LEN
ELLIS
Leonard
J. "Uncle Len" Ellis, observed, "I've
been surrounded all my life by a chorus saying,
'You can't do that." And, I've never listened
to them." That belief made him a pioneer in
country radio.
A
native of Chicago, Ellis began his broadcast career
in Michigan and Mississippi before landing a job
as a disc jockey and station manager at WJOB in
Hammond. "Uncle Len," his early adopted
DJ name, believed in country music long before
it became popular. His kitchen-table style of communicating
with his listeners made him a legend, but his "ahead-of-his-time
ideas made him a communications pioneer when he
and his wife, Bee, started Porter County Broadcasting
in the 1960's when they brought local radio to
Valparaiso through stations WAKE and WLJE, where
he was the first to broadcast in stereo in the
Chicago area. Ellis also introduced cable television
to Valparaiso years ahead of many other communities.
The company's name was changed in 1993 to Radio
One Communications. WLJE, now called Indiana 105,
is ranked by the Arbitron Rating system as the
#1 local station. It's also rated 35th in the Chicago
market. Ellis still serves as chairman while his
son Leigh Ellis runs things on a daily basis.
A
founder of the Country Music Association, Ellis
holds member card #1; sat on the first Board of
Directors in 1958, plus served on the Board from
1981 to 1984. He was named Mr. Dee Jay, USA in
1963; the Country Music Association's "Small
Market Disc Jockey of the Year" in 1978 and
elected to the Indiana chapter of the Broadcast
Pioneers Hall of Fame in 1996. Bitten by the woodcarving
bug since retiring, Ellis is also a member of the
Duneland Woodcarver's Association.
Len
Ellis was inducted into the Country Music D J Hall
of Fame in 1983.