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The story of REM's #1 Hit Single 'What's the Frequency, Kenneth?' My second YouTube Channel / @rocknrolltruestories2 Have a video request or a topic you'd like to see us cover? Fill out our google form! https://bit.ly/3stnXlN ----CONNECT ON SOCIAL---- TIKOK: / rocknrolltruestory Instagram: / rnrtruestories Facebook: / rnrtruestories Twitter: / rocktruestories Blog: www.rockandrolltruestories.com #REM #DANRATHER #michaelstype I feel like whenever you hear a really specific or weird lyric in a song, you wonder where it came from. Sometimes it’s just an inside joke, but other times the real story is stranger than anything you could have guessed. Today we’re looking at one of the weirdest backstories in 90s rock. It starts with a bizarre, violent attack on one of America’s most famous news anchors, runs through paranoid delusions about TV networks broadcasting secret messages, and ends with R.E.M. turning it all into one of their most iconic hits. This is the true story behind “What’s the Frequency, Kenneth?” It’s October 4th, 1986, on Park Avenue in Manhattan. Dan Rather, anchor of the CBS Evening News and one of the most recognizable faces in America, is walking home after dinner. Two well‑dressed men appear and corner him. They don’t try to rob him. Instead, as one starts punching and kicking him, they keep shouting the same bizarre question: “Kenneth, what is the frequency?” Rather tells them they’ve got the wrong guy and that he doesn’t know what they’re talking about, but the phrase keeps coming as they knock him down near East 88th Street. He manages to get into the lobby of 1075 Park Avenue, where a doorman and building supervisor rush in and scare the attackers off. Rather is bruised and shaken but not critically hurt. A few days later he’s back on CBS, briefly mentioning the attack. Who was Kenneth? What frequency were they talking about? With no suspects and nothing stolen, the case goes cold almost immediately. The line “Kenneth, what is the frequency?” turns into a kind of pre‑internet meme—late‑night jokes and office chatter shorthand for something that makes no sense. The phrase pops up in a few places: the band Game Theory uses a variant as a song title in 1987, and in 1993 Daniel Clowes weaves it into his graphic novel Like a Velvet Glove Cast in Iron. But the biggest aftershock comes from R.E.M. By 1994, alternative rock has taken over, and R.E.M. is one of the biggest bands in the world. That September they release Monster, a loud, fuzzed‑out, guitar‑driven record. The lead single: “What’s the Frequency, Kenneth?” Michael Stipe, fascinated by the Rather story, calls it a kind of surreal, unsolved American moment and uses the phrase as a metaphor for generational disconnect. The narrator is an older guy who’s tried to decode Gen X through media—“cartoons, radio, music, TV, movies, magazines”—but still feels locked out and numb. One key line, “Withdrawal in disgust is not the same as apathy,” even quotes filmmaker Richard Linklater pushing back against the “slacker” stereotype. The song becomes a major hit, topping the modern rock chart and crossing over to the pop charts. During recording, it accidentally slows down near the end when bassist Mike Mills is hit with appendicitis mid‑take; they keep the performance, adding a weird layer of real‑life tension. The video, directed by Peter Care, cements the song as a 90s rock fixture, and in 1995 Dan Rather even joins the band onstage, awkwardly “singing” along and completing one of the strangest loops in rock history These videos are for entertainment purposes only. READ OUR DISCLAIMER https://rockandrolltruestories.com/yo...