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Subject:
From:
Jim Gammon <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
For blind ham radio operators <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 6 Feb 2015 22:03:14 -0800
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Mike I found the book Charlatan but not one titled Wolf Man 
Autobiography.  Is it one and the same? I thought the station was 
XERB not F.  Jim WA6EKS

----- Original Message -----
From: "Mike Duke, K5XU" <[log in to unmask]
To: [log in to unmask]
Date sent: Fri, 6 Feb 2015 22:11:02 -0500
Subject: A Good Read about XERF

Below is a book review that I wrote for my local ACB chapter
newsletter.  While there are probably more defenative works out 
there
that are exclusively about XERF, and the other border blaster 
stations,
this one, which is about its founder, has a good bit of 
information.
Plus, even without the radio element, the story of what this 
crazy dude
really did and got away with for years is pretty amazing in and 
of itself.

The Wolf Man Jack autobiography, which is also available from the 
NLS
download site, is another good read about XERF in particular.

You can also google "border blaster radio", for more information.

XERF, XEG, and XELO, which was on 800, pounded into Mississippi 
from
dusk until well after dawn year round.



BOOK REVIEW
Charlatan: America's Most Dangerous Huckster,
the Man Who Pursued Him,
and the Age of Flimflam
by Pope Brock,
Reviewed by Mike Duke

Category: Medicine and Health
Read by Jim Zeiger
Reading time 11 hours 47 minutes.
db67282

What do country music pioneers such as the Carter Family, Jimmy 
Rogers,
Patsy Montana, Gene Autrey, Woody Guthrie, and legendary DJ Wolf 
Man
Jack have in common?

They all owed a major part of their success to a powerful "Border
Blaster" radio station which was established in Del Rio, Texas, 
by John
Romulus Brinkley.

Brinkley also invented the "infomercial," the media saturation
political campaign, and the predecessor to the call in show, the 
write
in show.  His radio program, "Medical Question mailbox," brought 
over 5
thousand dollars per week in contributions to his radio station 
at the
peak of the great depression.

But, radio broadcasting was not the primary occupation of J.  R.
Brinkley.  As the title suggests, he was a Charlatan; a "quack" 
medical
doctor, who scammed thousands of people, and caused the death of
hundreds  by claiming to cure impotence with goat-testicle 
transplants.
Morris Fishbein, editor of the Journal of the American Medical
Association, spent nearly 20 years trying to prosecute and 
discredit him.

Pope Brock weaves the tale of the quack doctor, the pioneer
broadcaster, and the man who was determined to silence him, into 
an
amazing story which will remind readers that truth, indeed, is 
stranger
than fiction, and in this case, much more scary.

2008.

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