News

WLUP-FM’s outrageous radio duo of Steve Dahl and Garry Meier, Chicago’s original shock jocks and a staple in the market for nearly 15 years, has exploded in acrimony, with Meier quitting in a ...
Steve Dahl’s final afternoon show on WLS-AM 890 will air Dec. 21 so he can focus on podcasting, he confirmed to the Tribune Wednesday. Marv Nyren, vice president/market manager of Cumulus Media ...
Check, check and check. Sheepishness, self-deprecation and hubris were on display, too, along with a fair number of laughs found in the midst of all of this as Steve Dahl returned to radio in Chicago.
That`s the question Chicago listeners are asking about the 5:20 p.m. walkout Tuesday by WLS radio personality Steve Dahl. ”I guarantee this is no put-up job,” said sportscaster Les Grobstein ...
Steve Dahl, the award-winning Chicago radio personality, announced he has prostate cancer. What they're saying: The ...
Donation Options Search Search Search “I feel good. No better or worse than I always do,” says podcaster Steve Dahl (pictured last summer). Provided Share Chicago radio legend Steve Dahl has ...
Chicago radio star Steve Dahl had a sneeze-and-you-miss-it cameo in a Jeep commercial starring Bill Murray that debuted during Sunday’s Super Bowl. The commercial itself is inspired by Harold ...
Radio stations were switching to all-disco formats. Steve Dahl, then a 24-year-old disc jockey, was mad. He had been fired from a Chicago radio station when it, too, went all-disco. In his new job ...
"I caught wind of a guy named Steve Dahl blowing up disco records," Mike Veeck says. Steve Dahl had lost his job spinning rock records when the radio station he worked for changed to an all-disco ...
As the "disco '70s" drew to a close, Chicago radio DJ Steve Dahl decided to speed up the process by promoting a Demolition ...
The July 12, 1979 event was the brainchild of a Chicago shock-jock-style radio personality, 24-year-old Steve Dahl, and Mike Veeck, Chicago White Sox promotions manager and son of the baseball ...
I have to wonder what McCormick might have called radio had he lived long enough to hear the inspired antics, creative flights and outrageous pranks of such radio performers as Steve Dahl ...