Monkey Wrench Radio

From https://community.pearljam.com/discussion/13690/if-you-met-eddie-vedder-what-would-you-say/p13
Author and original publication unknown or at least forgotten

San Jose native David Meinert, 29, is one of the powers behind what the band calls "Monkey Wrench Radio."

Meinert and his partner, James Lane, who work for the band's manager, Kelly Curtis, have built their radio transmitting equipment themselves. They have had varied luck with their transmissions, reaching 20 miles at a Labor Day festival in Seattle and only a few miles from a concert site in Sacramento.

The transmission of a July show in Chicago has been made into bootleg albums, another thing that Pearl Jam, unlike more greedy and less talented performers, approves of.

The pirate broadcasts came together after a January satellite-radio show broadcast by Pearl Jam and its singer, Eddie Vedder, in which radio stations across the country basically turned over their transmitters for whatever Vedder felt like saying and playing.

It was amazingly refreshing, compared to most of what passes for commercial radio these days.

The show gave the band a taste of free access to the airwaves.

"My philosophy is that the media is too controlled by large corporations," says Meinert, who was contacted by the band. "What you hear on radio is very limited. The public is too much a consumer of media and not a maker of media. This is a way to give you some creative input into it."

Vedder, who regularly gives out his home phone number to fans, will broadcast a cellular phone number during the radio shows so people can talk to him on the air.

The shows also promote other pirate stations, such as Free Radio Berkeley (104.1), which has been in a court battle with the Federal Communications Commission over its unlicensed transmissions.

The FCC contends it has power to restrict access to the airwaves. The Berkeley station's founder, Steve Dunifer, contends that the public owns the airwaves and has a right to set up community stations on vacant frequencies.

"I prefer to call it free radio or rebel radio," Dunifer says. "The FCC uses `pirate' in a pejorative sense. `Pirate' implies stealing something that belongs to someone else. We feel the airwaves belong to the people of this country."

Dunifer salutes what Vedder and his band have done and says that, if the FCC decided to take on the band, it would bring a huge amount of publicity to the plight of free stations.

"There are so many performers who will never be heard on commercial stations," he says. "There are so many people who will never have a voice, except on community stations like this."

Meinert agrees. "Is this illegal?" he asks when I question him about whether he fears theFCC. "I think that it's a morally decent thing to be doing. That's my position on it."

He plans to set up Monkey Wrench Radio at either 88.1 or 89.1 on the FM dial, starting next Friday, a day before Pearl Jam performs at Spartan Stadium. He expects to continue his broadcast through the show and after. Usually Vedder and other band mates stop by to chat and play records.

Meinert says he is 90 percent certain that the band's concert will be broadcast. The only things that could stop it would be equipment failure or unforeseen circumstances, which with pirate radio is always a possibility.

There's already a reaction from some commercial stations in the area, resentful that Pearl Jam won't cooperate with station promotions. I've heard D.J.s calling the band "Pearl Scam" and coming down on Vedder for getting sick during a Golden Gate Park concert in the summer. This San Jose show is a makeup for that one.

It's sad to see unjust criticism of a band that has consistently gone further than any other to de-commercialize the music and give it, as purely aspossible, to fans.

This is a band that should be saluted for walking the walk. It is one of the few bands that knows the true meaning and power of rock 'n' roll.

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An Interview with entrepreneur David Meinert

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The Promoter: Erica Barnett on David Meinert