Cause and Effect presents:
The Story of WHER, America’s Pioneering, First All-Woman Radio Station
When Sam Phillips sold Elvis’ contract in 1955 he used the money to start an all woman radio station in Memphis, TN. Set in a pink, plush studio in the nation’s third Holiday Inn, it was a novelty—but not for long. He hired models, beauty queens, actresses, telephone operators. Some were young mothers who just needed a job. WHER was the first radio station to feature women as more than novelties and sidekicks. The WHER girls were broadcasting pioneers.
Set against the backdrop of the civil rights movement, the women’s movement, Vietnam, and the death of Martin Luther King—the story of WHER follows the women who pioneered in broadcasting as they head into one of the most dramatic and volatile times in the nation’s history. “WHER was the embryo of the egg,” said Sam Phillips. “We broke a barrier. There was nothing like it in the world.”
From 1955 into the mid-1970s they ruled the airwaves with style, wit and imagination. WHER lasted through 1973, only two years after the National Press Club opened its membership to women.
Here’s to the women of WHER —Becky Phillips, Marge Thrasher, Janie Joplin, and Bettye Berger who have all passed on to that big radio station in the sky.
SOURCES:
Rufus Thomas, “Junita”
from Bear Cat (The Answer to Hound Dog) [Early Singles 1950 - 1957]
Soul Story - 2014
Kitty Wells, “It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels”
from Kitty Wells’ Country Hit Parade
MCA Nashville - 1956
Skeeter Davis, “Gonna Get Along Without You Now”
Big Buzz Productions - 2019
Etta James, “I Just Want to Make Love to You”
from Etta James - At Last and Greatest Hits (Remastered)
The Restoration Project - 2012
Glenn Miller, “Tuxedo Junction”
from Glenn Miller Swing for Victory 1937-1942
Fremeaux Heritage - 2000
Big Memphis Ma Rainey, “Call Me Anything, but Call Me”
from Call Me Anything, but Call Me / Baby, No, No! - Single
Sun Records - 1953
Mahalia Jackson, “Summertime / Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child”
from Bless This House
Columbia/Legacy - 1956
Erma Franklin, “Piece of My Heart”
from Piece of Her Heart - The Epic and Shout Years
NITRON media - 2009
Julie London, “Sunday Blues (feat. Russ Garcia and His Orchestra)”
from About the Blues (feat. Russ Garcia and His Orchestra) [Mono Version]
BNF Collection - 1958
Dusty Brooks & His Tones, “Tears and Wine”
from Dusty Brooks & His Tones' I'm Shedding Tears Over You - EP
Charly Records - 2006
Carrie Thornbrugh Cause and Effect May 18th, 2024
Posted In: Music, Music Shows
Tags: music, Music show, obscure, variety, WRIR