Seacrest wrote:
brucester001 wrote:
Listened to tribute today and music was very good. The other thing I noticed is he had not mentioned Mary Dixon since she got fired and she was not mentioned today. Did they have a fallout after she got deservedly canned as I got tired of her liberal biased newscasts. Probably the only person who didnt consider him the best friend in the whole world.
She was let go in a cost cutting move.
WBEZ host and former on-air partner Mary Dixon: "I worked with Lin for the better part of 28 years. He loved rock and roll, the listeners, and most of all, [wife] Sara and [son] Wilson."
"I learned a lot from Lin: how to connect music with current events, how to treat listeners with kindness, the beauty of a baseball game with an off-speed pitcher on the mound. I taught him how to floss."
"I loved him like a brother you sometimes want to strangle."
"I'm on my first real vacation in four years and will miss a [Sunday] gathering ... to share some drinks, memories and songs in Lin's honor. My request in absentia is Wilco's 'Box Full of Letters.'"
I had no idea that they had a falling out, but reading between the lines of that statement, well, let's just say it doesn't come off as the most heartfelt thing I've ever read.
I'm going to guess that CH is correct and that she wasn't very happy that he didn't go to bat for her.
Curious Hair wrote:
His listeners were mostly educated north-side urbanites (and suburbanites who drink Goose Island and still make it back in to see Wilco at the Vic) and local media members, both of whom seem to have an outsize role in determining who gets to be the Chicagoest Chicagoan. I mean, if we're talking about iconic Chicago morning shows of the '90s and 2000s (and sure, why not, 2010s), the first names that come to mind for most people are going to be, sadly, Eric & Kathy, Eddie & JoBo, and Mancow. But they all sucked. Lin was actually good, one of the best, but if you weren't really keyed into local arts/music/culture or didn't have parents who could've been in The Big Chill, I don't think he really meant much to your conception of Chicago. And even if Eric didn't make the women he worked with blow him in the broom closet, I don't think his death would make the front page of the WBEZ-owned Sun-Times.
I had no beef with him. His show was fine. "Lin's Bin" was usually pretty good and occasionally brilliant.
But, I don't really consider him a "Chicago guy." He's an East Coast dude who came here for work. When he thought he had a better job he moved to Minnesota.
Putting on a Cubs cap and going to FitzGerald's doesn't make you a Chicagoan. That's not a knock on a guy who just died. Not everyone has to be a "Chicago guy."
There is no specific litmus test for being a what I consider a "Chicago guy." You don't have to be born here. You don't even have to be a guy. Terri Hemmert is a "Chicago guy."