Joybubbles ( – ), born Josef Carl Engressia Jr. in Richmond, Virginia, was an early phone phreak. Born blind, he became interested in telephones at age four. He had absolute pitch, and was able to whistle 2600 hertz — an operator tone also used by blue box phreaking devices — into a telephone. Joybubbles said that he had an IQ of "172 or something". Joybubbles died at his Minneapolis home on . According to his death certificate, he died of natural causes with congestive heart failure as a contributing condition.

Early Life

Joybubbles was born Josef Carl Engressia Jr. in Richmond, Virginia to Joe Sr. and Esther. He has a younger sister, Toni, who is also blind. The Engressia family moved a lot. Joybubbles grew up in all over the East Coast, including a apartment in Richmond where he developed his phreaking skills, briefly in Saugus, Massachusetts and all around Florida, including Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Pompano Beach, Florida, and finally Miami, Florida. Joybubbles had good relationships with his mom and sister, but his father was abusive.

As a kid, Joybubbles had a lot of unique interests due to textures and sounds, including Jell-O, shower curtains, the telephone, and whistling, developing a talent for it.

Whistler

As a five-year-old, Joybubbles discovered he could dial phone numbers by clicking the hang-up switch rapidly ("tapping"). At the age of seven, he was idly whistling along to clicks while on the phone, he accidentally discovered that at certain frequencies, he could activate phone switches.

A student at the University of South Florida in the late 1960s, he was given the nickname "Whistler" due to his ability to place free long-distance phone calls by whistling the proper tones with his mouth. After a Canadian operator reported him for selling such calls for $1 at the university, he was suspended and fined $25 but soon reinstated. He later graduated with a degree in philosophy and moved to Tennessee.

Later life

In 1982, he moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota. He lived on his Social Security disability pension and a job as a test subject for scent-intensity research. He was an ordained minister of his own Church of Eternal Childhood, and ran a one-man nonprofit support organization for people rediscovering and re-experiencing childhood, called "We Won't Grow Up". He tried to remain an active member of the children's community around his home, giving readings at the local library and setting up phone calls to terminally ill children around the world. He often contributed to the Bulletin Board section of the St. Paul Pioneer Press newspaper.

Sexually abused as a child by one of his teachers, Joybubbles "reverted to his childhood" in May 1988 and remained there until his death, claiming that he was five years old. He legally changed his name to Joybubbles in 1991, stating that he wanted to put his past, specifically the abuse, behind him.

An active amateur radio operator with the call sign WB0RPA, he held an amateur extra class license, the highest grade issued. As shown in the Federal Communications Commission database, he also earned both a General radiotelephone operator license and a commercial radiotelegraph operator's license, as well as a ship radar endorsement on these certificates. He was one of the few to qualify for the now-obsolete aircraft radiotelegraph endorsement on the latter license.

Presence in the media

  • In 1971, just after his arrest, Joybubbles was featured in an Esquire article by Ron Rosenbaum which exposed the phone phreak scene to a general public and led to further media coverage of Joybubbles, who became a cultural icon.
  • The 1992 movie Sneakers had a character called "Whistler", who seemed to combine traits of both Joybubbles and John Draper. The character is played by David Strathairn.
  • The 2001 documentary film The Secret History of Hacking features archive footage of Joybubbles.
  • In Steve Wozniak's book iWoz, Steve Wozniak mentions Joybubbles as an early inspiration during his college years.
  • On February 21, 2012, WNYC's Radiolab aired a segment on Joybubbles in an episode titled "Escape!"
  • Chapter 9 of the book Exploding the Phone by Phil Lapsley details his successful plan to get a job by purposely getting arrested for phreaking. and March 17, 2018.
  • Joybubbles is the subject of the eponymous 2026 documentary Joybubbles (film).

Phone services

Joybubbles ran a weekly telephone story line called "Stories and Stuff", which was usually updated at the weekend.

In the early and mid-1980s, he ran a phone line called the "Zzzzyzzerrific Funline", which had the distinction of being the very last entry in the phone book. During the Zzzzyzzerrific Funline days, calling himself Highrise Joe,

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  • New York Times Obituary
  • New York Times Magazine memorial profile
  • Pittsburgh Post-Gazette profile (2003)
  • Find "Exploding the Phone: The Untold Story of the Teenagers and Outlaws Who Hacked Ma Bell" in a library
  • 11-20-91 Off the Hook interview / Summary of the Off The Hook interview
  • An archive of Stories and Stuff
  • A Haxor Radio interview with Joybubbles (April 22, 2004)
  • Radiolab audio segment describing Joybubbles' background (Feb 2012)
  • A conversation with Joybubbles from 1998
  • Secrets of the Little Blue Box

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