When he walks into a room, the first thing Bob Fass does is turn on the radio. “And the second thing I do,” he says, “is change the station. Then I change it again, and again, until I admit that ...
Kino Lorber will distribute “Radio Unnameable,” a documentary about on-air personality Bob Fass who revolutionized late night, free-form radio programming. It will premiere September 19 at the Film ...
The pioneering free-form radio host and counterculture icon Bob Fass has died at the age of 87. For more than five decades, Bob Fass hosted the program “Radio Unnameable” in New York, which first ...
Ten-thousand hours of radio airchecks that chronicle the counterculture of the 1960s have been acquired by Columbia University’s Rare Book & Manuscript Library. The vast majority of the recordings are ...
Half a century ago, when Bob Fass started his unscripted and unplanned radio career, most radio stations still signed off at midnight. “I asked why,” Fass says, “and they told me it was because no one ...
Syracuse University alumnus and free-form radio pioneer Bob Fass is dead at 87. The New York Times reports Fass died Saturday in Monroe, North Carolina. His wife Lynnie Tofte said he had been ...
The death of Bob Fass, the longtime host of “Radio Unnameable,” and a crucial member of the counterculture of the Sixties, has understandably led to recollections of him and tributes to his many ...
Bob Fass, who presided over a late-night freeform radio program on Pacifica Radio’s WBAI-FM in New York for more than 50 years, died Saturday from congestive heart failure. He was 87. Fass’ Radio ...
Bob Fass, who for more than 50 years hosted an anarchic and influential radio show on New York’s countercultural FM station WBAI that mixed political conversation, avant-garde music, serendipitous ...
On the evening of Feb. 11, 1967, several thousand people suddenly appeared inside the arrivals building at John F. Kennedy International Airport in Queens, where they danced, sang, smoked marijuana, ...
Bob Fass, longtime radio host for WBAI, died Saturday. His show, Radio Unnameable, aired for more than 50 years. Bob Fass, who hosted the influential New York City radio show Radio Unnameable for more ...