally went through a spritz  bottle of Chloraseptic every show.  No one will ever hear tapes of me on  WDRQ, and if you have one I’m going to have to kill you.  
I frantically sent out audition tapes, and a few months later was  offered a job at KYA, San Francisco.  The WDRQ program director thought I  was crazy taking that job.  If I stuck it out in Detroit for a year I  could get to Boston.  A year?  I’d sound like Kenny Rodgers by then.   Plus, what’s wrong with San Francisco?  
About a month later I received a letter from the program director.  He  had forwarded a petition some high school circulated to try to get me  back on WDRQ.  I still have it of course.  It’s my most cherished  keepsake from my radio days.  
My first time back in Detroit since those days was when I was  broadcasting for the Orioles in 1991.  I rented a car and thought I’d  tool around the old haunts.  The neighborhood where WDRQ was located in  my day was an absolute war zone.  Not that it was ever Park Ave. to  begin with, but now the street was littered with graffiti, squalor, and  the folks screaming were not introducing Motown records. I haven’t been  back since.  Although, I must admit, I’m a little curious.  Today it’s  probably gentrified and gorgeous and all the apartments have been  refurbished – now with hardwood floors and the meth labs removed – and  it’s the happening place to live in Detroit.  Or it’s been razed to the  ground.  Either way, there should be a plaque -- to WDRQ, or, as I used  to call it on the air -- W-Dreck.