R.J. Heim at WLAN-FM, Lancaster PA., 1981
R.J. Heim with his first Emmy Award, 1993
R. J. Reporting, 1994
R. J. Heim Channel 10 Publicity Photo
R. J. Heim, 2001

R.J. Heim writes:
To this day, I still tell anyone who asks that I loved radio more than television, but in radio you can get fired too easy, and unless you're a super-talent, there's no money to be made. Radio is a two-way intimate medium, where you're on the air for hours at a time, interacting with the audience. Television is initially a one-way process, with a delayed reaction (you get the feedback later - like when you're unshaven in the grocery store), where you work 8 to 9 hours a day for a compressed couple of minutes of air-time.
I'm currently the Weekend Meteorologist / 3 Day per Week Reporter for NBC10(WJAR-TV - Providence, Rhode Island). I've been here since 1993 (my longestcontinuous broadcast experience), where I've won the Emmy Award for OutstandingWeathercaster in New England twice. There have been television stints in Harrisburg, PA(WHP-TV / 1990 - 1993), Miami (then WCIX-TV /1985 - 1990 as a part time Weekend Weather Anchor).
There was a lot of radio overlap during the Miami experience during the 1980's to makeends meet including WAIA (97A1A - Adult Contemporary, it became WGTRin a format change (97GTR - Rock), WLYF (Life - at FM 101 point 5! - Easy Listening), a summer stint at WKLG-Rock Harbor (Easy 102 - Key Largo), then WXDJ (95-7 The Breeze - Miami - Contemporary Jazz), my last Miami station. I had had enough.
Prior to that, 2 years of television for Palmer Cablevision in Naples, Florida (NewsWatch 9) as a Weatherman and Feature Reporter. There I had my first experience at world-wide exposure, after sending a feature story on the Swamp Buggy Races to CNN(it was used as the "kicker" story on Headline News for 2 days in a row - every other half hour!)
Before Florida, my first TV job was in 1982 at WTVE-Reading (TV51 NewsBeat). Thatnewscast went belly-up after 6 months, but for being paid 2 hours a day minimum wage,and the rest of my income supplemented by the CETA program for migrant workers(ironic!), I at least had tape!
Every job before that was radio starting at WYCR-FM (98YCR - York-HanoverPennsylvania) while still in High School in 1976. During college at Temple University inPhiladelphia, I worked for WTTM-Trenton, WSSJ-Camden, and WQIQ Chester/Aston. After college, finally my first full-time radio gig at WLAN-FM in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, doing overnights. Then, I was hired away by WFEC/Harrisburg to work a new format called "Hot Hits!". Having grown up listening to stations like WFIL and WABC, this was a chance to do some high energy Top 40 radio. I couldn't pass it up, even though I was still under contract at WLAN. That's why my air name was changed to Robert Walker while I was at WFEC.
So, when people say "...it must be great being in broadcasting..." I smile back on theexperiences, and wouldn't trade them for the world. Although I crave the stability oftelevision, and thoroughly enjoy working for the number one station in Southern NewEngland, there's still a place in my heart for radio. Enjoy the collection!
The Repository thanks R.J. Heim for sharing!

Robert Walker (R.J. Heim) WFEC Harrisburg, 1982 (07:46)
. . . Hot Shot Robert Walker . . .
[Description by contributor R.J. Heim]
In 1982, the Mike Joseph Hot Hits format was sweeping the country, all on FM stations, mostly CBS O&O's. In Harrisburg Pennsylvania, WFEC (1400 Khz) had been a successful Top-40 station through the 1970's, before a format change to urban. They decided to try true Top 40 one last time.
I was hired to do the 1 - 5 p.m. shift Monday through Friday. Here's a sample from March of 1982. A dream come true with big jingles, big reverb, and high energy, for a guy who grew up listening to Ron Lundy & Harry Harrison on WABC, and George Michael & Jim O'Brien on WFIL. I remember listening to the final shows of WABC as a music station while driving to work at WFEC.
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R.J. Heim and Rev. Bob WLAN-FM Lancaster, PA. November 1983 (04:18)
. . . Reverend Bob, why are people afraid of 30, and why do they find it difficult once they get there?. . .
[Description by contributor R.J. Heim]
I have no idea what creative well I had to tap into to find "The Reverend Bob" character. All I know is that it was exhausting. Listeners of WLAN-FM 97 would call in on the station's 800 number with questions for Reverend Bob. I would go through that list, jot down some notes, go into the recording studio, and ad lib the whole thing on tape for broadcast the next day.
I knew I wanted a career in television news, not one as a comedian. Then, the Lancaster Intelligencer newspaper interviewed me for a feature story. It wound up taking up the whole front page of the "Lifebeat" section, with a fish-eyed lens picture of me, recording a segment, my fist clenched jutting in the air. Then the Associated Press picked up the story.
It ran in the Philadelphia Inquirer, and dozens of other newspapers around the country. The Reverend Bob was starting to take on a life of his own. Talk Radio stations around the country were calling, asking for interviews with the guy who was shaking up Amish country with an irreverent Reverend. The whole thing was getting out of hand. Fortunately, I got my next television gig, in Naples, Florida, and "The Reverend Bob" has not been heard from since!
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