
The term “900 number” probably conjures up images of phone sex operators or, even worse, teen heartthrobs tricking young girls into running up their parents’ phone bills. In 900 numbers’ heydays during the 1980s and 1990s, though, callers could do all sorts of things simply by dialing 1-900 and having a charge added to their phone bills. Let’s take a look at some of the more interesting examples.
The very earliest 900 numbers weren’t built around exorbitant per-minute charges; they only set callers back for their normal long-distance rates. In March 1977, callers could dial a special 900 number and ask President Jimmy Carter a question for a national radio broadcast moderated by Walter Cronkite.
Ever wonder what’s going on during a space shuttle mission? During the 1980s, NASA ran a 900 number that filled you in. For 35 cents a minute, callers could listen in on mission status reports and any press conferences NASA held mid-flight. The number was originally created so journalists could listen to conversation between the shuttle and mission control. The hotline later became public, which made for a horrifying situation when thousands of callers heard the Challenger explosion in real time.

DC Comics found itself in an awkward spot in 1988 when Batman fans had become truly sick of Jason Todd, the second character to fill the role of Robin. DC didn’t know what to do with the character, though, so the writers let the fans decide. At the end of Batman #427, the Joker brutally beat Robin and left him to die in an explosion. DC printed a 900 number in that issue and gave voters a 36-hour window to call and vote on whether or not the Boy Wonder should die. Fans killed off Robin by a 5,343 to 5,271 margin, which led to outcry among old-guard comic fans and writers. Of course, since we’re talking about comics, Jason Todd later miraculously came back to life.
In 1983, Saturday Night Live ran a sketch in which Eddie Murphy held up “Larry the Lobster” and let viewers call a 900 number to decide whether or not he would boil the tasty crustacean. The voters apparently had a soft sport for Larry and narrowly voted to save him from the pot. (Murphy boiled the lobster anyway.)
D.J. Jazzy Jeff and Will Smith spent a lot of their time in the late ’80s touring and recording albums, but what else were they doing? In 1989 the duo was pulling in over 100,000 calls a week to hear a series of daily two-minute messages about their wacky adventures. According to a contemporary New York Times report, the duo’s annual income from their hotline alone was “well into six figures.”

NBC allowed voters to call a 900 number to show their preference for Jimmy Carter or Ronald Reagan during the 1980 presidential debate. The results were the same as in the actual election: the audience preferred Reagan. Actual pollsters were distressed about these widely reported results since the poll’s sample wasn’t randomly selected, and in 1983 NBC’s Nightline quit using the unscientific 900-number-driven polls.
If you were watching TV in the 1990s, it was tough to avoid Dionne Warwick’s Psychic Friends Network and its ubiquitous cheesy commercials. Check out this great example with The Price is Right announcer Rod Roddy:
Although the Psychic Friends Network was a target for all sots of parody and mockery, it also took in loads of cash; at its peak the 900 number’s annual gross was over $100 million. However, eventually bad luck, management blunders, and competition from the Miss Cleos of the world drove the company into bankruptcy.
How could NBC possibly improve on the perfection of The A-Team? By letting the viewers vote for an episode’s ending. In November 1986 the show featured an episode in which Hannibal and the team brought a political-adviser-turned-felon played by Jeff Corey back to the States.
Throughout the episode, there were hints that the team’s target may have been “Faceman” Peck’s long-lost father. NBC then charged viewers 50 cents to call a 900 number that allowed them vote on whether or not the show should include a revelation about Face’s paternity. Viewers voted to have the political adviser be Face’s father.

After Jose Canseco became baseball’s first player to ever hit 40 home runs and steal 40 bases in a season en route to winning the 1988 AL MVP, he became an icon to sports fans and teenage girls alike. In 1989 Canseco debuted “DIAL JOSE,” a 900 number on which he opined about everything from baseball to the trappings of fame. In its first two months of operation, the hotline raked in over $500,000. Canseco reportedly pocketed a 75-percent cut of that revenue. The 900 number’s administrators later told the press, “Jose was a great success with our usual target audience — 14- to 18-year-old girls. They wanted to hear what he had to say.”
In the early 1990s, open-wheel racing fans could listen in on the banter between Indy 500 drivers and their pit crews for $1.50 a minute. Since most of the discussion was full of highly technical jargon, the line also had a commentator that translated the lingo for the average fan. The Wall Street Journal commented, “The line delivers, but much of the chat is fuzzy.”
Phone sex and gambling tips obviously had big places in the 900 number landscape. Kitty, the First Lady of Basketball, managed to combine both worlds. For $3 a minute callers got sports betting advice from a sultry-voiced woman. As the Philadelphia Inquirer noted in 1991, though, Kitty’s real brilliance was that she stretched out her recordings so well; callers didn’t actually receive any sexy betting advice until the 11-minute mark, at which point they were already $33 in the bag.
During the ’80s and ’90s, grappling skills were only part of what made a successful professional wrestler. The majority of the skill set apparently revolved around having your own 900 number. Hulk Hogan’s 1-900-454-HULK was the top grossing 900 number during the early ’90s, and everyone from Mean Gene Okerlund to Captain Lou Albano had their own hotline for behind-the-scenes scoops and interviews. Here’s Captain Lou shilling for his:
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You forgot the NY Times crossword clue line which is apparently still in existence and printed underneath the puzzle.
posted by Shawn on 3-23-2010 at 4:08 pm
Guilty of calling the wrestling hotline when I was 9. It. Was. AWESOME! Also, you left off the joke of the day hotline. Again, guilty as charged.
posted by AHI on 3-23-2010 at 4:31 pm
I remember calling in to hear a scary story read/told by Freddie Kreuger (of Nightmare on Elm Street) for $2.95 a minute or some other ludicrous amount of money. My parents put a stop to that REAL quick!
posted by Justin L on 3-23-2010 at 5:02 pm
I remember getting in all sorts of trouble as a teenager for calling the New Kids on the Block 900 number. This is something that my older sister reminds me of to this day. :)
posted by Laurel on 3-23-2010 at 5:10 pm
they forgot anotherone…. when WCW (World Championship Wrestling)was around before WWE bouth them out, they had a line to call the WWE and talk to “Mean” Gene Oakerland. I think it was 1900-909-9900….
posted by Jeremiah on 3-23-2010 at 5:37 pm
Yeah, there was a BIG stink in my family over some cousins from Texas visiting another cousin in our area, and the three of them running up a HUGE bill calling NKOTB. I think the siblings whose kids were involved didn’t talk for a while because the mom of the visiting cousins refused to pony up any cash for their part, and the dad of the other cousin (where the phone was) maintained that his daughter wouldn’t have called without their persuasion.
Good times, good times.
posted by Melissa on 3-23-2010 at 7:45 pm
I’m glad I’m not the only one still getting teased for calling the NKOTB hotline! My mom was afraid that my dad was calling porn when she saw the 900 number on the phone bill, but the phone company set her straight. The end result – I’m pretty sure I wasn’t allowed to use the phone again for the remainder of my 8th grade year. Too funny!
posted by rjb on 3-23-2010 at 9:20 pm
I remember when the Space Shuttle line was mentioned on an episode of “Major Dad,” when John ran up a hefty charge calling it and Polly thought it was a phone-sex line.
I also remember (only once) calling a video-game tip line when I got stuck in a game.
reCAPTCHA: “hearing rationed”. Could it be more appropriate?
posted by amaneaux on 3-24-2010 at 12:25 pm
you forgot about the freddy kreuger hotline! ah hotlines to sucker people in by syndicated horror shows!
posted by thomastrioxin on 3-24-2010 at 1:34 pm
I am guilty of calling 1-900-SPELLIT over 100 times in one day. It was a game where you called in, the phone would say “Spell the word..[insert word]” and you had to punch in the numbers to spell the word. They got progressively harder and harder, but you had the promise of winning cash if you completed all of the levels. Well, big brother and I were both home sick, we saw the commercial on TV, and decided to call. We sat there with the dictionary in our laps and tried it again and again and again, and didn’t think anything of it. I mean, it’s a phone call. Phone calls are free, right?!
…The bill was over $800.00. That’s a lot of money now, let alone in 1991! I was grounded for two weeks. …But I still love spelling. :-)
posted by Ophelia on 3-24-2010 at 3:24 pm
We used to have a 900 number that was tied into the TV station The Box- remember that? They would show music videos and you had to call to request your favorite one. I can still remember some of my favorite videos’ numbers, 10 years later.
posted by Wendy on 3-24-2010 at 8:48 pm
Just had a traumatic flashback to my mom completely flipping out when she got the phone bill after I “discovered” the WWF number when I was 8 or 9. I think it was 50-cents per call and I had a huge crush on Hulk Hogan. Not entirely sure, but I believe I was banned from the phone for quite some time after that. Funny, when I saw this link, the first thing I thought about was the WWF number. Amazing how guilt never leaves you, even 25 years later!!!
posted by Lori on 3-24-2010 at 10:59 pm
Omg, Wendy, “The Box”!! Hahaha. My sister and I were obsessed with that channel! I don’t think we actually ever called the number to request a video though, we just waited patiently for them to show our favorite videos because someone else was always bound to request them. Our parents raised us to be frugal ;)
posted by Laura on 3-25-2010 at 12:52 pm
Oh man, I used to watch Trivial Pursuit on TV when I was younger and while I don’t remember why I would call in, I would… I thought I was being sooo sneaky because when it asked for your 10 digit phone number, I would simply put in a random one (I thought that was how they figured out the charges). Silly me! And yes, I know that means I was trying to have other unknown people pay for my 5 minutes of fun :( BOY were my parents mad when they got that bill!
LOL Recaptcha: hoaxers existed!
posted by Sara on 3-25-2010 at 2:50 pm
After reading this article all I’m left to write is “1-900-9-0-9JEFF” WORD!!!!!
posted by David on 6-10-2011 at 8:29 pm