Mesa Kincaid

Mesa Kincaid (born Cheryl Holm; 23 September 1956 - 6 September 2009) was a talk radio host in the Minneapolis-St. Paul broadcast area.

Personal

Kincaid was raised in Minneapolis and attended Minneapolis Edison High School, where classmates voted her the one with "Wild Wit". After high school, Mesa wore many hats behind the curtains of the old Cricket Theater in Northeast Minneapolis. During her time there, she also attended Brown College for radio, and from there she got her break and sprung into the Minneapolis market in a relatively short amount of time. She was so popular, several parents named their female children after her. Mesa had an exciting and wild ride during her years in radio, and with the birth of her daughter, she added more professional voice overs and consulting to her work in order to spend more time with her daughter. During that time in the late 1980s and early 1990s, Mesa also worked briefly as a marketing consultant for the Old West-themed park Mission Creek in northern Minnesota.

She lived with her husband, Donald Hoeft, and their son in Pine City, Minnesota, until her death on September 6, 2009 from an apparent heart attack at the age of 52.[1] She had a daughter.

Career

Kincaid worked in the 1970s and early 1980s at numerous stations including KQRS-FM, WCCO-FM (now KMNB) and KSTP-FM but is best remembered as "Cheetah" or "The Fox that Rocks" on U100, which later became KDWB-FM.[2]

Mesa also worked on the KQRS-FM morning show with Tom Barnard, which was called the "Cat and Kincaid" show. She was a pioneer in a male-dominated industry and is known for her sparkling on-air presence and, on a more personal level, her deep compassion and sacrifice for those she cared about.

gollark: I like the ND system because it's not entirely random, it has skill, it's not limited to being on at a certain time or whatever, and it's fun and cooperative.
gollark: I think the blue alts would work better with that.
gollark: https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/dragcave/images/7/7f/Garland_mature_hatchi.png/revision/latest?cb=20171225233339Look at the garland hatchlings. So circular.
gollark: Much timefulness.
gollark: I was complaining about too few offers on my cheese and ice. Now I have too many.

References

  1. David Brauer, "Mesa Kincaid, U100's 'Fox that Rocks,' passes away at 52" Archived 2010-12-23 at the Wayback Machine, MinnPost.com, 10 September 2009,
  2. Tim Harlow, "'The Fox that Rocks,' Mesa Kincaid was a radio pioneer", The Star Tribune, 15 September 2009
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