It's up to the viewers to determine which are true and which aren't. The program consists of short stories about bizarre and intriguing events that have occurred during the past 100 years and stories that are fabricated. His company, Lehmann and Associates, is currently trying to market an independent program titled, "Counterfeit Reality." Today, Lehmann is still in the television business - writing, producing and directing.
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Here was Lynn Lehmann, a kid from Holladay with a syndicated TV show." He also hosted "Prime Time Scramble" - a program he syndicated to TV stations in several other markets. At KTVX he hosted "Dialing for Dollars" and a high school quiz show and anchored the weekend news. because they had to listen to his weekly awarding of the Lemon.ĭuring his radio days, Lehmann began taking an interest in television. People still tell him how they used to arrive late to class at the U. Lehmann's morning radio show on the old KCPX-AM (and KNAK for one year) was a daily staple for many thousands of Utahns from 1969 to 1980. When asked how he broke his arm, he told her he'd been skiing and had fallen while staring at a screaming woman sliding down the mountain with her pants around her ankles. The woman suffered a broken leg and while in the hospital met a man with a broken arm. "She went zooming down the hill in that position with her pants down," explained Lehmann with a broad smile. But when the woman shifted her weight to the back of her skis, she began to slide down the mountain. The woman skier was forced to go behind a thicket of scrub oak. The women, according to Lehmann, were at the top of a mountain when one told the other she desperately and quickly needed to find a bathroom. Lehmann says not a week goes by now that someone doesn't ask him, "What was your favorite Lemon Award?"Īnd each time he retells his favorite story of the two women schoolteachers who went skiing. "And now - Lynn Lehmann - with the Lemon Award of the week."The popular disc jockey would then read the winning letter nominating a person or group that most worthily lived up to the award's title. Just about anyone who lived in the Salt Lake Valley during the 1970s will remember the familiar words heard every Monday morning on the radio: