Browsing Tag

Radio

News

Help Keep the Irish Radio Shows On the Air

Taking a page from public radio–and from last year’s successful fundraiser–the hosts of the Irish radio shows at WTMR 800AM will be launching their on-air pledge drive on Sunday, May 31. Vince Gallagher of the Vince Gallagher Irish Radio Hour and Marianne MacDonald, host of “Come West Along the Road” need to raise $36,000 this year to keep the two shows on the air. (You can hear them between 11 and 1 every Sunday morning.)

The “radiothon” will run for five weeks, ending June 30. St. Patrick’s Day Parade Director Michael Bradley will kick off the give-fest on May 31, taking pledges and requests from callers. Other local Irish organizations are also donating their time, including the Mayo Association (June 7), the Donegal Association (June 14), the Tyrone Society (June 21), and the Irish of Havertown (June 28). Other volunteers are welcome and needed to answer phones and help with mailings.

This year, there are even pledge incentives – gift certificates, and CDs and DVDs of your favorite Irish performers, all donated. If you’d like to help or donate, contact Vince (610-220-4142 ) or Marianne (856-236-2717).

As they say on TV infomercials: But wait, there’s more. On Tuesday, May 19, the Camden County Emerald Society is sponsoring a night of Irish music and dance at the Coastline Restaurant, 1240 Brace Road, Cherry Hill, N.J. from 7-9 P.M. For a $10 donation at the door, the evening will feature music and dancing with Kevin Brennan, Vince Gallagher, Muriel Prickitt, Mary Malone, Den Vykopal and other local musicians and the Emerald Society Pipe Band. There will be a free dinner buffet, all drinks will be $1 and raffle prizes.

On Sunday, May 31, the Auld Dubliner Pub at 157 S. Burlington Street, Gloucester City, N.J., will hold a special fundraising brunch immediately following the radio shows. Everyone is welcome, there will be live music and dancing along with a special brunch menu and raffle prizes. Reservations can be made by calling (856)432-6578.

The Rose of Tralee Committee has pledged a special quiz night with proceeds going to the radio shows. They are also donated two tickes to the Rose of Tralee Gala on June 27 along with $30 in raffle tickets.

On June 17, all Pizzaria Uno Restaurants in the area will be donating a percentage of their proceeds to the radio shows when customers either show a special voucher or ask for the voucher for the radio shows.

Music, News

Saved!

Pretty early on during the Sunday, August 24,  musical benefit to raise money for Irish radio, some people forgot they were at a charity event. “Isn’t this a great party?” one happy stranger asked me as I wove my way through the dancers in the Irish Center’s Fireside Room.

In fact, it was a great party and it raised about $3,000 to support The Vince Gallagher Irish Hour and Marianne MacDonald’s “Come West Along the Road” shows that air every Sunday,starting at 11 AM on WTMR 800AM. Along with pledges and sales of raffle tickets, it’s enough for MacDonald to say, “It saved my show—and Vince’s.”

Both radio hosts bear the entire financial burden of airing the shows. WTMR does not sell advertising for them, as other stations do, so they need to bring in the estimated $35,000 a year it takes to pay for the airtime. Hosts have always contributed their own funds, but this year, with the economic downturn, it’s been harder to find advertisers and sometimes harder to get advertisers to pay, One longtime large advertiser not only stopped placing ads, but also failed to pay for ads that already ran.

But Marianne MacDonald, who organized Sunday’s benefit, was heartened by the more than $26,000 in pledges the station received during its 8-week on-air drive, and the help from all quarters of the Irish community. “It was amazing to see such a cross-section of people,” she said. “Especially the older people who have been listening to the shows for years. They’ve been so nice.”

Most of the Irish societies, AOH divisions, and other Irish organizations not only made contributions, but some helped out as pledge-takers over the summer, including the St. Patrick’s Day Observance Committee, members of the Donegal, Cavan, and Mayo Associations,the Irish of Havertown, AOH divisions in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, the  NJ, Irish Memorial Committee, DelawareValley Irish Hall of Fame, Mayfair Community Development Corporation, Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, and the Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann Delaware Valley Branch.

Door and raffle prizes were donated by Lisa Carbrey of Celtic Scenes, an online photo and gift shop; the Waterford Wedgewood Company Store in Limerick; artist Patrick Gallagher; Liam O’Riordan of Blarney, County Cork; the Eileen Motel in Wildwood Crest; the New Deck Tavern; Emmett’s Place in Philadelphia; Kelly’s Touch of Ireland in Pitman, NJ; Kathy McGee Burns; the Philadelphia Mayo Association; the DelawareValley Irish Hall of Fame; and www.irishphiladelphia.com.

Local musicians also donated their time and talents, including Kevin and Jimmy McGillian, Mary Malone, Den Vykopel, Patsy Ward, John Boyce, Tim Hill, the Gittlemans, The King Brothers, Round Tower, The McHughs, Fintan Malone, Terry Kane, and others. They’re who kept the dancers busy most of the night to help work off the calories from the buffet dinner provided by caterer Mickey Kavanaugh. 

The fundraising will continue for several months with a raffle—grand prize is atrip for two for a week to Ireland, free lodgings at Faha House, a home owned by local musician Fintan Malone, in County Clare; standard car rental for a week, and admission passes to various sites. The tickets cost $10, or three for $20, and are available from Robert Gessler. You can call him at 215-806-7298, email him at gesslervs@comcast.net or write to him at 2212 E. Norris Street, Philadelphia, PA 19125.

Music, News

How Do the Irish Raise Money?

Radio fans

Radio hosts Marianne MacDonald and Vince Gallagher, far right, with just some of the folks helping out with the pledge drive. From left, Attracta O'Malley, Vera Gallagher, Jimmy Meehan, Fintan Malone (behind Meehan), Carmel and Barney Boyce, Kathy McGee Burns and Brenda McDonald.

A musical benefit on Sunday, August 24, will mark the end of the on-air campaign to raise money to save two Irish radio shows on WTMR 800AM.

“So far we’ve gotten $26,965 in pledges—and we never expected to get that much,” says Marianne MacDonald who hosts the “Come West Along the Road” traditional Irish music hour every Sunday at noon, following the Vince Gallagher Irish Hour. “To date,” she said this week, “WTMR has received $19,225.”

The pledges and the money raised by the benefit and a special raffle will help offset the cost of producing the shows, which, along with a little advertising money, has been borne by both MacDonald and Gallagher who estimate each has personally spent about $10,000 to keep the Irish music cranking out every weekend.

Many of the region’s Irish organizations have rallied to raise the funds. Along with making donations—some as high as $1,000—Philadelphia’s county societies, AOH divisions, and organizations such as the Delaware Valley Hall of Fame and the Mayfair Community Development Corporation have supplied volunteer pledge-takers every Sunday since late June.

The fundraising effort hits a crescendo with the benefit, featuring John Boyce of Blackthorn, Round Tower, the King Brothers, The Vince Gallagher Band, Fintan Malone, fiddler Mary Malone with piper Den Vykopel, singer Terry Kane, and Kevin and Jimmy McGillian (who will be playing for the all-afternoon ceili dance in the Fireside Room), and many others.

The $20 ticket includes food and music and an opportunity to win several door prizes, among them a “Wheelbarrow of Cheer,” a large framed photograph of an Irish scene, and an original painting. A raffle is planned, but the grand prize is still being “assembled” so details will be available at a later date.

The event starts at 5 PM and the music kicks off at 6 PM at the Irish Center, Carpenter and Emlen Streets, in the Mt. Airy section Philadelphia.

If you’ve already made a pledge and haven’t sent it in, mail your donation to WTMR Radio, C/O Sunday Irish Radio Shows, 2775 Mt. Ephraim Avenue, Camden, NJ 08104. If you haven’t made a pledge and would like to donate, do the same thing. Write “Irish Radio Shows” on your check. Thanks!

News

Irish Radio Pledge Drive Brings in $11,000

Marianne MacDonald, left, assisted at the mike by Hall of Fame President Kathy McGee Burns.

Marianne MacDonald, left, assisted at the mike by Hall of Fame President Kathy McGee Burns.

Who listens to Irish radio on Sunday morning? People like the Philadelphia businessman who called in a pledge last week when I was helping to man the phones for WTMR radio personalities Vince Gallagher and Marianne MacDonald, whose shows are in financial peril.

A widower, he chatted about his Irish-born wife whom he met many years ago at a dance in the city. The music, he said, reminded him of good times.

And then there was Bridget, whose granddaughter called in a pledge for her. “My grandmother is from Newfoundland. She lives in Juniata now and she loves the music,” she said.

And the Italian woman who’s been to Ireland 11 times because she adores the place, the culture, and, of course, the music, even though she’s only a little Irish, “maybe, way back.”

They’re only three of hundreds of people who have called in during the current pledge drive to raise money for the two WTMR Irish radio shows that air on Sunday. Since June 29, more than $11,000 in checks have been mailed in to the station, says Marianne MacDonald, whose “Come West Along the Road” show, featuring Irish traditional music, airs at noon, following the Vince Gallagher Radio Hour. Volunteers from Irish organizations throughout the Delaware Valley, from the Shantys band to the Delaware Valley Irish Hall of Fame, have been taking the pledged donations over the phone. Several local businesses, including The Shanachie Pub and Restaurant in Ambler and Brittingham’s Irish Pub and Restaurant in Lafayette Hill, have donated gift certificates.

“I have been very surprised and gratified, and so has Vince,” says MacDonald, who took over her hour from Irish musician Tommy Moffitt, when he retired (though Moffitt was back at the mike a few weeks ago, filling in for Marianne when she was in Ireland). “It’s really amazing to see that people really do care about the shows and are willing to show that they care.”

MacDonald estimates that airtime alone for the two shows costs about $35,000 a year. The largely religious broadcasting station, located in Camden, doesn’t pay the hosts nor does it sell ads for the Irish shows. Gallagher and MacDonald are expected to bring in their own advertising, which has always been an iffy proposition that isn’t helped by today’s sagging economy. Several long-time advertisers have dropped out, at least two without paying their bills. It’s been up to Gallagher and MacDonald to front the money and they have. Both have spent at least $10,000 of their own cash keeping the shows afloat.

“I’ve done some cold-calling to get ads,” says MacDonald, “and that’s really hard. What’s worse, you hardly every get anything out of it.”

The public-radio-style pledge drive will continue through August 17. In the works for August 24 is a musical benefit to be held at the Irish Center in Mt. Airy. Caterer Mickey Kavanaugh has donated a buffet meal and a number of local Celtic rock bands and traditional musicians have agreed to perform gratis. MacDonald is looking for volunteers to work that day and door prizes. You can contact her at rinceseit@msn.com.

Mail your donation to WTMR Radio, C/O Sunday Irish Radio Shows, 2775 Mt. Ephraim Avenue, Camden, NJ 08104.

People

How We Can Save Irish Radio

At the Irish Festival on Penns Landing, radio host Vince Gallagher, flanked by Carmel and Barney Boyce, collected donations.

At the Irish Festival on Penns Landing, radio host Vince Gallagher, flanked by Carmel and Barney Boyce, collected donations.

There have been Irish radio shows in Philadelphia since there’s been radio. Today, there are at least five reaching to all parts of the Delaware Valley. But two of the oldest shows have been experiencing financial trouble in recent years. Along with hosting their shows—choosing the songs, inviting the guests, reading the announcements—WTMR hosts Vince Gallagher (The Vince Gallagher Irish Music Hour, Sunday at 11 AM) and Marianne MacDonald (Come West Along the Road, Sunday at noon) have had to sell their own ads to pay for the studio time.

“In the two years that I’ve had the show, I’ve spend thousands of dollars of my own money to keep it on the air. Vince is in the same boat,” says MacDonald. “We have advertisers that don’t pay, we have too few ads to meet the costs, and we are both shelling out money at an alarming rate to keep the shows going. The previous hosts (Tommy Moffit and Mary O’Kane) went through the exact same thing. We have both spoken of giving the shows up, but we don’t want to.”

And they’re hoping that their many fans don’t want that either. Starting on Sunday, June 29, and running through August 17, between your favorite songs, you’ll hear the hosts and their special guests asking for pledges a la PBS. This Sunday, St. Patrick’s Day Parade Director Michael Bradley (whom we like to think of as “he who must be obeyed”) will appear on both shows to encourage listeners to contribute. Members of the Shantys, a local Irish band, will be taking phone pledges. On July 6, members of the Philadelphia Donegal Association will man the phones. On July 13, local musician Tommy Moffit will be back at the mike with members of the Ancient Order of Hibernians from around the city collecting donations.

In August, a number of local musicians will be holding a benefit to raise money for the shows. “We’ve had promises from people like John Boyce (of Blackthorn), John McGillian (of Five Quid and Pat the Budgie), Round Tower and lots of trad musicians to play at the benefit,” says MacDonald.

If you want to make a donation, you can send a check made out to “WTMR Radio,” with “Sunday Irish Radio Shows” in the memo line and a note inside the envelope indicating that you’re making a donation to the shows. Send it to:

WTMR Radio
C/o Vince Gallagher and Marianne MacDonald
2775 Mt. Ephraim Ave.
Camden, NJ 08104

We’ll be keeping you updated on the progress of this campaign. And we encourage you to contribute—supporting your peeps is one of the best ways we know of to be Irish in Philadelphia.

News

Help Save Irish Radio In Philly

If, as it is for many, your Sunday morning ritual is Mass, breakfast, and Irish radio, you may need to make other arrangements. Two of the longest running radio shows in Philadelphia are in serious financial trouble and may come to an end.

“Come West Along the Road,” with Marianne MacDonald, and the Vince Gallagher Irish Radio Hour, on WTMR 800 AM, rely on revenues from ads that the hosts must sell themselves. If there aren’t enough ads—and there haven’t been—both MacDonald and Gallagher must come up with the difference to pay for the airtime themselves. “Both Vince and I have spent thousands of dollars of our own money to keep the shows on the air, and we can’t do it anymore,” said MacDonald.

Neither MacDonald or Gallagher make money from the shows. “Contrary to what many people believe, we don’t get paid any type of salary,” said MacDonald, who took over her show from longtime Irish musician and radio host, Tommy Moffitt, about three years ago. Gallagher took over the spot hosted for many years by Mary O’Kane. “We took over something that was already broke,” said MacDonald. “Both Tommy and Mary were struggling too.”

For both hosts, the shows are a labor of love. If you love what they’re doing, come to the Philadelphia Irish Center at Carpenter and Emlen Streets on Friday, June 6,at 8 PM, for a meeting to brainstorm ways to save this important part of Philadelphia’s Irish tradition.