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By PETER S. HAWES BRIDGEPORT, Conn. (AP) -- For almost three years a team of comedians has spiced up morning drive-time radio shows from Massachusetts to Guam, with a simple philosophy: "If it has air in it, we'll let it out." True, there are ground rules, but almost anything goes as members of the American Comedy Network try to make their names as great American humorists. There have been complaints from the McDonald's Corp., and listeners in the Bible Belt still beef about a fake advertisement for a perfume called "Nympho." However, ACN's business is irreverent comedy and it's found 128 radio stations in the United States and Canada willing to take the heat in exchange for the wacky group's potshots at everything. The group was formed in 1983 by Katz Broadcasting Co. Each week, Katz sends its affiliates a tape containing at least five 30-second to two-minute bits, plus scripts for any interactive segments. Local deejays "drop" the bits into their show whenever they want. ACN keeps its humor topical and considers few instititions sacred. Its commercial for "Greedies" cereal knocks Olympic Gold Medal gymnast Mary Lou Retton: "Four-foot-nine Mary Lou. She's selling out the way the big boys do." McDonald's complained to several stations about the ACN's takeoff on commercials for its McDLT sandwiches, in which an announcer says: "If you want to win the burger wars, you've got to rap and clap and flap your trap. ... We make a great big deal over nothing." Elvis Presley fans complained over a few bits they thought to be demeaning to the late singer. One was a parody of TV record ads hawking a tape of "Elvis' Most Intimate Moments" in which the rock 'n' roll king was heard ordering six pizzas, jelly donuts and a peanut butter and banana sandwich. Other commercials have hawked Slam-Dunkin Donuts ("Do you want a small one, a medium one or Olajuwon?" -- playing on the name of the Houston Rockets' basketball star); FasterCard ("for people who live beyond their means"); and Krapco's Surgery City ("save money by diagnosing yourself. We'll take your word for it"). Katz orginal idea for the company was to create timely takeoffs -- song parodies, fake commercials and sketches -- to be used by the company's 11 radio stations. Katz president Dick Ferguson lured ACN president Andy Goodman and his colleague Bob James to Bridgeport from Orlando, Fla., where the two had collaborated on a morning show that featured taped and live humorous bits. Dale Reeves, a New York disc jockey who had performed hundreds of voices by telephone for Goodman and James, later joined the team along with former actress Mechele George, who does female voices and serves as director of marketing and sales, and David Lawrence, executive producer. ACN's business plan, according to Goodman, was to produce national and localized material first for one radio station and gradually add one station at a time until it was supplying all 11 Katz outlets. But five months after it started, one of its bits -- a parody of the American Telephone & Telegraph Co. breakup, called "Breakin' Up Is Hard on You" and sung to the tune of Neil Sedaka's "Breakin' Up Is Hard to Do" -- caught on at the four Katz stations to which it was sent. The song received tremendous airplay, and within weeks a Boston record company had pressed it into a single that soon was heard on thousands of radio stations. It sold nearly 200,000 copies and climbed into the Top 80 on Billboard magazine's record chart. "I was sitting here telling everyone not to get excited, that this is a nonevent. It will fizzle out," Goodman said. "But we had this unwitting demo out there and we started getting calls. We looked at our business plan and threw it out the window." The ACN began lining up radio stations across the country and now supplies 128 of them with at least seven short, 30-to-90-second bits a week for use during morning shows. The team spends three hours a day writing, at least another day producing and every Wednesday ships its material -- tapes, scripts, a newsletter and evaluation form -- to its subscribers. Its fees range from $1,600 to $11,900 a year based on market size. Goodman would not reveal financial data for ACN, which is owned by Katz, a private company. "People don't know who we are and that's the way it's supposed to be," Goodman said. "We're trying to make announcers funny without stealing their thunder." The only rules to the ACN's humor, Goodman said, are "no space shuttle stuff, no AIDS, no ethnic jokes, no national tragedies and no incurable diseases -- except idiocy."