Peter Tripp

Broadcast Artist

1926 – 2000

47

Who was Peter Tripp?

Peter Tripp was a Top-40 countdown radio personality from the mid-1950s, whose career peaked with his 1959 record breaking 201 hour wakeathon. For much of the stunt, he sat in a glass booth in Times Square. After a few days he began to hallucinate, and for the last 66 hours the observing scientists and doctors gave him drugs to help him stay awake. He was broadcasting for WMGM in New York City at the time. Tripp suffered psychologically, after the stunt, he began to think he was an imposter of himself, and kept that thought for some time.

His career soon suffered a massive downturn when he was involved in the payola scandal of 1960. Like several other disc jockeys he had been playing particular records in return for gifts from record companies. Indicted only weeks after his stunt, it emerged that he had accepted $36,050 in bribes. Despite his claim that he "never took a dime from anyone", he was found guilty on a charge of commercial bribery, receiving a $500 fine and a six-month suspended sentence. Even his wakeathon record did not endure for long. Other DJs had quickly attempted to beat it and Dave Hunter, in Jacksonville, Florida, soon claimed success. Six years after Tripp's record, it was smashed by high school student Randy Gardner, who lasted 11 days.

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Born
Jun 11, 1926
Port Chester
Nationality
  • United States of America
Died
Jan 31, 2000

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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