Elliot in the Morning

Elliot in the Morning is a morning radio talk show hosted by DJ Elliot Segal. It airs weekdays from "5:48 until 10 something" on WWDC-FM in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area, and on WRXL in Richmond, Virginia. The program was simulcast on WOSC in Ocean City, Maryland from 2003 to 2004, on WCHH in Baltimore, Maryland from May 2008 to November 2009, and on WBWZ in the Hudson Valley of New York until 2017. Beginning in January 2014, the show was briefly simulcast on WOR-AM, while continuing to simulcast on the DC and Richmond stations, with the show originally planning to leave the DC101 studios in January 2014.[1] However, after citing that "significant changes" would be needed for the show to succeed in NYC, it was announced that the show would no longer be carried on WOR-AM.[2]

Elliot in the Morning
Elliot in the Morning
Created byElliot Segal
StarringElliot Segal and The Class: (Diane Stupar-Hughes, Tyler Molnar, Kayleigh Gelles)
Country of originUnited States
Production
Running time4 hours, 32 minutes
Release
Original networkElliot in the Morning Radio Network
WWDC-Washington, DC, WRXL-Richmond, VA
Original release1999 
present

The format covers a broad spectrum of topics, ranging from in-person or telephone interviews with well-known celebrities, to gross-out stunts involving much of the show's supporting cast. The show has regular telephone interviews with Patricia Murphy (from The Daily Beast), Mark Steines (from Entertainment Tonight) during sweeps and Brandon Noble (former NFL player) during football season.

As of 2005, Elliot in the Morning had been the cause of the fifth largest amount of Federal Communications Commission (FCC) fines since 1970, with $302,500 worth of fines leveled at the show.[3] As a result, while the show still frequently involves euphemistic mentions of sexual topics, it is broadcast with a short tape delay, and is occasionally "dumped" to canned music for profanity.

Cast (The Class)

Elliot Segal
The lead personality, Segal is a native Canadian who was raised in Houston, Texas. He attended Houston Baptist University for one trimester, where he was a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. His career in radio started at KKBQ in Houston, Texas as producer of John Lander's "Q-Morning Zoo" show. He also produced Scott Shannon's program on Pirate Radio in Los Angeles before working with Danny Bonaduce at WEGX in Philadelphia. By 1994, Elliot was a part of the "Morning Zoo" at Z100 in New York. Priding himself on toilet humor and gross-out jokes, he came to Washington in 1999, with his trademark maniacal laugh. He is married to wife Jacquie, and has two sons—the elder born in February 2004, and the younger born in August 2006. Fan of Soul Asylum, Rush, Marilyn Manson, Nickelback, Wayne Gretzky, and the Washington Capitals. Elliot's style of choice is a t-shirt and cargo shorts.
Diane Stupar-Hughes
Newswoman and original member. She previously worked for Washington, D.C.'s WPGC and Metro Traffic. "Diane's Dirt" is a popular segment at the end of each show, where she runs down the latest entertainment news. She is married to Scott Hughes and the two have a daughter, Marley, born in 2005. Diane is a graduate of Radford University. During a bit in 2003, she admitted that she lost her virginity on a ping pong table. Diane claims that while a junior in college, she would regularly stay up from Tuesday mornings through Friday afternoons without any sleep. After complaining for many years about the size of her breasts, Diane underwent breast reduction surgery in December 2009.
Tyler Molnar
Producer. A graduate of Georgetown University, he is in charge of sound effects and music played on the show. He was married to his wife, Lindsey Urbaniak, in July 2009. The couple had their first child in the Summer of 2011. Tyler also claims that his voice can be heard on the Christina Aguilera album, "Back to Basics," on the track "Thank You (Dedication to fans....)". In an on-air discussion on March 24, 2014,[4] Tyler recounted the unplanned birth of his second child in his home.
Kayleigh Gelles
Associate Producer. She is a graduate of Mount St. Mary's University in Emmitsburg, Maryland. She began her radio career at DC101 as a part-time promotions intern. In September 2010, she took over Kyle's position as a full-time member of the show. She is a fan of The Killers, Dave Matthews Band, Bleachers, the Pittsburgh Steelers, the Boston Red Sox, and Gilmore Girls. Tyler believes she has more hours in her day for all of the television she watches. She is also a spin instructor.

Former members

Bryan "Flounder" Schlossberg
Former Creative Services Director. Left the show after being fired on July 29, 2011. Flounder was part of the original cast, and started as Elliot's stunt boy/intern. He is a high school dropout, but a proud recipient of a GED. as a reputation for getting lost, vehemently blaming others for his mistakes, a complete and utter lack of intelligence and common sense, and is known for fighting with callers, as well as station employees. Flounder used to get annoyed when Elliot leaked his personal information on air, such as his real name, address, local hangout spots, and his marijuana use. He is a member of MySpace and a former supporter of Dog The Bounty Hunter. He is the two-time winner of the "Smell My Face Beltway Race," first in 2006 against Hélio Castroneves and again in 2009 against NASCAR driver Kyle Busch. Flounder's show, "Mash Ups," was heard Saturday nights on WWDC-FM. Superfan of the band Of A Revolution, Hulk Hogan and John Stamos. Flounder is currently a DJ and imaging director at DC's 1073 (WRQX) and operates his business, FM Entertainment.
Kyle "K-Dog" Benham
Former Associate Producer. A graduate of George Mason University. Left the show on September 17, 2010 to pursue a career in California. He resided in Newport Beach, California, and worked for the Premiere Radio Networks syndicated technology-oriented talk radio program, Leo Laporte: The Tech Guy until March 2013.
Craig Henderson
Former Producer, who resigned on-the-air on August 15, 2007 after a brief argument with Bryan "Flounder" Schlossberg. Henderson now works for Public Broadcasting Service.

Other former members: Dan Hoffman, Brett Haber, Jared Stern, and David Brody who is credited with giving Flounder his nickname (Because he looked liked Flounder from Animal House) and worked with Elliot at WHTZ.

"Smell My Face!"

The show's most prominent catchphrase has an unusual origin. The technically clean but inexplicably lewd-sounding phrase was conceived when the cast of the show was observing mug shots on the Frederick News-Post website (a local newspaper) for persons caught soliciting prostitutes. One picture that caught their eye was a badly disheveled man with a huge, bushy grey beard named Ronny Kline. Imagining what such a man might say to a woman after performing cunnilingus, the phrase "smell my face" immediately sprang to mind.

The phrase became a kind of "battle cry" and has been heavily integrated into the show's promotional material, with bumper stickers, signs, and highly coveted T-shirts. The show's cast and crew have also solicited (or tricked) numerous celebrities into saying the catchphrase for recordings used to promote the show. So far, there are recordings of Aaron Neville, Marguerite Perrin, Hélio Castroneves, Brittany Murphy, Mark Hoppus, Joe Frazier, Paul Stanley, Perry Farrell, Constantine Maroulis, Plain White T's, The Pussycat Dolls, Hulk Hogan, John Basedow, Josh Kelley, Sebastian Bach, Timbaland, Juliette Lewis, Pat McGee, Stephan Jenkins, Chyna, Night Ranger, Jeffrey Ross, "Weird Al" Yankovic, and Chris Cornell.

Controversies

'Lobster' story

In February 2000, Elliot related a lewd urban legend involving a woman who performed a sexual act with a live lobster. The show continued uninterrupted, but a message from General Manager Mark O'Brien was repeatedly played on the station later in the day condemning the story and announcing Segal's 'indefinite suspension'. Segal returned to the airwaves two days later. The episode has been replayed on "Best of..." versions of the show, with the offending portions censored.

White House Stunt

On the morning of February 8, 2001, Elliot Segal sent Bryan "Flounder" Schlossberg to the south fence of the White House, where a gunman had been shot and arrested the previous day, offering passersby to a "free shot of bush." The "bush" in question was an anatomical reference in connection to a spread of porn magazines that were on display. Flounder was connected to the airwaves via cell phone when the Secret Service surrounded him and demanded that he hang up the phone. In the end, Flounder avoided being taken into custody, but was however banned from the grounds of the White House indefinitely.[5]

Bishop O'Connell High School

The morning of May 7, 2002, on D.C. metro area disc jockey Elliot Segal's radio program, DC101's "Elliot in the Morning", two sixteen-year-old O'Connell students called to be considered in a contest whose winners were to be cage dancers at an upcoming Kid Rock concert at George Mason University's Patriot Center. Instead, goaded by Elliot, they discussed alleged sexual activity at O'Connell. The students claimed to be eighteen. The two discussed giving oral sex to lines of boys in the hallway and having intercourse in stairwells and closets.[6] They implied these acts occurred during a typical school day. The students, who had used false names on air, were suspended the same day for their comments.[7] The principal addressed the student body on the PA system and discussed the immorality of Mr. Segal's radio show. The following day (May 8), Mr. Segal, angered by the students' suspension, personally insulted the principal on air, making lewd remarks about his family and his sexual activity. He also mocked the school's mission statement, specifically what he considered to be a hypocritical statement that their educational environment is "rooted in the life of Christ."[8] The two days of broadcasting were ruled indecent by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). As a result, in October 2003, sixteen months after the incident, DC101's parent company Clear Channel Communications was fined $55,000.[9]

Lance Armstrong prank call

In the summer of 2003, Segal conducted an interview with someone he believed to be famous cyclist Lance Armstrong. In reality, the caller was Chad Dukes, currently the co-host of Chad Dukes vs. The World on WJFK-FM in Washington, DC. Dukes stayed in character as Lance Armstrong for over seven minutes on-air without arousing the suspicions of Segal or his co-hosts. When Segal asked Dukes – still in character as Armstrong – what the greatest moment in his career was, Dukes responded that it was "when The Junkies moved to HFS in the mornings you jack-tool-ass-f, I can't believe you thought this was Lance Arm...!" Segal abruptly hung up on Dukes in mid-sentence and laughed it off before going to commercial break.

Dan Patrick

On November 8, 2007, Elliot Segal announced that Dan Patrick would no longer be contributing to the show. Patrick, a former ESPN anchor, had commentated on Fridays during football season, but failed to call for two previously scheduled interviews. Elliot said, "The Dan Patrick thing just didn't work out and that's fine."[10]

December 2008 Suspension

The show was suspended on December 11 and 12, 2008. As part of an agreement to resume broadcasting, Elliot was barred from discussing the reason behind his suspension.

The "Monkey Wrench" Incident

The show was pulled off the air on August 30, 2010 as Elliot spoke on the telephone with former Clear Channel employee, Jon Ballard, who was fired from sister-station WBIG-FM Big 100.3 earlier in the morning. The conversation abruptly ended when the show was pulled off the air and replaced with music, most notably, "Monkey Wrench" by Foo Fighters. The show returned the next day and Elliot blamed the incident on upper management.

gollark: Oh, complex. Yes, C is probably simpler than Rust at least.
gollark: I called C *unsafe*, thank you.
gollark: OpenComputers?
gollark: C is the opposite of safe, i.e. "unsafe".
gollark: > C> safe

References

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