A
few weeks ago the broadcasting landscape changed drastically for one
radio station, as X96 laid off several of its staff and put a lot of
programming on the chopping block. In the process effectively ending
the broadcast of any local music on the station. But from the ashes,
a familiar name fired back.
--- Portia
Early has been a fixture in local broadcasting for years, but the
past five have put her front and center in the local music spotlight.
Running the popular Live & Local series that helped give the
scene a mainstream location and artists a chance to be recognized on
a grander level. But once the writing was on the wall at X96, Portia
picked up and headed out before they got the chance. Not more than a
few days later a shift at UtahFM was hers, giving her the ability to
play whatever she wanted and speak her mind like never before. I got
a chance to chat with her about her career and on local music as well
as some other random thoughts, all topped with pictures from a few
weeks ago as everyone raided her first show.
Portia
Early
http://www.utahfm.org/
Gavin:
Hey Portia! First off, tell us a little bit about
yourself.
Portia: I was born in Burley, ID. My parents
moved to Holladay, UT when I was two. They met in Salt Lake in the
60's, then moved in with my mom's parents in Idaho. I was born in
1971. Grew up in Holaday, went to Skyline High. I was always into
theater since I was in the fifth grade. We had to do any book report
then, and I found a book on plays. I asked it I could direct a play
instead, which was Pippy Longstocking, and the teacher said yes. Of
course I starred and directed it. That's how that started.
Gavin:
What first got you interested in music?
Portia: I
was nine when friends showed me tapes of The Cars and B-52's. I was
exposed to B-52's "Hot Lava" and thought it was so weird! I
preferred "Quiche Lorraine". That was the funniest song
ever I thought. When I was 10 I owned Devo's New Traditionalists on
Vinyl. Then The Go-Go's Beauty and the Beat was my second album. In
1985 a school friend told me about this really cool station called
KCGL. It was all new-waver stuff ran by Mr. Mike Summers and Mr.
Bruce Jones (A.K.A. Biff Raff).
Gavin:
On college, how was your time spent over at Westminster?
Portia:
I started college in 1989 at Chapman University in Orange, CA. I
moved to Westminster six months later because I was homesick, but I
wished I finished in Cali. That was a fun school. Westminister was a
good school, but the theater department was horrible until 1991 when
a new theater was built and more teachers were hired. (there used to
be only one) I lived in the dorms my first year there and those kids
were cool. I was kinds popular there because I started in all the
plays.
Gavin: What inspired you to go into
broadcasting?
Portia: I was in a talent agency in 1992
and ran into a DJ who worked the morning show on KJQ with Kerry
Jackson (not Bill, and I forgot this guy's name). By that time Mike
and Co. already established the new X96 and KJQ had a completely
different staff with the exception of Kerry. I asked this guy if they
still did "DJ for a day". I did that, got hired on
Saturdays for no pay. I sent out ten airchecks and Summers called me
back. I started X in January 1993 working Monday mornings
2-6.
Gavin:
What was it like for you working there during the
“heyday”?
Portia: The early X was fabulous and even
though I was on the bottom of close to of the totem pole, I had a
blast! We made our own sweepers (no big announcer guy voice back
then). I interviewed a ton of 80's musicians like Rob Dickenson of
Catherine Wheel, Sarah McClaughlan, Jellyfish, The Origin, Live; and
Love & Rockets and Peter Murphy a month apart from each other! I
was also the music news director. The news was played on-air and the
website, which I wrote, produced, voiced, and recorded. That was my
favorite!
Gavin: What was your initial reaction to the
Simmons buyout in 1998?
Portia: The music news was cut,
and so were my on-air hours. So I left. It was so sad!
Gavin:
I read that you headed off to Arizona after that. How was your
time down south and what were you up to down there?
Portia:
I followed a boyfriend to Arizona in 1999 and worked at KEDJ in
Phoenix. Not as fun as X was. And the people weren't the
same.
Gavin: What persuaded you to come back to SLC and
work at X96 again?
Portia: Boyfriend didn't work, I
came back in 2001. I found out in 2004 that Todd was in charge and
was hiring weekenders.
Gavin:
How did you come to be involved with Live & Local?
Portia:
I did Locals Only in 1996-1997 programmed by Sean Ziebarth. Doug was
gone in 2005, Todd asked me to take over. I was
thrill-illed!!!
Gavin: What would you say was your
favorite or most rewarding quality of the show?
Portia:
Getting the right bands in the right places. And calling the winners
to tell them they are playing the main stage at the BASh. I loved
their reactions!
Gavin:
What was your reaction to recognition you got for your work on
the show?
Portia: Overwhelming at first. I got a Slammy
after I was the host for only three months, and I didn't know what it
was!
Gavin: Did you know the end was coming or was it
very sudden? And how did you react to it?
Portia:
Kinda both. I wasn't happy for the last three years. I felt that I
was being praised by everyone except for Simmons. I was making $10 an
hour for a part time job. I went to ask for a raise and a better time
slot, and that's when Todd told me that there would be no more
overnight or weekend live DJs, except for Live & Local from
10-Midnight. Then I decided to leave. I left four days after the
news.
Gavin:
How did the offer for UtahFM come about?
Portia:
I've been friends with Patrick Commiskey since February. I told him
the Monday after I quit that Saturday. I got a job offer the next
day.
Gavin: How has your time at the station been so
far, and what do you think of the new shift?
Portia: Oh
my God, I work during the day! It's liberating, I love the freedom I
have and I'm going to be so involved with the community. No pay, but
I'm having a blast and there have been a few paying opportunities
outside of that.
Gavin:
Now for the fun questions. What are your thoughts on the local
music scene, both good and bad?
Portia: More bands are
being unique and creative, and some are still stuck in metal or
emoland. I hope we continue to grow. There are the music venues but
we could definitely use more. More creative bands would be
nice.
Gavin: What's your overall feeling on local
radio, both corporate and local?
Portia: No comment on
corporate. Local gives the freedom to play the creativity that needs
to be noticed.
Gavin:
What's your thoughts on local labels, and do you believe the help
or hinder musicians?
Portia: Labels help, but I think
just in the state they are in.
Gavin: What do you think
of our current venues, and are there any changes you wish they'd
make?
Portia: We need more, and they need to look
nicer!
Gavin:
Real quick, what are your thoughts on the local art
scene?
Portia: The local art scene is awesome. It's so
diverse and involves all age groups. I love Gallery Stroll and the
events Art Access gallery provides.
Gavin: Where do you
see Utah entertainment in the next five years?
Portia:
Emo-free, and taking over the world!
Gavin:
What can we expect from you the rest of the year?
Portia:
I'll be living at the Utah Arts Festival this June. I helped pick the
bands for that. I also may book shows at the Salt Lake downtown
library and I may be on a media panel with everyone's boyfriend, Doug
Fabrizio. I am for sure going to broadcast my UtahFM show live from
different coffee shops playing live music. I am also booking bands
and emceeing monthly at Huka by Fashion Place.
Gavin:
Aside the obvious, is there anything you'd like to plug or
promote?
Portia: Me! I could use some extra cash. I DJ
weddings and events. Just email me at portia@utahfm.org.
Also any major animation productions, I'm available for my break as a
major cartoon voice!