Who are these guys?
At least it's not Pong
Our crew at the Winchester Mystery House We also operate a small chain of local markets
Radio cohorts Jym, Debbie and Bob at San Jose's Winchester Mystery House Madge Finston weighs almonds at Annubis Markets
Before FreakaMedia and the Online WhackShack, Jym helmed* the 9-noon show on Mix 106.5/San Jose (along with Debbie Rogers and Bob Elmore). In San Francisco, he had shows on Big 98.1, KSFO/KYA, KKIS mornings, KFRC and X-100. He's also worked in talk radio. Jym came to the Bay Area in 1990 from WLRW, Champaign, Ill.

He's a voice actor in one movie so far (Henry Selik's Monkeybone), and in regional and national commercials, CD-ROMs, and books on tape (Majestic, McDonald's, Corn Nuts, Carmen Sandiego, Nintendo, Dr. Seuss, Warren Buffet Speaks and many more). He's done stand-up and improv-comedy, including a Punchline gig. He wrote gags for Jay Leno and was lead writer/editor for a national radio-prep service.

He was drummer and backing vocalist for the Grammy Award-winning group Petra in 1979 and he's studied and performed African big-band and jazz percussion. Jym's musical equipment includes Tama and Ludwig acoustic drums and Simmons SDX digital drums (it's cranky British technology, but this kit was used on a Doobie Brothers album, and Jym has a collection of Bill Bruford drum samples).

Jym has a B.A. in Speech Communications and Radio/TV from Eastern Illinois University, Charleston, graduating summa cum laude, and a degree in visual communications and graphic arts from the Art Institute of Atlanta.

He and wife Vicky live in coastside Pacifica, Where The Fog Is Thick And The Living Is Good©. If the San Andreas Fault goes, they'll relocate (along with their house) to Point Reyes, somewhat nearer Bodega Bay, where Alfred Hitchcock filmed The Birds.


*
Adding the suffix "ing" to helm creates "helming," an example of the verb form known as the gerund. For example, "dogging" my steps, "vegging" out. If you have others, please relate them in detail to the cast of TV's "24."
A bug in the system