a get together at JFK airport where he and his friends could meet and party with Radio Unnameable listeners and their friends, while the planes took off and landed in the background. (y vision was like the Hawaiians who greet you when you get off the plane with leis, a kiss, and song, Fass says.)
About a month later, on Saturday, February 11, 1967, 3000 people showed up at midnight n the coldest day of the year, to play guitar and hang out at the International Arrivals Terminal underneath Alexander Calder monumental mobile. Fass told author Jay Sand, hat was the first inkling I had that there were so many people and that they wanted so much to get together. omething about this electronic thing – this radio station – makes it possible to listen to other people like themselves and they get the idea they aren alone.
Excited by the response to the Fly In, Fass and