Mike Flanagan

Program Director

@OpenAirMike

Education:
Bachelor's degree in broadcast and journalism, University of Oklahoma.

Professional background:
Mike has more than 30 years of experience working in radio at several levels. He landed his first job at KWSH in Wewoka, Okla. when he was just 16. As a college student in Norman Okla., Mike hosted “Sooner Sanctum” at KNOR, the Norman Okla.’s only commercial station. After graduating, he served as program director and host for KOFM, Oklahoma City’s original “beautiful music” station, which changed to an acoustic rock format when Mike and his colleagues arrived.

Mike eventually moved to Colorado and held various positions at a handful of Denver radio stations, including KFML-AM, KLIR-FM 100 and KDKO. He was an afternoon drive show host for KWAB in Boulder from 1999-2001 and also worked at CPR as a classical music host for seven years in the 1990s. Most recently, Mike was general manager of the University of Colorado’s nationally-recognized student radio station, Radio 1190.

Outside of radio, Mike has had an accomplished career as a writer and published author. For nine years he wrote for the Denver Post’s Empire Magazine, “Out West.” Throughout his career, he also managed to find time to author four successful books including “The Complete Idiot’s Guide to the Old West.”

Mike came back to Colorado Public Radio in 2011 to help bring new music to Colorado Public Radio with the launch of OpenAir.

Q & AHow did you become interested in music?
My earliest musical memories involve being very little yet very aware of Elvis. It was like we were all getting a visit from the future. I didn't know, but it was all different. I had nothing to reference it to, so the lesson I thought I was learning was that the world went crazy for new music. That sounded great to me. I wanted to play a guitar but that was too difficult. I switched to piano, took lessons, but what they were teaching me was so far from what I wanted to be doing, I never got very far. Then I realized I could play whatever I wanted with a record player and I was completely hooked. When I got a little older, I could ride my bike to a warehouse where the guy who "jobbed" the local juke boxes sold the 45s he took out of the machines for a dime a piece. An outlay of one dollar and I could come away with Elvis, Buddy Holly, Bo Diddley, Chuck Berry, Jerry Lee Lewis, the Everly Brothers and more.

How did you get into radio?
I toured my first radio station as a cub scout when I was eight years old. I was smitten immediately. Here was an entertainment medium where you could reach lots of people at once and never have to look at anybody. Great for shy extroverts. Plus you could play records for a living. As soon as I turned 16, I went back and got a job at the studio where I'd taken the tour. Radio is very much like writing...mass communicating, touching many, all from a quiet little room where you sit all by yourself. Theatre is art, movies are real life, television is furniture and radio is imagination.

How did you end up at CPR?
This is my second tour of duty here as I was a classical host from 1991-98. In early 2011 I began talking with CPR about what a natural fit modern creative music is with public radio. Our visions connected. Colorado is a wonderful epicenter for new music. I tend to steer away from labels, brands and other attempts at pigeon holing what is about to happen. It's not about limits and boundaries. It's about OpenAir.

Favorite music?
I get exposed to so much music it is very hard to hover over just one type. I like music that tells the truth, that creates its own reality, and that accomplishes what it set out to do. Did it want to make you dance, think or discover? Did you dance, think or discover? Then it worked. And for that moment, it was my favorite music.

Retrofit remembers Woodstock with rarities

It’s Woodstock’s 45th Anniversary! On Retrofit this week we’ll stray from the beaten path in our tie-dyed VW bus, and focus our black lights on some Woodstock Rarities, in other words, not the signature playlist that was handed down on the original soundtrack.

Retrofit: Here Comes the Sun

Join host Mike Flanagan for fun in the sun on Retrofit with an hour of solar power entitled “Here Comes the Sun.” Shine on, Saturday, May 31 at 5 p.m. and SUNday, June 1 at noon!

Retrofit: Deep Garage

Host Mike Flanagan takes Retrofit into the Deep Garage this week, with classics and modern examples of over-amplified thunder, snaky organs, and the kind of reverb that could pop the needle out of the groove.

Retrofit: Tom Waits Covers

This week on Retrofit we have Tom Waits covered, as artists big, little, and surely out-of-luck put their stamps on the guy who is just looking for the heart of Saturday night. Tune in to Tom Waits Covers, 5 p.m. Saturday, May 17 and the eggs and sausage special at noon on Sunday, May 18.

Retrofit: Double Standard – The Duets Show

As far as Retrofit is concerned this week, two is definitely better than one. Duets have always had a certain musical appeal, typically bringing together two stars for an uncomfortable three minutes during which neither one knows exactly what they are doing.

My first record: Mike Flanagan

In the days leading up to this year’s Record Store Day on April 19, the OpenAir hosts will share the story of their first-ever record purchases, however memorable or misguided they may have been. First up is program director and afternoon host Mike Flanagan.