From E-gor's Chamber of Horror Host web page:
"Mad Daddy Myers is mentioned in feature article by Michael Weldon about Cleveland horror hosts, hosts, "The Hosts That Ate Cleveland," in issue #24 (December 1982) of Fangoria, pages. 28-32".
From E-gor's Chamber of Horror Host web page:
"Pete "Mad Daddy" Myers was a legendary radio rock disk jockey. He created the character of Mad Daddy on WHKK in Akron, Ohio, then moved his wiggy, frenetic platter patter to WJW and WHK in Cleveland and finally to New York City in 1959. At WNEW-AM, his trademark frantic patter bombed with the square NY audience, and he was stifled after only one shift. He stayed at the station in a painfully constrained role until 1963, when he was sprung to recreate Mad Daddy at WINS until the station went all-news in 1965. He then returned to WNEW-AM, where he worked on mainstream shows from 1965-1968. Though he did fine work on such shows, his heart just wasn't in it. On October 4, 1968, he took his own life with a shotgun in his Manhattan apartment after his shift was moved from afternoons to evenings".
From E-gor's Chamber of Horror Host web page:
"The Fangoria feature above was reprinted with changes as "Stay Sick with Ghoulardi" in issue #2 of Michael J. Weldon's own magazine, Psychotronic Video, (Spring, 1989), pages. 38-43.
From E-gor's Chamber of Horror Host web page:
"The Cramps' recording "Mad Daddy" is about Pete Myers (available on their album Songs the Lord Taught Us, on I.R.S. Records)".
From E-gor's Chamber of Horror Host web page:
"Mad Daddy Myers is mentioned in the feature article "Monster Mania '57" by Greg Theakston in issue #3 (March-April 1991) of Pure Images, pages. 2-11, 25-28".