The Monkeywrench Gang
by Mike Romano
Radio: An unlicensed station broadcasts alternative
music and a tangy vocabulary.
When I try to tune in 89.1 FM around 11 o'clock
at night, it sounds like Ray Suarez
from KUOW's National Public Radio and Jim Bohannon
from KIRO's The Buzz are
interviewing each other. I'm told that the crossover
between 94.7 and 100.7 occurs
because my radio is too sensitive, which is too
bad because what I was attempting
to find was the weak signal from Seattle's pirate
radio station. After a night of driving
around Capitol Hill, Eastlake, and the University
district listening to Ray and Jim and
their respective guests talking over each other,
I parked my car and decided to try
89.3. Thar she blew, behind only a little static:
Seattle's radio pirates.
The station has been broadcasting evenings in
Seattle throughout the winter. Before
that, Pearl Jam was using the equipment for their
Monkeywrench Radio project,
broadcasting their shows live from concert parking
lots. A man who goes by "Pfeltch
Dunderhead," a radio pirate since his teenage
years, toured with the band, running
their unlicensed 75-watt mobile radio station,
and we can thank him for keeping the
station going in Seattle.
When the band returned to Seattle in the fall,
Dunderhead wanted to keep the station
going, and using equipment from the concert tour,
began broadcasting on 89.1.
Although Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder paid for the
original equipment for the band's
Monkeywrench Radio, the group has officially
severed ties with 89.1 and the name
"Monkeywrench" has been dropped.
Still, the radio station's web site, http://bahh.internet.com/mwrench,
which displays
the on-air schedule, general music news, and
links to related sites, is clearly labeled
"Monkeywrench" [It was; It has since been changed
to "FUCC 89.1" -- 5h] and offers
direct connections to several web pages dedicated
to Pearl Jam. As it stands today,
89.1 is a collective of dues-paying on-air DJs,
none of whom are in Pearl Jam
(although several have close relationships with
the band), who meet regularly in
members' living rooms to discuss station security,
programming, and maintenance.
Because the entire station must be regularly
disassembled and moved to new
locations, 89.1 broadcasts only at night, usually
from 7 or 8 until the early morning. It
can be difficult to receive 89.1 because of the
station's weak signal and because the
transmitter moves to new locations several times
a week to elude the Federal
Communications Commission. "Jon Harrison," another
89.1 DJ and co-founder, says
the station's mission is primarily non-political,
except that it's run by non-commercial
and non-governmental interests playing music
not subsidized by major record labels
(i.e. music you probably won't hear elsewhere).
The programming is dominated by a
mix of underground rock, hip hop, dance music,
and sometimes live concerts, "for
the purpose of finding as much new music as we
can," says Dunderhead. The station
has broadcast live shows from several Seattle
clubs including RKCNDY, Moe, and
the OK Hotel; sometimes, DJs read random prose
and poetry over the air, and the
talk show What's Up Next airs Sunday nights from
9 to 10.
Typically, pirate radio stations stress political
agendas, such as Radio Free
Berkeley, which focuses on community outreach
with call-in talk shows for Berkeley
and Oakland community groups, and weekly programs
by groups such as Earth
First! and Cop Watch. If 89.1 has any political
leanings, it's to subvert FCC
regulations and government censorship. Harrison
wants the station's call letters to be
"FUCC," Dunderhead's first name, "Pfeltch," is
a play on a glorified sex act, a DJ
named Snatch hosts a music show called Pussy
Cock Juice (is Weird). The agenda
is meant to challenge the moneyed monopoly on
musicial expression and public
dialogue that's enforced by the FCC -- in other
words, the DJs revel in cursing over
the airwaves.
Despite their in-your-face style, 89.1 hopes
to escape the attention of the FCC by
flying beneath its radar and staying on an unused
frequency. Some at the station
claim they cannot apply for an FCC license even
if they wanted to. Since their
transmitter broadcasts at 75 watts, 89.1 lies
in an unregulated zone and a legal gray
area. The FCC disagrees and says that even transmitters
under 100 watts must
apply for "low power licenses" with the Mass
Media Bureau in Washington, D.C.
The issue will probably be decided in an important
Federal case on FCC regulations
over micro-powered broadcasting involving Radio
Free Berkeley's Steven Dunifer,
slated to begin trial on February 2 [1996]. Dunifer's
case will rest on First
Amendment issues and -- ironically -- on FCC
president Reed Hunt, who has said
that FCC regulations for public interest are
intellectually untenable and "a
meaningless hoax on the American public... an
injury to constitutional standards."
Dunifer, who goes by his real name, considers
"pirate radio" a derogatory term. He
worries that stations like 89.1 Seattle have
a "romantic attachment to the idea of
pirate radio," and hopes they will "cut down
on the music mix because there's no
point in being a farther-out college station."
Indeed, few would be able to distinguish
89.1's programming from the music played on the
KCMU (90.3 FM) -- which comes
as little surprise: At least four of the DJs
for 89.1 are KCMU veterans.
Not everyone can take on the FCC, but the 89.1
secrecy (interviews in ski masks,
secrest beeper codes for communications, etc.)
seem unduly excessive, and their
adolescent penchant for expletives undermines
their most important political feat:
that they're on the air to begin with. To quote
its pirate founder: "It's a totally divergent
form that can only be a positive thing and it
will move forward as a voice of positive
social change. It's like radio Dada." Spoken
by a true Dunderhead.