|
|
Museum of Broadcasting Hall of Fame
Don Dresser
Inducted 2002
For more than thirty years, the people of North Dakota and
northwestern Minnesota started their day with Don Dresser.
As a youth, he tinkered with tape recorders and began thinking
about a career in radio. He attended Brown Institute, and
after graduating in 1956, joined the staff of KTRF Thief
River Falls, where he and an engineer developed an echo
chamber that amazed listeners. In 1960, he began his long
tenure at WDAY Fargo, North Dakota, working a night shift
at first.
He took over the morning radio show in 1962, and stayed
there for 32 years, turning down opportunities to move to
larger markets because he thought the Fargo area was the
perfect place to raise his family. Listeners in the Red
River Valley loved his excellent voice, his quick wit, his
talent for telling tall tales, and the entertaining style
that made his program the top-rated show in the region for
many years. He is revered as one of the area's best known
and best loved broadcast personalities. In his spare time
he restores vintage Volkswagens, and has been an active
amateur radio operator for many years. He retired in 1994.
|