|
Eddy
Allen (continued)
Perhaps the best quality of a Door County personality is that even if
you’ve never met that person before, it feels like you’ve
known them forever. That’s exactly what it feels like to talk to
Eddy Allen, WDOR owner, operator, and radio celebrity.
For some Door County residents, forever might not be a complete exaggeration.
This fall, Allen will celebrate a record 50 years on the air. Many people
(even the ones who have never met him) call Allen “The Official
Voice of Door County.” From a personal standpoint, I’ve been
listening to Eddy Allen on WDOR’s Noon Report ever since I was old
enough to comprehend what a radio was. Still, the day that I’m interviewing
him will mark only the second time I’ve talked to the man, and yet
a lifetime of knowing who he is.
It is impossible to talk about Allen and his ties to the radio business
without mentioning his family ties. When asked how he got started in radio,
Allen laughs and says, “There was no business to start ‘in’
– this goofy business is all I’ve ever known!” Allen’s
father, Eddy Allen Jr., was a radio man in Chicago, and his family lived
on the north side, across the street from Lincoln Park. When he was eleven,
Allen’s family moved from Chicago to Sturgeon Bay, and his father
started the WDOR radio station with a group of local businessmen. Their
first day on the air was September 8, 1951.
In seventh grade, Allen’s family moved to another Sturgeon Bay home
on Iowa Street, which was very close to the WDOR studio. “I hung
around the studio all the time,” Allen says. “It beat staying
at home and cleaning my room, so I was over here every chance I got.”
His own radio career began in 1957, when he was seventeen. “My father
figured that if I was going to continue to hang around, he might as well
put me to work. I started by doing the morning news on Saturdays.”
Allen did not plan on staying at the radio station after high school graduation.
He wanted to be an engineer, and in the fall of 1958 he went to the University
of Wisconsin-Madison to pursue an engineering degree. But the fit wasn’t
quite right, and so he came back to Sturgeon Bay after a year, working
at the station until he figured out what he really wanted to do with his
life. History and political science proved to be more interesting, and
he graduated with a double degree in 1964. Not much time passed before
the “draft board got him” and he was sent to Korea in April
1965.
After spending three years in Korea, Allen came back to Door County in
1968 and went back to working at WDOR. Little did he know that one of
his life’s biggest passions would now become his job. “I always
loved baseball – I think it stems from living next to Lincoln Park
when I was a kid. Jocko Rader called my father up and said, ‘WDOR
should broadcast the Door County League baseball games every Sunday. Can
you think of anyone there that might want to do that?’ Of course,
my dad told him that I would do it – before he told me. But I’m
glad those broadcasts were given to me – it had turned out to be
one of the best parts of working here.”
In the nearly 40 years that Eddy Allen has been broadcasting the league
games, he estimates that he’s missed about fifteen. “There
have been the occasional missed games, much to my chagrin. I’ve
had a few graduations, birthdays, my own wedding.” I asked him how
his wife felt about Allen being away every Sunday afternoon during the
summer, and he says, “The Door County League is part of what Mary
Lou [his wife] married into when she married me – I made sure she
knew that from the very beginning!” Allen laughs. “I do try
to make sure I get the yard work done at the beginning of the weekend,
though.”
When asked why he continues to work in the radio business for so many
years, he shrugs and says, “It’s better than actually working!
In all seriousness, though, it’s all of the people I have met over
the years. All the different groups and causes – that’s what
keeps my job interesting.” His favorite part of WDOR is getting
to do the daily talk show, where he interviews everyone from the Department
of Natural Resources to the United Way to the various historical societies
and museums around the county. “I’m a history buff, so I love
having the historical groups on the show. I actually save some of those
shows,” Allen says, motioning to the vast amount of tapes piled
up in his office.
I’m at the end of my interview with Allen when the telephone rings.
He reaches to answer it, as the WDOR office is a small enterprise, and
he is in charge of receptionist duties for the evening. The phone call
is from a woman who had called a few hours earlier to notify the radio
station that her dog was missing. She is now calling to tell Allen that
the dog has been found. Allen talks with her for a moment, and in a matter
of minutes he has engaged in a conversation with such ease and sincere
interest that one would think he was on the phone with a relative or a
good friend. They talk for a few more minutes, and then Allen hangs up
the phone and smiles.
“It’s funny, after all the years I’ve been here, you’d
think I’d understand it – the way people thank us so profusely
for just doing our jobs,” Allen says. “We get calls everyday
from an organization or person thanking us for putting their information
on the air. And I always think, ‘Why wouldn’t we do that for
you? We’re a community entity – that’s what we’re
here for.’”
One would think after nearly 50 years in the radio business, Allen would
have plenty of interesting stories. “There are simply too many to
count,” says Allen. But his job in radio has taught him a few lessons.
“As silly as this sounds, one of the biggest things radio has taught
me is to ‘look for the obvious.’ Things are so technical here
that it’s easy to think the problem is bigger than it really is.
I’m the ‘first responder’ to anything whenever there’s
trouble, so experience has taught me that before I scare myself for no
reason, I always make sure that ‘it,’ whatever ‘it’
is, is plugged in,” he laughs. “I’m serious! That’s
the biggest lesson I’ve learned.”
My interview with Allen wraps up, and we chat about my family for a bit.
Inevitably, he remembers my father as a star basketball player at Sevastopol
High School and knows my relatives who own a supper club in Sturgeon Bay.
The conversation is easy and comfortable, and it is only then that I truly
realize how essential people like Allen are to Door County. More than
linking family names together, speaking with Eddy Allen has shown me how
important it is that we in Door County never lose that sense of community
– or personality.
|
|
|