WARNING, THIS WILL GET SHILLED
STARTING TO DIG ON THE AJ/BILL HICKS BS
I was skeptical but anon posted pics that made me think twice. My overall conclusion is that there is something fishy here and this might be a provable conspiracy. It needs more autism. Just look at the attached photos and tell me they don't look just like AJ and Bill Hicks. Think it's a coincidence Hicks and AJ are from Texas? Hicks grew up there. Think it's a coincidence AJ made his carreer start in radio? Think it's a coincidence Hicks stated he wanted to have a radio talk show before he quickly "died" of cancer. Something is going on. Not to mention, this entire family has that royal inbred look to them. Tom Hicks has more sons than the 2 that work with him. The family lines sprawl far and wide.
THIS PISSED ME OFF
Tommy Hicks Jr takes credit for Trump presidential win. This is how (((they))) do shit, fuck them - https://www.dallasnews.com/news/politics/2016/11/11/two-young-dallas-guns-helped-deliver-white-house-trump
HICKS ELITISTS FAMILY
Following info of family story was found here - https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/ebh02
HICKS FAMILY. The Hicks Texas radio dynasty began with John Hicks, Jr., a theology professor at Southern Methodist University. Hicks worked in the newspaper industry as an advertising representative prior to World War II. Upon returning from the war, he went to work for Burris Mills of Dallas as an advertising representative for area newspapers and radio stations. Burris Mills sponsored the Fort Worth-based Light Crust Doughboys, whose advertising Hicks handled.
In 1959 John Hicks, Jr., bought his first radio station, KOLE, in Port Arthur, Texas. He was successful in the radio business and continued to buy local Texas radio stations until he owned an AM and FM station in seven different broadcasting areas, the maximum number then allowed by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). Hicks's stations were based in Port Arthur, Beaumont, Bryan, Sherman, Laredo, Lufkin, and Big Spring, and in Lafayette, Louisiana. In the 1960s Hicks often used his radio stations to pursue joint promotions of concert events featuring such entertainers as George Jones, a strategy that would later serve the Hicks family well. Hicks and his wife Madelyn had four sons, John III (Jay), Tom, Steven, and William. The Hicks sons often worked for their father as radio DJs and later continued their father's pioneering legacy in the radio business by assembling one of the largest radio empires in United States history.
Jay Hicks began working for his father in the mid-1960s. Though he did own at least one radio station in Charlottesville, Virginia, he sold his interests and soon went on to a career in the computer business. Steve Hicks built Gulfstar Communications and Capstar Broadcasting which included interests in Tyler, Beaumont, Lufkin, Waco, Longview, and Corpus Christi. Tom Hicks enjoyed a successful career in the finance industry as one of the founders of Hicks, Muse, Tate and Furst, Inc., a Dallas-based company that orchestrated substantial media buyouts. He also built Chancellor Broadcasting which gave him a significant presence in most major United States radio markets. William Hicks started his own broadcasting company based in Bryan with the help of his brothers, Steve and Tom. The three Hicks brothers also bought WSIX-FM in Nashville, Tennessee, an important station in the country music broadcasting world.
CONT. on next post.