Pugs Moran and James Parker step back to trace how Live 105.3 even came to exist, starting in Chicago where Pugs cut his teeth at The Loop and built his on-air identity before a chance phone call with Kelly Mohr turned into their first show together. That momentum quickly collided with reality when a feud with radio legend Steve Dahl got them fired, a hard lesson in how power really works in the business. From there, the story shifts to Dallas, where insiders reveal the station itself was never supposed to succeed. The “Young Country” format it replaced was already being positioned for failure, with leadership quietly preparing for a full pivot to personality-driven talk radio built around bigger, louder voices.
As the format flipped in early 2000, a mix of veterans, outsiders, and lucky breaks came together at just the right moment. Future stars and staff describe getting pulled in from rival stations, stand-up comedy, or even random listener calls, while others recall the chaos of layoffs, last-minute deals, and entire shows being wiped out overnight. What emerges is a picture of a station built less by careful planning and more by timing, risk, and a willingness to bet everything on personalities over structure. By the end, it’s clear Live 105.3 was never a safe, corporate creation. It was something far more volatile, born out of disruption, desperation, and a handful of people willing to take a shot when the door cracked open. [Ep 2]
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