After completing his "national service," Alan tried to find
a job with as little responsibility and as much money as
possible. If you ask him what his first station was, he'll
say "Texaco," and he means it! But even that was too much
manual labor, so when a friend suggested to him that he had
a deep voice and was kind of weird, he applied for and was
accepted as a DJ in a suburb of Portland, Oregon. He and
the only other DJ split up the day on a station that was
all religious in the morning and went "underground rock" in
the afternoon, immediately following the Holy Rosary live
from the First Church of the Holy Rosary.
After bumming around the country in low paying jobs in
garden spots like Great Falls, Montana and Fargo North
Dakota, he finally landed a minimum wage job as a DJ at KGW
in Portland, Oregon. He stayed with that company, King
Broadcasting Company for 18 years as a DJ, program
director, group program director, and general manager.
In 1988 it struck him that he wanted to work for someone
who truly loves and understands him, so he went into
business for himself. In 1999 he partnered with John Frost
to leverage the strategic think they are both known for,
which means they each had half a brain and together could
probably figure out how to tie their shoes.
Alan also took on the responsibilities of Executive VIce
President of Programming for Paxson Communications, where
they made the mistake of giving him an American Express
card with no limit. Using that card he was able to take
enough people out to lunch and dinner to make them feel
good about Paxson Communications, and thereby produce good
ratings.
Since then he's been influential in several formats,
including Smooth Jazz and Contemporary Christian, and
become a combination consultant, writer, public speaker,
clown, mentor, cheerleader, and change agent.
Experience as a radio General Manager taught him the
importance of balancing forces: creativity and
accountability. So he combines original thinking with
strategic execution to create highly successful radio
stations. He would copy what everyone else does, but he's
old enough now that his memory isn't great.
Alan is an active contributor to the industry, and has
spoken at the NAB, Radio & Records conventions, the
Country Radio Seminar, the NRB and the GMA. He's been
published in Radio & Records, Radio Ink, Christian
Radio Weekly, All Access, and many other places. He also
publishes the successful "Mason Morning Minute" blog.
Chosen by CRW magazine as on of the 50 most influential
people in Christian music, Alan is also the 2007 recipient
of the Scott Campbell Award, and the GMA Echo Award for
impact on Christian music radio.