Did they have their own radio show where they called from the station? I believe the law covers what radio stations may do, not independent comedy acts.
It’s been a couple of decades since I listened–this was definitely before cell phones were common. But I think he threatened with the police. He also threatened to use an on-air delay to keep people off of the show, which just resulted in the callers getting cleverer and more subtle (the “holy rollers” were a great example–by the time they were describing the competitive Manwich-eating ceremonies, it was such a convincing call that the preacher didn’t quite clue in to the bullshit factor in time). You may be right, but that’s definitely not the sense I got.
Not from what I remember. Neither Captain Janks nor the Wack Pack work for the show. Stuttering John worked for the show but he did face to face interviews.
Here’s a relevant article from 2011 that makes the claim that almost all of the people you hear as callers on the morning shows are actors working through one or more services that recruit them…
I don’t. That’s why I asked. Before being sidetracked with incorrect information from other posters who somehow don’t believe that the person I heard making a prank phone call two days ago is an actual employee of the show.
Back in the '90s I had some friends who did this kind of thing. They would record the calls and post them to their website. One would call a local talk-radio show, play it totally serious, then say something outrageous. Then another would call in, condemn the first caller, and say something even wilder. And so on. The radio stations were going pretty much live with this, just a short delay like on live TV. I witnessed them once get the word “buttfucking” out over the air before the DJ caught it.
I think the difference between this scenario and the one in the OP is that it sounds like the preacher was inviting the public to call in live to the show. The folks calling in know and want to be on the air.