Thursday, August 7, 2008

A Tribute to MaryEllen O'Brien

I have a confession. I have no idea who MaryEllen O'Brien is. Other than what her MySpace page says.

According to it, this is a picture of MaryEllen (who runs her two Christian names together, or least it is written that way on her MySpace page). Also according to it, "MaryEllen O'Brien is a freelance writer and author of two books and numerous articles in the area of spirituality. She is also a rock radio vet who spent 20 years on the air at stations ranging from WBLM in Portland, Maine to 93 Rock, Sacramento, to Atlantic 252, an international radio station based in Ireland and broadcasting to the U.K., and more. After logging all that on-air time MaryEllen took a break from radio to pursue studies in spirituality and theology and to begin writing professionally. Today MaryEllen writes, does voice talent work—and who knows, may just do some radio again too! She also does energy healing work. She has had a lifelong interest in the paranormal." OK. Now you know as much about her as I do.

But you must be asking, if you don't know this woman; never met this woman; and only know what her MySpace page says about her; why are you blogging about her? Fair question. Simply; she intrigues me. And reminds of a bygone era. Well actually one part of her resume' intrigues me and reminds of a bygone era that was near and dear to my heart and keeps great memories alive.

Here's the deal. After finding out there are engineers, as well as non engineers, who have posted transmitter tours of broadcast sites on YouTube (IS THERE NOTHING NOT ON YouTube??!!) I ran across a video of a defunct long wave radio station in Europe, Atlantic 252 (spoken as Atlantic TWO-FIVE-TWO). Now I have always had a subtle fascination with European rock and roll pirate radio stations (illegal broadcasting stations) and the like from the 60's forward. Stations like Radio Caroline and and the American backed Lazer 558.

As a young pup in radio in the early 80's, I had passingly read of the illegal stations Radio Caroline and Lazer 558 in one of the trade papers and how the UK was trying to shut them down. They were two of several radio stations that broadcast from ships in the North Sea to the UK and mainland Europe. Back in the day, I just couldn't fathom (pun intended) how you could broadcast an AM signal from a ship effectively. Well, years later, I now know how; but it ain't easy (that is a different posting, though).
The thing about Atlantic 252 is that it legally broadcast on 252 kHz. Frequencies BELOW the North American standard medium wave AM broadcast band. Frequencies here in North America that houses only aircraft navigation beacons and you need shortwave radios to hear them, but in Europe are as common as your local AM or FM station here in North America. In Europe, they are allocated to broadcasting. The UK, Ireland, France, Germany and Spain all have certain frequencies allocated to them in this "European long wave broadcasting" spectrum. It was and still is mostly government broadcasters like the BBC and RTE and such, but a group of investors decided to try a "national" commercial station in the long waves for the UK. Long waves have the advantage of very large coverage areas day and night per transmitter site without many of the interference issues the AM broadcast medium waves experience. This was the late 80's and Europe still hadn't embraced FM radio as we had here in the US. AM radio was still in vogue in Euorpe. The only long wave frequency they could get for this new station was 252 kHz, hence the branding number, 252. But the catch was the station, that was to broadcast to the UK, had to be located in Ireland because of the frequency coordination, hence, Atlantic in the branding. So the station was located in and around Trim, County Meath, Ireland and Atlantic 252 was born.


So this is where MaryEllen O'Brien comes into the story. Exactly where in the time line of Atlantic 252 I am not sure or for how long she stayed, but it seems she was one of the original disc jockeys or "presenters" as they are called in Europe, when the station signed on.

But I am getting ahead of myself. Anyway, when I surfed over to the tribute site for Atlantic 252, I found in the middle of these high energy, high personality (something that radio today sorely lacks among the cookie cutter radio stations that dot the AM and FM bands in the US) UK, Irish and Scottish rock and roll disc jockeys, an American woman named MaryEllen O'Brien was on the list. It must have been the fashion at the time to have an American woman on an air staff in Europe because even the pirates, whom many of the legal European broadcasters had begun to emulate to retain listeners, had American sounding women on their staffs too. MaryEllen was an American. And from the airchecks I heard on several sites, MaryEllen was good. She could front announce up to the post or kiss the lyrics with the best of the US announcers and never miss a beat in giving the latest weather forecast.

They did rebel rock and roll on Atlantic 252, something that was both a throw back to the classic early days of bad boy rock and roll radio of the 50's and 60's with the likes of the beloved Allen Freed, Cousin Brucie, Murray the K, Dan Ingram or Super Jock, Larry LuJack and a look to the future of the naughty free-for-alls you now hear on morning radio but not in the "shock jock" vein of current radio, but in that fun, just east of blue vein that is so lacking in radio today on the Morning Zoo's. A style that takes talent to pull off, not a dirty mouth. The ole, "fully clothed, undressed woman" concept. i.e the imagination is more powerful than reality.

But all good things must come to an end. And too so did Atlantic 252. FM finally overtook Europe and not only put the licensed commercial AM stations like Atlantic 252 out of business and into the hands of their respective licensing governments, but it did what the governments couldn't do, finally run the AM pirates out of business. In December 2001, Atlantic 252 signed off for the last time. A victim of the changing times as had its North American cousins of two decades before. The long wave frequency and transmitter site reverting back to the Irish government, where the government run RTE has a station on that frequency and facility now.
The pirates didn't even make it that long, being gone in the early 90's due to continued governmental pressure and changing listener patterns. Radio Caroline went though 3 or 4 ships (and in a gale one of the Caroline ships, the MV Mi Amigo went to the bottom off the coast of the Long Sand Bank in 1980 with the 127 ft antenna tower sticking above water for 6 years before it rusted off into the sea) in their 25 years of pirating, The last Caroline ship, MV Ross Revenge, is put up in port as a volunteer support group tries to keep the old ship and its 80's vintage broadcasting equipment from rusting out with high hopes of sailing the old lady on the high seas again and maybe broadcasting, legally. MV Communicator of Laser 558 fame went to the cutters torch just this year. Radio Caroline being the last one still broadcasting more legally on satellite radio now in Europe but nowhere near as popular or as outlandish as in the old days.

So my tribute to MaryEllen is really my memory of when music radio was good and fun to listen to and work in. How even an American could make it big on a European rock and roll AM station when at the time, here in the US, AM music radio was all but dead at the hands of FM radio. I used to be idealistic back then too, dreaming of far off exotic places doing radio. To be young again with what I know now. But she just went off and did it. While I only continue to dream of it.

He's to you MaryEllen. May you always hit the post. May you never have dead air or back time issues going into the top of the hour news. And may you NEVER, EVER had to play Freebird or Stairway to Heaven (or even MacArthur's Park), unless you WANT to or its on the playlist, not because you HAVE to. And from one former jock to another, MaryEllen you KNOW what I am talking about.