Robert "Bob" Reitman (born December 1941 [1] ) is an FM radio personality (disc jockey, or deejay) from Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA. Reitman was a pioneer in freeform radio, also known as "underground radio", and has been playing album-oriented rock music and providing on-air commentary for over 45 years at various radio stations in the Milwaukee market. He is currently semi-retired, but continues to host a show once a week on WUWM, the Milwaukee Public Radio station where he got his start. His primary inspiration is Bob Dylan. [1] [2]
Reitman, son of an FBI agent, was born in Enid, Oklahoma and raised in the Milwaukee area village of Whitefish Bay. He received an English degree from Marquette University and a graduate degree in Urban Education from the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee (UWM). [1] His early interests included poetry, and it was while he was performing poetry to music in coffee shops that he was asked to take over a poetry show on WUWM (89.7 FM, "Milwaukee Public Radio") the National Public Radio station in Milwaukee, Wisconsin owned and operated by UWM. He was soon doing his own music show "It's Alright Ma, It's Only Music", one of the first "underground" FM music shows in the freeform style, where the disc jockey has full creative control and essentially makes up the programming as he goes along. [1] [2] The style was known for the hushed tones of the radio announcer in contrast to the blaring, shouting style of many AM radio personalities of the time, as well as the playing of long, extended album cuts (often from the deejay's personal collection), creative song sequencing across genres, and a general counterculture atmosphere that focused on the music rather than the announcer. The title of the show was taken from the Bob Dylan song It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding) and Dylan's music would continue to be the dominant theme of Reitman's career. [2] In 1967, he was also one of the founders of Milwaukee's first underground newspaper, Kaleidoscope.
In the late 1960s Reitman moved to FM radio station WZMF, a small 3000 watt station in Menomonee Falls, WI, where he performed his first full-time radio show in the freeform style that allowed deejays to be their own program directors. His show was called "The Eleventh House", which is also the name of an LP he released in 1972 of spoken word poetry and music. [3] Some listeners went to great lengths to pick up the weak signal, and the station's slogan was along the lines of "WZMF ... We're Hard To Get, But It's Worth It". Over the years he hosted shows at numerous other commercial radio stations in the Milwaukee area including: WAWA, WTOS, WQFM and WKTI, although as the years went on he had to relinquish the freeform style and mostly conform to the stricter programming formats enforced by commercially owned stations. [1] In 1976 while at WQFM, Reitman set the Guinness Book of World Records for continuous broadcasting by staying on the air at Wisconsin State Fair Park for 222 hours and 22 minutes. [4] In 1980 he teamed up with Gene Mueller, and the pair co-hosted the morning show at WKTI for over twenty-five years. They broadcast from the Soviet Union as well as from six Olympic games. [5] [6] They were known as well for their large scale pranks, such as advertising they would be dropping the very hot Christmas toy ‘Cabbage Patch dolls’ from the sky over the parking lot of the Milwaukee Brewers County Stadium. [7]
In 2006 Reitman retired from co-hosting the morning show at WKTI. He is currently hosting a new version of his old WUWM radio show, "It's Alright Ma, It's Only Music" with his son, Robert "Bobby" Reitman III once a week. The show airs on Thursdays at 8:00 pm and repeats on Saturdays at 9:00 pm on WUWM. [8] He has another son, John, and a daughter, Jessica.
Wisconsin Public Radio (WPR) is a network of 34 public radio stations in the state of Wisconsin. WPR's network is divided into two distinct analog services, the Ideas Network and the NPR News & Music Network, as well as the All Classical Network, a digital-only, full-time classical music service.
The UW–Milwaukee Panther Arena is an indoor arena located in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The arena, which seats as many as 12,700 people and offers 41,700 square feet (3,874 m2) of floor space, is part of a larger downtown campus, that includes the Milwaukee Theatre and Wisconsin Center.
Free-form, or free-form radio, is a radio station programming format in which the disc jockey is given wide or total control over what music to play, regardless of music genre or commercial interests. Freeform radio stands in contrast to most commercial radio stations, in which DJs have little or no influence over programming structure or playlists. In the United States, freeform DJs are still bound by Federal Communications Commission regulations.
WTMJ is a commercial AM radio station in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Owned by Good Karma Brands, the station has a news/talk radio format. Its sign-on dates back to 1922 and for most of its history it was owned by The Milwaukee Journal newspaper. On weekdays, it airs news blocks during drive time, local talk shows in middays, sports in the evening and syndicated shows in late nights. It is the flagship station for Milwaukee Brewers baseball and Milwaukee Bucks basketball.
WORT is a listener-sponsored community radio station, broadcasting from 118 S. Bedford St. in Madison, Wisconsin, United States. WORT offers a range of programming.
WHQG is a commercial radio station in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. It airs an active rock radio format and is owned by Saga Communications, operating as part of its Milwaukee Radio Group.
WXSS is a commercial radio station licensed to Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, and serving Greater Milwaukee and Southeast Wisconsin. It broadcasts a Top 40 (CHR) radio format and is owned by Audacy, Inc. Its studios are on West Grange Avenue in Hales Corners.
WRNW is a commercial radio station in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, known as "97.3 The Game." It airs a sports radio format and is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. The studios are on West Howard Avenue in Greenfield.
WJMR-FM is an urban adult contemporary radio station serving the Milwaukee, Wisconsin, area. They are known on-air as "Jammin' 98.3", and are licensed to Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin. Under ownership of Saga Communications, its studios and transmitter are located in Milwaukee's West Side.
WLDB is a commercial radio station in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. It is owned and operated by the Milwaukee Radio Alliance, a partnership between Shamrock Communications and All Pro Broadcasting. WLDB airs an adult contemporary radio format, switching to Christmas music for much of November and December. Its studios are on Good Hope Road in Menomonee Falls.
WKTI – branded 94.5 ESPN Milwaukee – is a commercial sports radio station licensed to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, serving the Milwaukee metropolitan area. Owned by Good Karma Brands, WKTI is an affiliate for ESPN Radio. WKTI is known as ESPN Milwaukee; also jointly identified as ESPN Wisconsin alongside Madison-based sister station WTLX, which simulcasts much of WKTI's local programming. WKTI also serves as the flagship station for the Marquette Golden Eagles; and the radio home of Mark Chmura, Mark Tauscher, Tony Smith and Steve True. WKTI shares its transmitter and tower facility with WTMJ-TV from its former studio located off of Capitol Drive in Milwaukee, an Art Deco facility known as "Radio City", in tribute to the New York complex of the same name. WTMJ radio, WKTI and WGKB moved to a new studio within the Third Street Market Hall in downtown Milwaukee at the end of 2022.
WOKY is a commercial AM radio station in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. It is one of two sports radio stations owned by iHeart in Milwaukee. WRNW 97.3 FM focuses on Wisconsin-based sports shows, while WOKY 920 mostly airs national programs from Fox Sports Radio, including Dan Patrick and Colin Cowherd. WOKY's studios and offices, which became the home of all iHeart Milwaukee stations in 2000 after a building expansion, are on West Howard Avenue in Greenfield.
WUWM is a non-commercial, listener-supported public radio station in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. It is owned and operated by the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee with the license held by the Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System. A unit of the UW-Milwaukee College of Letters and Science, the station's studios and offices are on the seventh floor of Chase Tower in Downtown Milwaukee.
WYMS is a non-commercial radio station in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, broadcasting on 88.9 FM. The station currently airs an eclectic adult album alternative music format, branded as "88Nine Radio Milwaukee". The station's license is owned by Milwaukee Public Schools, though it is managed and programmed by an outside group, also named Radio Milwaukee. In addition, WYMS airs weekly school board meetings on the over-the-air signal as a condition of MPS leasing the signal to Radio Milwaukee. The station broadcast in the HD Radio format, with its second subchannel carrying a locally-based automated AAA format.
Progressive rock is a radio station programming format that emerged in the late 1960s, in which disc jockeys are given wide latitude in what they may play, similar to the freeform format but with the proviso that some kind of rock music is almost always played. It enjoyed the height of its popularity in the late 1960s and 1970s. The name for the format began being used circa 1968, when serious disc jockeys were playing "progressive 'music for the head'" and discussing social issues in between records. During the late 1960s, as long-playing records began to supplant the single in popularity with rock audiences, progressive rock stations placed more emphasis on album tracks than did their AM counterparts. Throughout the 1970s, as FM stations moved to more structured formats, progressive rock evolved into album-oriented rock (AOR).
WAUK is a commercial progressive talk radio station licensed to the Washington County community of Jackson, Wisconsin, and serving the Milwaukee metropolitan area. It is known on-air as The Sha 101 FM in reference to the station's Waukesha based FM translator. The station's studios and offices are in downtown Waukesha.
WVTY is a commercial FM radio station in Racine, Wisconsin. It serves Racine, Kenosha and Milwaukee's southern suburbs. WVTY airs a country music radio format and is co-programmed with sister station 92.5 WMBZ in West Bend. They are owned by David Magnum, through licensee Magnum Communications, Inc., along with WIBD 1470 AM in West Bend.
Kaleidoscope was an underground newspaper that was published in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA]. Founded by John Kois, the radio disk jockey Bob Reitman and John Sahli, it was published from October 6, 1967, to November 11, 1971, printing 105 biweekly issues. The paper's first issue was printed with a borrowed $250 in an edition of 3,500 copies, which sold out in two days.
WTLX is a commercial radio station, licensed to Monona, Wisconsin and serving the Madison metropolitan area. The station is owned by Good Karma Broadcasting, LLC, and runs a sports radio format as a network affiliate of ESPN Radio, sharing most programming with Milwaukee based WKTI-FM identifying jointly on air as ESPN Wisconsin. Studios and offices were on North Pinckney Street in Madison for 5.5 years from mid-2016 to the end of 2021. Jason Wilde stated on December 21, 2021 during an episode of Wilde & Tausch that the show that day was the last show from that studio as the radio station was going to be moving to a new location. The transmitter is off Tower Road, using an antenna on the water tower at the Mendota Mental Health Institute in Madison.
Liam Callanan is an American author and professor of English at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee. His novels include The Cloud Atlas (2004) and All Saints (2007).