TALENT G-J

TALENT G-J

Here we will post [& update] on the whereabouts of some of Seattle Radio’s finest. Have you wondered WHATEVER HAPPENED TO…? or WHERE IS so & so working these days…? – Send us email if you have an update on any personalities from Puget Sound radio/TV. Thank you for your participation!

Gabby Parsons – on the air @ WMMM Madison, WI Linked IN

Gary Chittim KING five News; left the station to work for LED Lighting company

Gary Crawford – Gary Crawford is working at KPLU and works at Topo Swope Talent.

“After six months, I was hired by Steve West to work at the fresh rock station KTAC-AM, Tacoma, I was fired for being arrested but I got hired by Stan Foreman at KGHO, Hoquiam.

After eight months at the Grays Harbor station I went to work at the legendary rocker KOL-AM in 1972. KOL was the hipper AM, against KJR. We would play the longer versions of Top forty hits. KJR jocks were more big voices and straight, KOL jocks were more “street wise” and psychedelic At the AM station I would sneak next door to KOL-FM. I was hooked on the progressive album rock format.

“KOL eventually switched ownership and format. Most of the staff were let go..

“I was hired at KZOK in one thousand nine hundred seventy three to do evenings, but ended up working mornings, afternoons and middays. I was also KZOK music director for three wonderful years. At KZOK, we believed the audience wished to hear a large multiplicity of Rock and we gave it to them. KZOK became the very first FM station to defeat then unbeatable top-40 KJR in the ratings.

“In one thousand nine hundred seventy seven I was hired at KISW by Bob Bingham to do afternoons. There were ten fantastic years at KISW, which originally was called “FM 100.” In one thousand nine hundred seventy eight we embarked playing hard rock, rocking right out of the gates in morning drive. It worked!

“KISW “Seattle’s Best Rock,” became the very first FM to hit the perennial ratings-leader “news-radio” KIRO-AM. I had wonderful years at KISW with friends and playmates Mike West and Bob Hovanes. Superb personalities like Steve Slaton, Robin and Maynard and Bo Roberts.

“I left KISW in one thousand nine hundred eighty seven and helped form KXRX at “96DOT5”, with Robin and Maynard and Mike West and myself. Seven superb years at KXRX – but I was let go for, shall we say, political reasons. I got hired at “The Mountain” KMTT. Four good years there, once again united with Mike West. My contract expired and I was suggested afternoons at KZOK and a long-term contract. I leaped at the chance to go total circle and comeback to basic rock ‘n roll, and, again, Robin and Maynard and Steve Slaton.

“Radio has switched immensely! Due to ownership. Working for a single proprietor like Lester Smith at KISW, we had a real family feel, everyone knew everyone. Now, with station consolidation we have four outlets in the same building contesting against each other. Now you can see the enemy, if you want to look at it that way! But at the CBS Radio group, all stations realize their position in the market place and work towards one common purpose: Winning your share of the total market.

“What’s kind of weird is that it through all this consolidation, it’s still possible to have joy. I still do, and I think that is the single reason I am still around after all these years. I love being on the air – through one holder or a fat conglomerate.

“The major difference inbetween Mornings and Afternoons, or any other shift for that matter, is winning!

The morning showcase leap starts your entire station and you’d better be excellent! Mornings set the tone for the entire radio station in posturing and attitude. You’d better be good! You’re getting people up and off to work and need a demonstrate that is joy to listen to, participate in and, I hate this word but I’ll use it anyway… compelling. The best morning shows are raw yet educated, rude but not crude, informative and innovative. You’ll age two years for every one year you do Mornings and, as Don Imus said, there isn’t enough money in the world to ruin your life by doing Morning Radio!

“Afternoons is a walk-in-the-park compared to Mornings. The same prep, but a different tempo as people head home and want to unwind with their beloved friend and good music. (Adapted bio material posted on Soundrider.com, 2012)

Gary Hoffman [KOMO] has been at KFI/Los Angeles since 2004

Gary Justice grew up in Spanaway, Pierce County, graduated from Washington State University in one thousand nine hundred sixty five and worked at KIMA-TV in Yakima and KING-TV before joining KIRO in one thousand nine hundred seventy two as the station’s eleven p.m. anchor. He was sports director for a time, doing the very first TV play-by-play of a Seahawks game and doing commentary for KIRO-TV’s broadcast of SuperSonics basketball games, working with Pete Gross. Justice left KIRO TV at the end of one thousand nine hundred ninety four to work for James Feek Corp. of Seattle, an independent insurance brokerage

Gary Linton came from Utah to country-music KAYO as part of the morning team Ryan & Linton. The two also worked at KVI-AM and KMPS-AM.

The team became Ryan & Ryan after moving to hit-music KYYX, and sister-station KXA as it plunged into an automated oldies format.

Linton stayed with his air name Gary Ryan as he began fill-in work on KIRO-AM and KOMO-AM. His aggressive, conservative leaned came out after KIRO, and in two thousand eight he moved to the “Megatalk” stations KITZ, Silverdale, and KGTK, Olympia.

“The Gary Ryan Demonstrate” was suggested in syndication for a brief while. Gary Linton on Facebook

Jeanne Lockhart News anchor at KIRO Radio since 1996, lost 5-year battle with breast cancer September 2013.

Lockwood got newspaper headlines for reputedly being Seattle’s very first million-dollar talent – in one thousand nine hundred eighty four a station manager affirmed that Lockwood’s multi-year contract renewal would assure him $1.Five million total. Lockwood surely is a candidate for Seattle’s funniest disk jockey, making a name for himself despite running against a good looking movie starlet of the same name

In September one thousand nine hundred ninety one LockJock was “yanked from his early morning demonstrate” -another headline-grabbing event – as fresh owners at KJR plunged into its sports-talk format. (Seattle SuperSonics play-by-play announcer Kevin Calabro was shoved in as KJR’s interim morning host.)

Albeit dumped at KJR, Lockwood was off the air for only a month. On November twenty two 1991 he embark mornings at classic-rock KZOK, staying there until 1996. (Lockwood began in radio in one thousand nine hundred sixty four as Sammy Carr in Saginaw, Michigan. He was brought to Seattle from KGW, Portland.) Lockwood confessed that his aim was not to stay in radio. His aim was to live on the beach, look at the ocean. In two thousand three he reported “I am retired and living in Bradenton, Florida. I still do occasional voice work, but I haven’t done a radio showcase since I left KZOK.”

In 1981, Gary Semro/Gary Clark signed on the Country music format on the Satellite Music Network. He ran for Colorado House District forty three in 2010. He lost. He listed himself as president of West Point Energy, LLC and has worked at WCBS and at Dial Global Networks [2001-2010]. LinkedIN

Gary Spinnell/Gary Loving – DJ at KUUU and KOL, sportscaster at KIRO TV, now holder of Spinnell and Stwan Marketing and Media in Seattle.

Gary Todd – KOL (1961 and 1967-68), retired from WIBC in Indianapolis, Indiana in 1988. Later, in two thousand seven joined Seaview Radio in Palm Beach Gardens, FL.

Gary Vance – Air personality. KRKO, KAYO, KMPS. Died September 2014.

Gary West – (James Furrow) Newsman at KING AM, KOL and KAYO. Last reported to be a financial consultant in Bellevue

Gayle DeLaney became the “wish psychologist” on KVI in 1982. This was during KVI’s very first brief attempt to become an all-talk station. She had the four to seven p.m. timeslot. She joined a staff including Jack Morton as morning “conversational newsman,” Seattle psychologist Jennifer James, and well known sports-talker J. Michael Kenyon.. Despite an exceptionally brief stay here, DeLaney had a long career in the San Francisco area. She has written six books on dream-interpretation.

Gene Collins – Gene Collins (Dr. Gene Huber Hostetter) left radio and became a professor in California. ++ Gene began working at Commercial Productions, an audio and film recording studio, when he began high school. There he met and worked with many of the recording artists of the era. After high school, he became a popular Seattle radio personality (as Gene Collins) on KOL AM and FM and several other Northwest stations. This financed five years of concurrent full-time investigate at the University of Washington where he received the BSEE and MSEE degrees. Following graduation, he worked for two years at Boeing Airplane Company, and two years as Director of Engineering at the Seattle Broadcasting Company. Following this, he accepted a position at the California State University, Long Beach, where he was a faculty member for fourteen years, including service for two terms as Chairman of the Electrical Engineering Department. During two of those fourteen years, he was also a Ph.D. student at UC Irvine. His last seven years were spent as a faculty member at UC Irvine. He died on July 30, 1988.

Gene Larson – KFKF and KAYO in the 1960s/1970s. His happiest years in radio occurred in Seattle while working for KAYO, a country music station. The station brought to town the super starlets of the late 1960′s and mid 1970′s. Larson had free-run of the Seattle Opera house backstage, private busses, hotel rooms, and various live spectacle areas of the country starlets. Among those he interviewed were: Dolly Parton, Marty Robbins, Loretta Lynn, Charley Pride, Hank Snow…… some forty of them. His most memorable interview was with his childhood hero, Roy Rogers. Larson died age seventy nine at Miles City, MT.

Gene Wike – [KING five News]

George Boucher KBLE – George Wade BOUCHER Age 86, of Indio, CA, passed away August 21, two thousand ten in La Quinta, CA. He was born on February 27, one thousand nine hundred twenty four He was in Broadcasting for fifty two years. George was a car salesman and deal ership possessor in St. Louis, MO, while at the same time pursuing a career in Broadcasting. George moved to Seattle in 1952, where he worked for a number of radio stations including KBLE for forty years. He has been referred to as the “godfather” of Christian Radio. The Northwest Pioneer Broadcasters awarded him for being “the longest running, continuous manager of any Seattle radio station”.

George Edgar KQDE, KETO

George Fisher -George Fisher left radio in two thousand four to work in corporate retail

George Garrett – George Garrett (George Ure) resigned as news director of KMPS in 1983. From his bio on George Noory’s website: George Ure was a news director in Seattle from one thousand nine hundred seventy to 1983. He holds a Masters in Business Administration with a concentrate on long wave economics. He is a co-holder on four patents related to battery state of charge instrumentation and has a patent pending on measuring user-friendliness of enterprise software. He’s been Senior Vice President of an international airline, a vocational school president, and has just packaged up a two-year sales & marketing assignment for a major software company. His web site, urbansurvival.com concentrates on long wave economics./font>

George Hayes [KQDE]

George Harris – KCBS Reporter George Harris began his broadcasting career in one thousand nine hundred seventy five at KYXI Radio in Portland, Oregon which was his hometown. In one thousand nine hundred seventy eight Harris left KTXI for KGW which was the number one station in Portland. Locating to Seattle, Harris was hired at KING. Radio where he became News Director in 1986, also working as a weekend General Assignment Reporter.

Harris was news director at KING radio in Seattle in 1986-87.

In one thousand nine hundred eighty seven Harris moved to San Francisco embarking his career at KCBS Radio working as a Reporter/Anchor, and in one thousand nine hundred ninety six becoming the primary reporter working out of the Santa Clara County Bureau in San Jose.

Highlights of Harris’ career include coverage of the Mt. St. Helens explosion, the Loma Prieta Earthquake, the East Bay Hills Fire and the riots in South Central Los Angeles.

George was married to Delilah Rene back in the 80′s. And here’s my most joy fact: I introduced them. – Rich Johnson [from the Radio-Info message board]

George Heard DJ at KLAY who got arrested by Tacoma police while on the air. The arrest was for possession and sale of marijuana. [1973]

George Hicks, a Tacoma talent, was the announcer for “Death Valley Days” and will be remembered as a newscaster who reported from the deck of a landing ship under aerial attack during the invasion of Normandy on D-Day.

George Lester – George Lester left radio in one thousand nine hundred ninety one and then wrote thousands of radio commercials. Spunky Vapid and Beyond, Growing Up in Texas, Memoir by George Lester.

George Ray substituted Keith Jackson as Sports Director at KOMO four when Jackson left for ABC TV in 1964. George Ray went on to work in the publicity & promotions department for the Seattle Pilots’ baseball team in 1968. George Ray went on to volunteer and became a staff member at KCTS 9, retiring in two thousand twelve after thirty years with that station.

In the marriage of George Richey and Tammy Wynette, George Richey seemed to be the one in control. In fact, Richey was Wynette’s manager. Richey managed her career and the money. After Wynette’s death in 1998, there was slew of controversy inbetween Tammy’s family, her doctors and George Richey. Richey was sued by the family for $50 million of Tammy Wynette’s estate.

George Richey married once again, two years after Tammy Wynette died. This final marriage to the former Dallas Cowboy’s cheerleader, Sheila Slaughter, ended about a year later (2001), when George Richey died, following a long battle with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

George Shangrow [KING FM] deceased [obit]

Gerry Gawne – station manager KING 1090, now: Gawne Creative Media in Bothell

Gina Tuttle – KOMO Radio News reporter usually working Five:30 a.m. to one p.m. – anchored Noon hour news program beginning 1981, co-anchor was Mike Hamilton.Lately, traffic reporter for Metro Traffic.

Gisela’s Original German Hour which, until it ended, was heard every Saturday morning from 9:00 to Ten:30 over radio station KXPA-AM one thousand five hundred forty in Bellevue, WA. Over the years, the program had been carried by KAYE, KMO, KRPM, and KJUN.

Glen Martin/Glen McCartney -In his bio he said he worked at KLTX and KJR, Steve Randall remebers working with Glen at KPOI/Honolulu back in 1974-75. Here is Glen said about leaving radio:

Martin would stay in San Diego for almost ten years, before heading to Chicago (WFYR and WCLR), and later Seattle (KLTX and KJR). He left radio in one thousand nine hundred ninety three to become a financial planner and investment advisor.

“I think it wasn’t the same passion for me any more. My competitive urge had been greater than other management’s at the last two stations I was at. Programming was also a job only indeed well done if you committed to staying on it at some level of supervision one hundred sixty eight hours a week. I didn’t have that left in the tank anymore, didn’t want to miss my kids growing up and didn’t indeed relish leaving Seattle for the next big paycheck. I’m in financial services; connected to the same company I joined in 1993, but essentially working for myself consulting primarily smaller, closely-held businesses on financial, succession and estate planning.”

Gordon DeWitty [KZAM] -At 12, Gordon was dishing out R&B, Jazz, and Pop music over the local flaps. Station KZAM FM in Seattle billed him as “The World’s Youngest Disk Jockey.” At age 20, Gordon took long bus tour to Los Angeles because Bobby Womak heard him working back home and said, “Come on down to LA, I got a gig for you.” BIO

Grant Neilsen retired from KSL in Salt Lake City in March 2015

Very first thing Aust did in Seattle was rent a high-rise apartment two blocks from KVI’s home in the Tower Building. He then plunged into Seattle nightlife, as only a midday announcer living an effortless walk to the station could. Restaurant meals every night. In fact his apartment refrigerator contained only “champagne and strawberries.”

He shook up KVI listeners with funny phone calls, facetious announce that the station was switching to the All-Polka Sound, intentionally playing records at the wrong speed. He lasted but a year and a half, and moved to Boston and WFBV, where he became a near legend as “Austin of Boston.”

Perhaps due to the confusion inbetween folks named “Austin of Boston” and “Austin From Boston”, he was reported to have died in Phoenix in 2006. Instead, a friend reports, Aust is “long out of radio,” and living a low-profile life in San Diego. (VOS2014)

Greg Connors DJ. KOL, KING, KMCS. Deceased

Greg Copeland KING five weekend morning news anchor

Greg MacArthur is imaging/Production Director at CBS/Seattle

Greg Miles [KRIZ]

Greg Ogonowski [Engineer KZOK]- VP Product Development – Orban

Greg O’Neill left radio in LA in one thousand nine hundred ninety six and is now a writer and involved in TV and film productions

He submitted his own obituary to The Seattle Times – a promotional device for his one thousand nine hundred ninety three TV documentary on death and dying in cultures around the world. His work also appeared at local theaters and various Park Department productions. He worked in television as a talk-show host and news reporter, among other jobs.

In 1996, Palmer became a producer and writer for KCTS-TV. He contributed a weekly series of humorous commentaries.

In 2002, Palmer published “Adventures in the Mainstream: Coming of Age with Down Syndrome,” a largely biographical journal about how a father and his son coped with the developmental disorder. He received a lifetime achievement award at the 46th annual Northwest Emmy Awards. He died in 2009, age 61. He was survived by his wifey and two children. Newspaper obit http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19931001&slug=1723822 (VOS2012) – deceased May 8, two thousand nine Greg Palmer dies of cancer – Mercer Island Reporter

Greg Thunder [KMPS] Was working at KS95-FM Minneapolis, Now working at KILT/Houston Linked IN

Gregg Hersholt – Newsman. – now morning anchor KOMO AM

1973-78: KJRB. Spokane

1979: KYTE Portland (fired on my bday!)

1979: KPAM Portland

1980-83: KJR Seattle

1983-84: KVI Seattle

1984-2010: KIRO Seattle (fired on my wifey’s bday!)

2011-12: KXL Portland

2012-present: KOMO Seattle

Gretchen Hart [KEZX]

Hal Lavers click this Facebook link

Hal Links left KTW in one thousand nine hundred sixty five and went to work as an underwriter for Safeco Insurance

WDZ [Decatur IL] 1957

WEEK [Peoria IL] 1958

KISN [Portland OR] 1959

KAYO [Seattle WA] 1961

KBOX [Dallas TX] 1962

WDGY [Minneapolis MN] 1962

KGW [Portland] 1964

KEX [Portland] 1968

WSBA [York PA] 1973

WOYK [York] 1995-1998

Hal Raymond died of ALS (Lou Gehrig’s disease) August 8, 2005.

Hal Widsten [PD at KING AM 1972]

Harmon “Rocky” Shay KETO, KOMO, KIRO

Harry Sloane [KOMO AM News] moved to KOMO TV News 1972

Harry Smith/Bill Bray – deceased

Heather Bosch – KIRO Radio News reporter, went on to CBS Radio in 2013.

Heather Graf KING five News reporter who previously worked at TV stations in Georgia, Tennessee and North Carolina.

Heather Stark – Worked at Metro Networks; Past: Total Traffic Network/Metro Traffic and Westwood One

She held down the midday shift on KJR-FM, became assistant program director, then music director for the top-40 FM station.

“I’ve been fortunate to work in an industry that I love so much for many years,” she said. She was interviewed in two thousand ten by Michael Easton for the website PugetSoundRadio.com.

“I’ve worked for some of the top radio stations in Seattle. My voice reached almost a million listeners weekly.I grew up in the 1970s listening to KJR (AM) and KING-AM. For career day in high school I visited KZOK and asked if there were any female disk jockeys. They laughed at me. Such a foolish question. There were not any on the air in Seattle. Yet.”

With the help of student loans, she enrolled in a broadcast school. “I was the only female in my class. A sign of things to come,” Heidi May told the website interviewer. “One of the instructors urged me to drive from Bellingham to Aberdeen if I desired a job.

“He told me later that he had given that advice to every one in the class, and I was the only one who did it.”

She ended up in Puyallup. “I got my very first radio gig doing 10p-5a at KJUN; seven hours a night on the air! I was in heaven. They called me Chrissy Thomas.

“After KJUN, I went by my real name, Heidi May. I went from Puyallup to Shelton and at the same time worked part time at KTAC, Tacoma. I then moved to KBAE (now KRKO) in Everett. In one thousand nine hundred eighty six I got a job at KVI Radio. One of my instructors, Dick Curtis, hired me. He was worried that doing oldies would be a little beyond me. I was in my early twenties at the time. He quizzed me on oldies artist names and hired me anyway. I worked weekends at KVI for awhile. Dick Curtis was doing mornings at the time. Sky Walker came on board and did afternoons and later became Program Director. Curtis stepped down, but continued doing mornings. I’ll always be grateful to Sky Walker for providing me my very first total time Seattle radio gig. I got the 7p-12m gig.”

While at KVI she also worked for Mike Webb. “He was the PD there for awhile as well. I liked Mike. We used to pull practical jokes on Paul Thompson (another KVI alum). Paul worked with Ed Hume on his Saturday morning gardening demonstrate.

Mike and I called in to the showcase a few times with crazy gardening problems. Mike would always play the elderly hubby and I’d be his crazy wifey – all the while attempting not to urinate my pants from laughing so hard. I was very sad to hear about Mike’s passing a few years back.

“I left KVI in one thousand nine hundred ninety and got hired on at KBSG Radio. Another oldies station. I was the assistant program director, music director, production director at one point, and the go-to fill-in person. I spent eight years at KBSG and made some good friendships. I left KBSG in one thousand nine hundred ninety eight and went to work for KJR-FM. It was a thrill to get to say those call letters.

“Gary Bryan hired me to do mid-days. During my time at KJR-FM – the station has been through some switches. It was KJR-FM when I was hired, but then we became The Fresh Mix 95.7. That was brief lived. The Hammer. That was brief lived as well. We then became known as Superhits of the 70’s, Rock & Roll’s Greatest Hits and ultimately Classic Hits.

“I’m a breast cancer survivor and have been active in raising funds for breast cancer. My lumpectomy surgery did not go well. I had a mastectomy and reconstructive surgery early in 2010. I am now cancer free.”

Heidi does voiceover work and public relations work, including for King County Komen Cure for Cancer. (VOS2013)

Herb Smiles was afternoon disk jockey on KAYE, 1450, Puyallup in one thousand nine hundred sixty six – the format that week or so might have been R&B. He did some goofy things that would have drawn attention if he had been on a fatter station. One early evening he called Larry Lujack’s parents, in Idaho, and put them on the air. Lujack’s reaction? Unknown, but according to Smiles, the parents couldn’t have been more charming. Another time he clean-shaved off one side of his beard just before a local appearance. Another time, he performed a twenty minute “sign off” speech, well before the actually sunset-sign off. He also did some petite concert promotions and attempted to help promote local bands. (VOS2012)

In World War II he was assigned to the Air Force’s radio service He very first appeared as an inmate in the one thousand nine hundred forty seven classic-prison movie “Brute Force.” In later films he often co-starred with his wifey Ida Lupino. On network radio Duff played Dashell Hammett’s private eye “Sam Spade” from one thousand nine hundred forty six to 1950, a detective series appearing from time to time on ABC, CBS or NBC. In 1950, he lost all his radio work and had a difficult time holding on to movie work because he was listed as a subversive person. He later appeared in a number of TV scenes and a 1958-59 sitcom “Mr. Adams and Eve” again co-starring with his wifey. He appeared in other short-run TV series, plus “Rockford Files” and as Detective Sergeant Sam Stone in “Felony Squad,” on ABC.

In 1989, he was the grandfather to series starlet Tom Selleck in “Magnum, P.I.”

Duff died of a heart attack in one thousand nine hundred ninety in Santa Barbara, Calif. Age 75. (VOS2014)

Howard Hall – Newsman at KING AM and KING TV

Howard Hoffman – is a Commercial Producer at the Los Angeles Dodgers organization, proprietor of Superb Big Radio dot com, and Production/Creative Services Director at KABC/Los Angeles.

Hubcap Carter [KBRO]

Modest Harve – worked at KHTS/Los Angeles most recently

Ian Furness KJR Sports anchor and KCPQ thirteen Sports – Seahawks reporter. Looking more like his father Milt Furness as he ages.

Ichabod [Randy Hansen] Caine – recently took a run at Internet Radio with wildboarradio.com

He began a sports-talk demonstrate on KING-AM in 1967. Because a Mexican superpowered station would intrude into 1090’s nulls after sunset, particularly io the Green Sea Valley, Kenyon played mariachi music under his conversations, “to get listeners ready.” He mysteriously walked away from the KING mike because of “management meddling.”

Later at KVI, when placed up against KIRO’s juggernaut nighttime sports-host Wayne Cody, Kenyon was introduced as a sports-talker “with interests in darts, croquet and cricket.” He was a whiz at baseball statistics, had deep interest in wrestling and was an occasional fledgling boxer. In one thousand nine hundred ninety one he was on a sports-talk showcase at KLAY.

After radio, he moved to several California newspapers, then, suffering from accumulating illnesses, moved to the Oregon Coast where through two thousand ten he became a significant wrestling historian. He died in 2017, age 73. (VOS2012)

“Across high school I dangled out around oldies KQIN800 (Now KGNW, 820). Eventually they put me on the weekend schedule.”

(Actually J.J. had pretty much made his career choice at age three while crawling under the consoles as his father Jack Hemingway worked shifts at KIXI, KING, KISW, KAYO and KFKF).

“After high school I worked at beautiful music KBBX (later, KEZX), then went ‘cross-country,’ working iin Augusta, Savannah, Winston-Salem-Greensboro, Greenville-Spartanburg, then Dallas, Colorado Springs, Spokane (very first time), Superb Falls, Columbus and since 1998, back in Spokane. I have done mornings, afternoon drive, production and even put a duo of fresh stations on the air. I love AC, Hot AC and Classic Hits. It’s the music that I know and love the most.”

Hemingway embarked Cascade Broadcast Services, a production house, in one thousand nine hundred ninety eight and did ten years at ‘lite-rock Smooch (KISC-FM, Spokane) In two thousand seven he voicetracked KJR overnights. In two thousand twelve he became morning personality and program director of KACL, Bismark, ND. (Yes, KACL, the fictional radio station of “Frasier.”) Hemingway wields a ’72 Volvo and a ’78 Beetle. He is single and has a son and daughter. Update– April Ten, 2015: iHeartMedia has flipped Sports “Fox Sports 1280” KZFS/99.Trio K257FX Spokane, WA to Christian AC “Up 99.3“. JJ Hemingway, who spent fifteen years at sister AC “Kiss 98.1” KISC rejoins the company to host mornings.

J.J. Jackson/see: Don Shorter – Pastor in Pierce County

J.J. Valley – Air personality at KJR, KTAC, KOL; resides in Eugene, OR

J. Scott Harrington of KPOK/Portland came to KIXI/Seattle [News]

J. Parker Antrim – Antrim is listed as working on KYA, San Francisco in December, one thousand nine hundred eighty three on KYA on this website KYA Radio one thousand two hundred sixty – San Francisco – Airchecks and Jingles Antrim also worked at KGAL Lebanon, OR in 1972, WCOL Columbus, OH and KSJO, San Jose. J. Parker Antrim is retired from radio and living in San Francisco. Joel came to the San Francisco CA market from WCOL in Columbus Ohio but is not from Columbus. He began his radio career in his hometown of Missoula, MT.

J. Walter Beethoven (Wally Thornton) retired from radio and now works for All Starlet Casting Company and lives in Lake Lotawana, Missouri.

“I determined that was enough radio,” Allen said, “I partnered in VIP Studios, a Seattle audio-visual production company, and am still there, albeit now part time while caring for my wifey who is a cancer survivor.”

Allen hopped into hosting the long-running “Loveline” program in a compassionate manner, always willing to match up all the lonely people, some who were bold and adventurous, but most who were subdued and jumpy about such a public venue. A weekend version was begun by Tam Henry and the station sponsored several big Loveline Valentine’s Day Dinner and Dance events. Allen calculates there were three hundred fifty KVI Loveline marriages. The program continued only a few months (under Clark Race) after Allen left. He eventually revived it at KMPS – who knew there were lonely country-music paramours as well? Another two hundred marriages.

“Among my beloved memories,” Allen said, “- being interviewed by Victor Stredicke at the Seattle Times building on Fairview Avenue. Among my worst memories, the cup of coffee Stredicke bought for me from The Times’ automatic coffee vending machine.” Far and away, the worst he had ever consumed. A digression: did you ever notice that a coin operated coffee vender supplies milk, a liquid, as a powder, and sugar, a powder, as a liquid? (VOS2012)

Jack Barton (newsman) KING, KVI

Jack Eddy embarked at KIRO TV in 1965, before moving to KOMO as News Director/Evening News anchor in one thousand nine hundred sixty seven and in 1976, Jack Eddy joined Alice Blanchard & Bob Robertson for the ten ‘o clock News on KSTW Channel 11.

Jack Frost – KING AM; Jonathan B Frost retired in 1998, moved to Freeport, TX [2005] and does voiceovers for a movie and documentary company in Houston.

Jack Hemingway very first worked in Ellensburg in 1945, then Port Angeles in one thousand nine hundred forty six and then KRKL, Kirkland, in 1948. Then two years at classical KISW, one year at rockin’ KRSC, and one more year as the station switched to country with the fresh name KAYO. Next he moved to another changing-format station KTIX (It became beautiful-music KETO in 1959) and then m.o.r. KING-AM. His longest run was five years at KFKF, Bellevue, and he concluded with a year at KIXI-AM, then KIXI-FM in 1968. He died in December, 1969.

Jack’s son, NW broadcast personality, J.J. Hemingway writes:

Got a little update on my dad’s bio. After two years at KISW, then he moved onto KRSC which became KAYO and they were middle of the road music until 1957, then they switched to Rock and Roll…Dad wasn’t a big fan of that, so he abandon and for a brief time in one thousand nine hundred fifty eight worked for Pacific Electronics.

Then one thousand nine hundred fifty nine he worked with Hugh LaRue at KTIX and that became KETO around 1961. For awhile is was called “The Album Sound Of Seattle,” they would feature cuts from the latest albums by Sinatra, Peggy Lee, Perry Como and the other MOR artists of the day. He did the morning news for Hugh LaRue(“Mr. Music”) and did the mid-day demonstrate commencing at 9am. KTIX studios were originally on Capital Hill, and then moved to the Fresh Washington Hotel.

Then in one thousand nine hundred sixty two he worked at BOTH KING-AM and KIRO-TV(he at times got to throw water on J.P. Patches-as the unseen–except for the arm—weatherman.) I recall as a little boy observing my dad broadcast live at the Seattle Center(now Key Arena) during the World’s Fair for the world to see.

Then in 1963, he took the position as mid-day host and engineer at KFKF in Bellevue—studios right there at Bellevue Square, and he remained there until sometime in 1968. Kemper Freeman Jr–a real estate genius, wasn’t so good at managing a radio station–many people came and went through those door the time he was GM. It was an titillating time KFKF got 92.5FM(KZAM) and for awhile ID’d the station at KFKF/Bellevue KZAM/Seattle. Eventually getting the city of license switched to Bellevue, and the AM moved from a daytime signal of one thousand three hundred thirty to a full-time signal at 1540. At that time some good people worked there—Jay Ward, Dick Stokke, John Forrest, Bill O’Mara, Jerry Holzinger, Larry Nelson, and Tom Bondage mask. A very good staff indeed.

Then after parting ways with KFKF, he turned down an suggest from KOMO–a position that Larry Nelson snagged, and instead of KOMO dad moved onto engineering and 7-Midnight host on the simulcasted KIXI AM(910) and FM (95.7), he assisted Lee Hurley with projects and also treated engineering duties for KSND/1590 and KWYZ/1230 and he passed away from a heart attack December 13, 1969. I indeed wonder how my life would have been different had he taken the KOMO job vs. KIXI.

On a bad note–he met some German cleaning lady at KIXI and got involved with her and that ended my parents twenty five years of marriage and he passed away six months after that event. I’ll never leave behind when my mom sat my brother Jon and I down to tell us that she and dad were divorcing–I was stunned. IF she had to do over again, she said she would have forgiven him and worked things out. But–hindsight is always 20/20. My mom Alice, who worked with dad at KRKL and KISW passed away in 1999.

James Lynch – KCPQ thirteen News reporter; from Dallas, studied at Grambling University. Now, Communications and Public Relations Coordinator at Pierce County Prosecutor’s Office.

Jack McDonald Promotion director, KVI. Deceased

Jack Morton – Air personality at KMO, KVI, KOL, KRPM and KIXI. Died June 1, 2016.

J. Parker Antrum, you would think is a phoney air name, especially since he was on “oldies” KUUU 1590, with a one thousand nine hundred seventy five staff that included “Summers” and “Loving.”

Evidently not, albeit there later turned out to be a California jock named Joel Parker Antrim (sp).

The spirited morning host was from Columbus, Ohio, and even after moving to “top-40” KYA, San Francisco, in one thousand nine hundred seventy six he kept the name. Up comes an ownership shuffle inbetween King Broadcasting and Golden West, and the station name was gone. Now it’s KOIT-AM. And in the process we lost track of J. Parker Antrum.(VOS2013)

Jack Spencer (news director) KIRO radio and TV, KVI, KAYO and KIXI. Passed away May 6, 2015.

Jack Tregellas KOMO- Air personality/read poetry on air CKMO Vancouver 1946-48

Jackson Dell Weaver -November 11, 2011- In Astoria, Oregon, a reversal of the typical AM station “music-to-sports” pattern, as Ohana Media Group announces “game over” at all-sports KKEE (1230). On Monday, it’s going classic country as “The Spirit of the West.” And after almost eleven years, the station’s returning to its original call letters of KVAS. Ohana’s ops manager Kris Edwards says “we get calls all the time for songs we don’t play on The Eagle 103.9, like Johnny Cash, George Jones or Patsy Cline.” Ohana GM Jackson Dell Weaver has effortless access to the KVAS calls, since he’s using them on “Eagle 103.9”, licensed to Ilwaco, Washington. The classic country station will include Fox News Radio, local news and weather, University of Oregon Ducks football, and – when there’s an NBA season again – the Portland Blazers.

Jamie Garner – DJ at KRAB FM

In one thousand nine hundred eighty five she married Barry Petersen, a CBS News Correspondent, and they lived in San Francisco, Tokyo, Moscow, London, then back to Asia where they divided time inbetween apartments in Tokyo and Beijing.

Jan maintained her career in journalism, freelance reporting for CBS News, CNN, Voice of America and ABC News. Her capability to work was diminished by Alzheimer’s Disease In two thousand eight she was placed in an assisted living facility in Bellevue and in 2009, Denver.

Her spouse, plunged into the role of caretaker, wrote a book “Jan’s Story, Love Lost to a Long Goodbye” which later was developed into network-television documentary.

She died in 2013, age 63. (VOS2014)

Jamie Tompkins anchor/reporter at KCPQ. Previous same position at KOMO.

Jane Shannon (Weaver Grey) – KXXO, KIRO, afternoon news at KOMO AM; passed away 8/20/2015

Janet Wilson came to KMPS-FM, working the all night shift, after four years at San Francisco stations. In 1985, a week after leaving KMPS, Janet got a weekend shift at KJR

“My fantasy station,” she said. She soon began fulltime on the all-night shift, “following Pat O’Day.” “And I even packed in two mornings for Gary Lockwood when he was on vacation.”

KJR remains one her dearest stations. “It was an AC format with the emphasis on personality.”

She left KJR in 1987. Next she was able to add a bit of personality to the “singer-songwriter AC” KEZX. Next was “Magic 108” KMGI, where everyone was diminished to reading liner-notes (“Boring!”)

She worked at “K-106 Country” KYCW in 1990, suggesting morning and afternoon traffic reports (“A killer split-shift,” she recalled.)

In one thousand nine hundred ninety four she was hired to do weekends at KJR-FM, but shortly after, a fresh PD came in and put her on-call.

“I think I may still be on-call,” Janet said, “and I am sure KJR will call me any day now.”

Janet dropped out of radio to work for the Eddie Bauer company for three years, but a chance meeting with Dave Wingert of KLSY led her to apply at the Bellevue station. She worked weekends in their AC format and soon was host of the weekend edition of “Lights Out,” a love-songs dedication program. She joined the Sandusky sister- station KIXI for weekends and utility fill-in a few months later and remained for six years, until May two thousand six when the entire air staff was dismissed. Janet had resigned from KLSY to concentrate on her KIXI shows. She stayed on as a receptionist/administrative assistant for all five Sandusky stations.

She also applied to the Music of Your Life Network and was hired to do two weekend music shifts in two thousand seven – putting her back on KIXI, plus the one hundred network affiliates across the country. Janet was welcomed back by many KIXI listeners. She received e-mails from all over the U.S. plus Canada and England which was “very cool !”

Janet resigned from the M.O.Y.L. Network to concentrate on her full-time Metro Traffic reporter position. She did traffic on many Seattle stations, ultimately was the featured evening traffic reporter for “news-talk” KIRO-FM. She remained with Metro through July 2010, when she was retired from radio sooner than she had planned.

Janet now runs Janet’s Pet Planet, a petite pet-sitting business.

“I’m pretty sure I am the only pet sitter in the Puget Sound area who once received a dozen roses from Tony Bennett. (That came about when she mentioned to the singer that the San Francisco station she was at was the only one playing his fresh record. The next day the roses arrived!)

Janet misses being an entertainer and telling stories. She sometimes does open-mike stand-up routines at the Comedy Underground in Seattle. (JW2012)

Janette M Veer – Randi Thomas was a board operator at several stations, including oldies KXA, “new-wave” KYYX and “classy” KLSY, in Bellevue..But Randy also had an on-air shift in the early 1980s at country-music KJUN, Puyallup. She stepped in as the 2nd replacement host of “Lights Out,” the lovesongs and dedications demonstrate begun by Delilah Rene. Randi continued the program through the early 1990s. Mike Barer remembers her as having a sense of humor and an undying dedication to her craft. Randi died in May of 2011. Janette Veer Obituary – Tacoma, Washington – Powers Funeral Home_ http://powers-sumner.tributes.com/dignitymemorial/obituary/Janette-M.-Veer-91613092

Jason Hughes is the co-owner of Sonic Boom Records/Proprietor, Sonic Boom Recordings, Seattle

Jason Prater – The Roanoke Times/roanoke.com

Jason Rantz [Antebi] – weekend display host at KIRO FM.

Jay Coffee [KJR] was doing weekends at WJPD FM Marquette, MI, now doing voice-over work.

Jay Michaels – 07/26/12 – Former Sandusky Seattle personality Jay Michaels, who assisted with the development and initial launch of MOViN KQMV-FM 92.Five, has been named PD and afternoon host at Indianapolis market i94 WRWM-FM 93.9 LinkedIN

Jay Nelson (John Nelson) has been working as a traffic reporter and heard on several Sea-Tac stations and also is a freelance voice-over actor.

Jay Phillips last worked at KWJZ and is now at Total Traffic Network/Metro Traffic

Jay Philpott migrated east from St. Louis diversity hits “106.Five the Arch” WARH and earned a promotion at Times-Shamrock’s “100.7 the Bay” in Baltimore. That’s classic rock WZBA, where Jay did afternoons/APD. In March 2015, Philpott moved to Cumulus Classic Rock WNNX (ROCK 100.Five)/Atlanta, as APD/afternoon drive. Jay previously worked in Milwaukee, Dallas, Minneapolis, Norfolk and Seattle.

Jay Thomas [KRIZ]

From Broadcasting Yearbook one thousand nine hundred sixty one & one thousand nine hundred sixty three Jay Ward, news director KFKF, Bellevue

From Broadcasting Yearbook one thousand nine hundred sixty five Jay Ward, program director KOMO AM

From Broadcasting Magazine on June 24, 1968:

Jay Ward, program manager, KOMO Seattle, also named assistant station manager.

From Broadcasting Feb Nineteen, one thousand nine hundred seventy three Jay Ward had been named station manager by what he wrote:

EDITOR: To set the record straight, KOMO-(AM) [not KJR(AM)] is number one in total persons 12+, Monday through Sunday, six a m to midnight, in average quarter-hour listening estimates (both total and metro areas), cume listening estimates, and on and on. Furthermore, in Monday through Sunday metro shares, KOMO is number one with a 13.1 to KJR’S 8.7.-Jay Ward, station manager, KOMO-(AM) Seattle ..

From Broadcasting Magazine May 14, 1973:

Jay Ward, station manager, KOMO(AM) Seattle, elected VP.

From Broadcasting Magazine April 11, 1977:

Jay Ward, VP/station manager, KOMO(AM) Seattle, named to extra post of corporate VP of parent, Fisher’s Blend Station.

These were the last listing of Ward at KOMO in Broadcasting Magazine. He was listed at least until one thousand nine hundred seventy nine as above in the Broadcasting Yearbooks that could be found online. Jay W. Giesa died [approx 2011]

Jaye Albright is a fucking partner in country radio specialist Albright & O’Malley, Seattle.

“It wasn’t until the late ’70s in Seattle and Tacoma that I eventually was permitted to use a very first and last name. I determined to use my legal name, Prozora (my married name at the time) and the program director went ballistic. “It’s too ethnic. ”

She picked up a stack of 45’s and randomly matched various last names of artists with her very first name Jaynie.

“Jaynie Jo Royal sounded good,” she said, “so I used that – at least at that station. Many of my friends still affectionately call me ‘Jaynie Jo.’ “

At “kowboy” KKBY-FM,Tacoma, she was companion to Ichabod Caine in morning drive, but added all manner of announcing, DJ-ing, news reading, reporting and public-affairs direction to her abilities.

“Later a program director at a Seattle station wished me to ‘sound more country’ so he named me Jaynie Dylan; then it occurred to him that “Dylan” might be associated with folk music, so he switched the spelling to Jaynie Dillon to have more of a connection to Matt Dillon in “Gunsmoke.”

“While working in Tacoma at KTAC-AM/KBRD-FM, I was Jaynie Dillon on the Top-40 AM station and Jane Robbins on the FM, a beautiful music station. (The mantra was, “As beautiful as a bird in flight. K-Bird. K-B-R-D.” …Robbins, bird, robin, get it?) (VOS2012)

Jaynie Dillon, at various stations during her career:

KCYS-FM “Three Rivers” [Richland, WA] one thousand nine hundred sixty seven – one thousand nine hundred sixty eight Jaynie

KTWD-FM “The Pacesetter” [Spokane, WA] one thousand nine hundred sixty eight – one thousand nine hundred seventy Jaynie

KTNT “Entertainment 14” [Tacoma, WA] one thousand nine hundred seventy six – one thousand nine hundred seventy seven Jaynie Jo Royal

KNBQ-FM “Q-97 FM” [Tacoma, WA] one thousand nine hundred seventy six – one thousand nine hundred seventy seven Jaynie Jo Royal

KAYO “Country Music Radio” [Seattle, WA] one thousand nine hundred seventy seven – 1979

KTAC Top forty [Tacoma, WA] one thousand nine hundred seventy nine – one thousand nine hundred eighty one Jaynie Dillon

KBRD-FM “Beautiful Bird” [Tacoma, WA] one thousand nine hundred seventy nine – one thousand nine hundred eighty one Jane Robbins

KOMO “Station You Can Depend On” [Seattle, WA] 1981-1990 Jaynie Dillon

KKBY-FM “The Cowboy” [Tacoma, WA] one thousand nine hundred ninety seven – one thousand nine hundred ninety eight Jaynie Dillon

KLAY “News & Information” [Lakewood, WA] one thousand nine hundred ninety eight – two thousand six Jaynie Dillon – commercial voice talent.

Jeff Bach [KSCR] – Jeff Bach Productions

Jeff Baird – KRFE Everett, KATS Yakima, KRPM, KUBE, KHIT all Seattle and then KZDG FM Denver, KBUL Reno and KBUQ FM Phoenix (1996) [programmed by Bob Case]

His name was Dick Haase (evidently pronounced with a long “a” ) which became Dick Hayes at his previous station,Toronto‘s CHUM .where he had been for three years. In Fresh York City and Detroit he was known as Jack Hayes. (VOS2013)

Jeff Pursue got out of radio not too long after the Gannett takeover of KHIT. Went into the sales side of things, had an ad agency and I believe he is now running his own insurance franchise & doing well. ***Note. This was posted on Radio Info Seattle board when someone asked whatever happened to Jeff Pursue.

Jeff Conwell – works for Voices.com and is in Bothell, WA

Jeff French [KITZ]

Jeff McIntosh KRKO radio personality in the mid-1970s; later worked at KXA in the Pat O’Day OLD GOLD era.

Jeff Mosier [KKNW FM]

He attended Newport High School. Probst discovered his love for communications and filmmaking while attending Seattle Pacific University. One of his very first jobs out of college was as a producer for Boeing’s marketing department. Probst produced corporate movies, where he served as both creator and talent, narrating many of his films.

At KIRO-TV he was the host of a weekly home-and-garden display.

And tho’ he’s best known as host of the TV showcase “Survivor,” Probst has been host of a number of television programs. In 1994, host of “Backchat,” then “Sound IX.” In 1998, VH1’s “Rock and Roll Jeopardy.” That was followed by the NBC-TV special “Dave Barlia: Extreme Stuntman.” “Survivor” began in 2000,

He wrote wrote and directed an independent film about a man who detects a wallet containing a lottery ticket worth $6 million. The film premiered at the Seattle International Film Festival where it won “Best Picture” and a “Best Director” award for Probst. Another of his projects, “Fish Out of Water,” remains in development. Familiar formula, but with the right amount of charm, Probst could make it look fresh and effortless.

Probst was named one of People magazine’s “50 Most Beautiful People” in 2001.

Probst is an Universal Life Church minister; he remarried his parents for their 35th wedding anniversary.

As a souvenir, Probst keeps the implement he uses to quench the flames when a contestant is voted “off the island” on “Survivor.”

In 2007, Probst founded The Serpentine Project, a non-profit that empowers youths with foster care histories.

In two thousand twelve he had his own syndicated daytime talk demonstrate, “The Jeff Probst Demonstrate.”

Jeff Randall – is the holder of Jeff Randall, LLC, Auctioneer/Emcee at Stokes Auction Group

Jeff Renner [KING five Weather]

Jeff Salgo – was last reported to be the IT manager for KROQ in LA

Jeff West (Baird) [KUBE] Yep….that “was” me! I left KUBE in ’91….to KMLE in Phoenix as APD/MD, then transferred to Denver to begin my programming. Have made stops along the way in San Francisco, Tucson, SLC, Phoenix (again) and since 2004….Eugene, OR where I put BOB FM on the air and also program KMGE. Mixed in there was a two year run doing sales at Broadcast Programming in Seattle. Also voicetracked a 7-mid demonstrate into KJR-FM when I was programming in Tucson.

Jefferson Kaye [Roger Dale] – died of cancer March 2010

Jennifer Wood [KMPS] now works at KYMX FM Sacramento, CA

Jerry Burling – [Engineer, KING Five] now a contract engineer in Long Beach, Calif.

Very first Class Radiotelephone License (now obsolete)

Senior Broadcast Television Engineer, Society Of Broadcast Engineers.

Began in television at KEPR-TV, 1958, Pasco, Washington. Worked at KING-TV, March one thousand nine hundred sixty to April one thousand nine hundred seventy two as master control engineer and cameraman. Two week stint at KJR, Seattle. KING-FM host, one thousand nine hundred seventy to 1972. Worked at NBC, Burbank, one thousand nine hundred seventy two 1989, movie and audio editor. Freelance movie and audio editor one thousand nine hundred eighty nine to present. Recently editor on Deal or No Deal game showcase.

Went to work for Hanna Barberra as a voice actor. He now lives in San Francisco

Jerry Dimmitt – Talk-jock. KMCM, KLIQ AM/FM, KKEY, KAYO, KYXI, KAYO, KTNT, KPMA, KMO, KAAR, KKEY, KXL, KKEY PD, KVAN-1550, KXYQ retired and does a movie blog on U Tube called “The Dimmitt Display” k6tpl’s Channel – YouTube

In one thousand nine hundred thirty seven he became the very first broadcaster for the Tacoma Tigers of the Western International League. In one thousand nine hundred thirty eight he joined KMO, very likely Tacoma’s very first play-by-play broadcaster, handing WIL baseball and PLC and CPS games. He also had a daily radio sportscast.

Geehan became KMO’s sales manager in 1943, and two years later became general manager. In one thousand nine hundred fifty three he was general manager of Channel thirteen TV. He was proprietor and general manager of KTAC Radio from one thousand nine hundred fifty two to 1969. He also served as the chairman of the board of the Washington State Association of Broadcasters.

Geehan was married for sixty two years. He died in 2001, age

88. (CHBCenter, 2014)

Jerry Hart – worked at KUBE and now has “gone green” see hartofgreen.com

Jerry Hill [KNBQ] Steve Randall says: Jerry and I worked at KZOK in one thousand nine hundred seventy nine and I got him over to the Q in early 80. Jerry was one of us. He had the idea of the opera singer of the Crazy Steve open and many others ideas we used. I am so proud of Jer. I recall this day I trained him how to manhandle trade outs we had with advertisers. Bought him his very first expensive Scotch Malt. Jerry’s production and imaging were right up there with anyone and this was all analog no ProTools or Sound Forge. Jer was an artist with a razor blade and a grease pencil. Jer had a good ear and he permanently gave me critiques of my showcase whether I desired them or not. A true pro,a gifted musician and a wacko you couldn’t help but love. Jerry has been West / Central Broadcast Support Supervisor at the The Edward R. Murrow College of Communication Washington State U university, Richland, Washington for a number of years and doing very well – doing what ever he does which is all very technical he says.

The fast-talking pipesmoker, utter name Allen Jerry Holzinger, had an educated background – political science, journalism, and pharmacy, not all from college; lots of night school lectures. Before radio draped around KLSN, (the original FM station at 96.Five). He shoved for more jazz. He served in WWII and Korea. He held an Actors Equity card from his appearances at Gene Keene’s Cirque Theater, in the Broadway district. He died in 1980.

Howarth began his broadcast career in one thousand nine hundred seventy four with The Tacoma Twins of the Pacific Coast League on KTNT. He added University of Puget Sound baseball and football. Howarth moved to Salt Lake City to take on play-by-play for the Pacific Coast League’s Gulls in 1976. He followed that with a double-duty stint, assistant general manager and play-by-play broadcaster for the Salt Lake City Prospectors in the Western Basketball Association. That led to the Utah Jazz.That led to the Utah Jazz and eventually a utter time position with the Toronto Blue Jays in 1982. Howarth has done play-by-play for the Toronto Blue Jays for more than thirty years.

Howarth’s signature home run call, “Up! Up! Up! And there (s)he goes!” (CHBCenter, 2014)

Jerry [Farley] Kay (last name was King) – Air personality at KJR, KSPL, KPLZ, KYYX. Passed away in 2005.

Jerry Mason is reported to have retired in one thousand nine hundred ninety four and is living on Camano Island

Jerry Miller was host and announcer of several brokered programs on Seattle radio stations. The newspaper salesman and advertising-agency executive, commenced with a Mondays-only three minute commercial purchase on KVI, where some of his time was touting the talents of Jerauld Douglas Miller, the other suggesting thoughts on political issues. He was active in civic issues an state Republican politics. He commenced a magazine and a radio program “Straight Talk” about addiction and recovery, and later with volunteer help produced “Republican Radio” an unafilliated program which bounced around on several radio stations including KKOL and KKMO.

After a six-year meyeloma battle, he died in 2011, age 78.

Jerry Van Dyke [KITZ]

Jessica Gottesman [Ettinger] – In two thousand eight Ettinger moved to Seattle and joined seven hundred ten KIRO-AM, and Newstalk 97.Trio KIRO-FM as a news anchor and talk host where she used the name Jessica Gottesman, [Ten] and worked with Dori Monson, Dave Ross, and the Ron & Don Showcase. She was also heard on The Bob Rivers Demonstrate, on KZOK-FM. A two thousand twelve come back to Fresh York City brought her back to CBS and Anchor work at one thousand ten WINS, as well as the host of the one thousand ten WINS “Open For Business” reports; a post-Hurricane Sandy series. LinkedIN

Jesse Jones, longtime consumer reporter for KING Five, now at KIRO seven [5pm evening newscast]

Jessica West – KXXO

Jill Kenly – works for Habitat For Humanity/Tacoma

Jill Taylor on the air @ KPLZ

Jim Arnold on the air @ KKZX/Spokane

Jim Babcock [KZAM]

Jim Bach – worked for KING AM and still does voice work in Bellevue

Jim Blossey air personality at KVI, is retired from radio and lives in Edmonds

Jim Breedlove – [KSND]

Born in Klamath Falls, he earned a degree in history at Reed College and a master’s degree at Columbia University School of Journalism. In one thousand nine hundred sixty nine he was a Fulbright Scholar.

He very first worked at an Italian newspaper, there learning Italian and Romanian. After KING-TV he became foreign correspondent for NBC again.in Cairo and London, learning Arabic to extend his capability to cover world hotspots.

Compton was a TV newsman and producer of forty TV documentaries..

He was elected to the City Council in Seattle in 1999. He left the Council in 2005,

In latest years he ended a manuscript for a book to be published on the one thousand eight hundred seventy three Madoc Indian war – along the Oregon-California border.

He died of a heart attack in 2014, age 72. (VOS2014)

“Next, I worked at KIXI-Light when Wally Nelskog wielded it,” Dai said. Later Dai did a morning shift for KSEA, then-sister-station to KIRO-AM. That was followed by an afternoon showcase at KJR while it was wielded by Ackerly.

“It was an honor to work with Jerry Kay and Gary Lockwood,” Dai said.

“I spent the remaining time in Seattle working for Sandusky Radio, very first as the morning host on KIXI then the morning showcase on KWJZ. The best time I ever had in Seattle radio was working at KIXI with Jim Kampman and Bonnie Brown. Tons of joy and excellent response from the listeners.”

In two thousand twelve Dai hosted a cruise to the Caribbean “and eighty people signed on who were listeners to KIXI’s “Jim and Jim Display”. We hadn’t been on KIXI for over six years!”

“After ‘slick jazz’ was dumped at KWJZ, I no longer had a passion for radio.”

Dai moved to Lake Chelan. But he relented when the Chelan station, KOZI, suggested him a position as program director.

“It’s all community radio,” Dai said, “and no corporate bull.”

Jim Dai blogs on www.winedripbib.com (VOS2012)

Jim Dever KING five News reporter and host of Evening Magazine.

Jim French – air personality at KING and KIRO, operates Jim French Productions

Gearhart also worked at WCBS, Fresh York, WNEW and WNBC in Fresh York. He commenced at Roanoke VA, radio station.

In one thousand nine hundred ninety he lodged down on the news-talk Trenton station, Gearhart became a force for education and reform in state politics. In 2011, as he approached his 21st year on “Fresh Jersey 105.1” the owners, Millennium Radio, named their radio studio and office building the Jim Gearhart Broadcast Center. He retired from radio after suffering an injury in 2015, from which he did not fully recover. (VOS2013)

Jim Hammer KOL, KMCS, founder of “Penguin Records” – deceased

In the late 1980s he left Seattle for station WJLA in Washington D.C., where he became the evening news anchor. Following a successful career in television he served as the radio host of “Prime Time Concentrate,” a nationally syndicated program sponsored by the American Association of Retired Persons (AARP). He joined the program in 1993, serving as national host until his death in two thousand seven from stroke-related complications.

Jim Hartt was noon-to-6 p.m. announcer on jazz-formatted KBVU 1540, Bellevue, in 1961.

Hartt was a relaxed announcer and relied on a number of folksy phrases to introduce the established musical artists, such as “..the Chairman of the Board…” the Velvet Fog himself…”

He stayed with the station through its one thousand nine hundred sixty four absorption into KBES-AM. Utter name, James Kuenhausen. (VOS2013)

Jim Hewitt [Robin Sherwood] Air personality. KRKO, KGY, KQIN, KOL. Retired, residing in Palm Desert, California

Jim Johnston – the other half of the KING – AM morning team, Adkins & Johnston. (1970)

Jim Kampmann [KISW…KLSY…KIXI…KQMV] Born in Saint Paul, Minnesota, 1950. Radio embark as Veteran’s Hospital closed-circuit station volunteer in Walla Walla, Washington, 1968. Very first commercial radio in one thousand nine hundred seventy at KKGF-Great Falls, Montana before a six-year run in Spokane with stints at KREM, KXLY, KJRB. On several different Seattle radio stations since one thousand nine hundred seventy six including KISW for seventeen years. Local, national and international voice work for Boeing, Microsoft, AT&T, McDonalds, Outside Magazine. Recipient of numerous journalism and advertising awards. Full-time instructor in Broadcast Journalism at Green Sea Community College. 1999. Married Ann, 1989. Died in March 2015

Jim Keller – does copywriting out of his home in the Seattle area.

Jim Kelly [KING AM]

Jim LaMarca – now runs LaMarca Strategies in the Greater San Diego area

Jim Martin “Big Jim” [McMartin] – Air personality and newsman, KOL, KJR, KING and KIXI. Deceased.

Jim Nicholls – deceased

Jim Norwood [KZAM]

Jim Reed – KMCS, KBBX, KWYZ, KLSN, KETO, KOMO, KIRO – deceased

Jim Severn – moved to Hollywood

Jim Sims – was at KJR in Oct. One thousand nine hundred sixty five and in Feb. One thousand nine hundred sixty eight he was the PD at KGA Spokane By 1969, he was the PD at KSPO, Spokane. Then the trail goes cold.

Jim Stevens – KZAM et al Chief Engineer/Director of Engineering one thousand nine hundred seventy five – 1998

Jim Trapp – JACK FM/Seattle

Jim Wilke – Retired from Jazz After Hours after thirty years and more than three thousand one hundred original shows. (1984-2014) The national award-winning program resumes under Jeff Hanley. Jim is still producing “Jazz Northwest” for KPLU which includes many live, location recordings from clubs, concerts and festivals. His production company is Hatchcover Productions www.hatchcover.co

Jim Williams said in two thousand three ” I drifted out of radio and into computer network technology. Dammit, then the tech crash hit! I should have stayed in radio,”

Jim Willis KIXI announcer

Jimmy Anderson – worked for Real Networks in Seattle as the Security Operations Manager;

“I actually retired from RealNetworks a few years ago, and now live in Kirkland, WA.

Very cool website!

Pat O’Day once supplied some background on Hilliard’s early career: “He was from Texas. He had been hired to take over programming of a station in Bellingham that was about to go on air. Puff! It was just smoke and mirrors.”

“He was here with his wifey but had left everything behind in Texas. He was somewhat desperate.

“KJR had room for an all-night man. He wished a fresh air name, so we quickly agreed on Jimmy Darren. He was funny on the air, good tempo, excellent feeling, simply fine is the word.

“Next we sent him to Spokane (sister-station KNEW, eventually KJRB) as morning drive jock and program director.”

Hilliard left Spokane for jobs at stations in Calgary, Winnipeg, Philadelphia, then Indianapolis.

At Fairbanks Communications he acquired several Florida radio stations for the company. He became a full-time Florida resident and formed James Crystal Radio Group, eventually purchasing four stations from Fairbanks.

By 2002, Hilliard had concentrated on building a group of South Florida AM stations. The United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Florida auctioned off James Crystal Radio’s four stations on Monday, March Two, 2015. End of the James Crystal empire.

Read More At: http://radioinsight.com/blog/headlines/91962/james-crystal-stations-to-be-auctioned-off/

Jimmy Rabbitt [KJR] became Roger W. Morgan at KOIL/Omaha in the ’60s

Joanna Robertson, wifey of veteran Northwest sportscaster Bob Robertson. Joanne and Bob married in 1951, shortly after graduating from Lincoln High School in Tacoma. She raised four children – Hugh, Janna, John and Rebecca – worked as a business woman, was secretary at KTAC Radio for a period in the late 1980s, sang in the University of Puget Sound’s Tacoma Civic Choir and danced in Ballet Tacoma. She passed away on Bob’s 82nd bday in 2010.

Joe “Downtown Joe” Bryant – is on 95.7 KJR with Bob Rivers

Joe Coburn – is a director and teacher at the Los Angeles Acting School

Joe Cooper/Joey Cooper Giannunzio is retired from radio but he still dabbles in home building

Joe Dawson said in two thousand five that he is now in the sports marketing business in Atlanta, GA

Joe Fiala His career took him from Spokane to Seattle to San Diego, back to Seattle, then to Denver, Colo., Phoenix, Ariz., back to San Diego, and ultimately back to Seattle. He now is retired and living at Chelan, WA Facebook link

Joe Fryer worked as a KING TV news reporter, 2010-2013, then went to NBC TV news Burbank.

For the past fifteen years he has been at KSPA, Ontario, CA. where the format is business and finance news. He is regional sales manager and co-hosts a Sunday morning financial talk display. He has his own one-man production agency.

Previously Lyons had worked at KXLY, Spokane.

Joe Michaels [Coby McCloud]

Joe Norris worked at several Puget Sound radio stations in the 1980’s and 90’s, including

1981-KMAS; 1981-82, 1990-95- KRKO; 1983-84-KJUN; 1984-85,1987- KVI; 1985-87-KIXI-FM (as Joe Thomas)

Also worked at KTIX in Pendleton, Oregon from 1982-83.

Joe Salvatore moved from KREN/Renton to KQIN/Burien

Joe Sargent – DJ at KAYO in 1982.

Joe [Fleischauer] Michaels – is on Spirit 105.Three midnight-4am and does other voice-overs; was aka Coby McCloud at KJR in the late 70’s.

Joel Block was a former flying KIRO AM traffic reporter

Joel Martin [KING> went on to KGW

John Bates – was last heard on WYCL/Pensacola FL parttime

John Burgess KTNT, KIRO -Station Manager KNWZ Newsradio one thousand nine hundred eighty nine – one thousand nine hundred ninety (1 year) Palm Springs, CA; News/Program Director KSRO one thousand nine hundred eighty six – one thousand nine hundred eighty eight (Two years) Santa Rosa, CA; Editor, Reporter, Managing Editor KING Radio one thousand nine hundred eighty one – one thousand nine hundred eighty five (Four years) Seattle, WA; Newsroom Assistant KIRO Radio / Bonneville Broadcast Media industry one thousand nine hundred eighty – one thousand nine hundred eighty one (1 year) Seattle, WA; News Director KTNT Radio one thousand nine hundred seventy nine – one thousand nine hundred eighty (1 year) Tacoma, WA; Anchor/Reporter KSRO Radio one thousand nine hundred seventy six – one thousand nine hundred seventy nine (Trio years) Santa Rosa, CA;

John Chambless [KOL] was a UW professor in addition to his night time radio job, He organized Sky Sea in one thousand nine hundred sixty eight and on loan from the Seattle Parks Department produced Bumbershoot in the middle 70’s.

This isn’t a very first. He at the KVI microphone in one thousand nine hundred ninety three and has informed and entertained KVI faithful on and off for almost two decades.

John also did commentary on newsradio KOMO and before radio was a commentator on KIRO-TV for seven years, periodically on KCTS-TV and he has written a newspaper column.

John graduated in one thousand nine hundred eighty one in the Political Science Honors Program at the University of Washington.

John has led three successful statewide initiatives, including America’s very first “Three Strikes, You’re Out” ballot measure in the early ’90s. John worked shortly in the Reagan Administration in the early ‘80’s before serving as Communications Director for the Washington State Republican Party.

In the ’80s and ’90s, John founded and led a political think tank, The Washington Policy Center, (KVI2014)

John Curley – [KING five TV evening magazine host] Now talk display host on KIRO FM

John Dayle [KTW talk host]

John Erickson works at K-103/Portland Or

John Evans he is now with KCBS, San Francisco – This is from his LinkedIn bio: KISW Seattle April one thousand nine hundred seventy eight – June one thousand nine hundred seventy nine : I worked for Program Director Beau Phillips. I did weekday morning news on the Terry MacDonald showcase and hosted a current events talk showcase from 6-8am called “Saturday Morning Live.” We had a magic staff in those days including Gary Crow, Steve Slayton, Gary Bryan and a newsman we hired from the local R&B station KYAC. His name is Mike West. Mike became our afternoon news fellow. He would eventually become teamed up with fresh morning man John Langan (Langan and West) and later Gary Crow (Crow and West). Under Beau’s leadership, KISW would begin a entire fresh era strenuous on talent, personality and promotion. He was an excellent coach and a strong motivator. My work caught the attention of a talent scout from CBS in Los Angeles.

John Fisher – on the air @ the Mountain 103.7/Seattle

John Frost was last reported to be a broadcast consultant working out of Palm Beach, FL.

John Hinterberger – The Seattle Times Food critic is now retired

John Hopperstad comes to Q13 TV News from WGME thirteen Maine

John Jarstad, KTVW TV thirteen newsman in the 1960s. A former sports announcer, newspaper and broadcast journalist, and Tacoma city councilman and deputy mayor, died at age seventy eight in March 1999. Mr. Jarstad was born and raised in Bremerton, and after graduating from Washington State University he returned to his hometown, where he was sports editor of the Bremerton Sun and the radio voice of the Bremerton Bluejackets, a minor-league baseball team, in the late 1940s. He later broadcast live baseball on television for the Pacific Coast League’s Seattle Rainiers, and hosted an outdoors display on KOMO-TV for thirteen years in the 1950s and ’60s.

John Komen, TV news anchor-reporter for KOMO four in Seattle and ABC network. Komen was also editor at the Tacoma News Tribune.

Langan commenced in radio in one thousand nine hundred fifty four in Winslow, AZ, moved to stations in San Diego, Houston, Jacksonville, and Los Angles before coming to Seattle.

After KZOK, Langan budge to KZZU, Spokane, then to Kansas city, and back to Spokane, this time to KKZX.

He uses the name C. Foster Kane as co-host of “The RadioMen” morning display with Jim Arnold on “classic rock” KKZX, and, under the name Toby Hitller, is evidently the dictatorial station manager.

John Andrew Lyman lost his job at KLAY before he even got it. Fresh from Ron Bailie’s Broadcast School in 1970s. John very first got a job at top-40 KNWR-FM, Bellingham along with some prompt food restaurants. “The radio job was nothing you could make a living off of,” he said.

“I got a call that a station in Juneau was having a hard time finding “just the right person.” I learned later that mean no one wants the job. I went up to little KINY-AM and KINY-TV, Juneau.

The TV station-was an NBC affiliate – operated from three p.m. to the end of Johnny Carson..(NBC programs would arrive by mail – big Beta cartridges from KING-TV, Seattle.)

“Eventually I spent days working with the TV anchor putting news packages together and did news for the radio side, too. In broadcasting school I had sworn I would never be “a news dude,”

Through her political work, my mom knew Clay Huntington at KLAY-FM, Tacoma. I spoke with him two or three times and eventually he said he had a job if I desired it. I got on a plane as soon as I could, but the position was packed. I ended up in construction – eventually wielding a puny contracting company. My broadcast career instructed me a lot about work and life, so there was no loss. And I made a heck of a lot more building cement walls. And that’s no joke!” (JAL2012)

John Mangan – GM/PD of KVTI was cut liberate during the switch to Northwest Public Radio’s takeover of the Clover Park station

John Maynard – That other half of Robin & Maynard that worked mornings at KZOK and KISW. Now works at KPLU FM.

John Morrow – KING one thousand ninety DJ

John Murphy – Emmett Allen Jones III produces and directs TV specials and DVD documentary features

John Napier – last worked at KZOK in 1998

John Nixon – on the air @ Movin’ 92.Five/Production Director

John Posey – National Sales Manager for Lamiglas

John Pricer (from Wikipedia “John Pricer was the recorded voice … “From Vancouver to Vancouver, this is the all northwest sound of stereo 105, KBIQ in Edmonds.” He also worked at KIRO.

John Rody was last on KZEW. Media czar John Rody wears many hats during his ventures across airwaves and the web. His voice is recognizable from years spent on KZEW, a station considered by many to be the greatest rock radio station to ever come out of Texas. More recently you can catch him lording over the Internet by way of Downtown Fort Worth on Mambo’s WebCast

John Ross – John R. Prukop left radio in April 1989, became a commercial airline pilot and retired in 1991

John Sebastian – Now in Phoenix, AZ and kicking off fresh consulting group called “Sebastian Secret Sauce”

John Stone – Here is what Pat O’Day said about John Stone was hired by Chris Lane who was PD [KJR] in one thousand nine hundred fifty nine (for about sixty days) and then substituted him in the PD slot also doing afternoon drive. Yes, he hired me and Dick Curtis. Me from KAYO and Dick from KBRO Bremerton.

Stone got himself fired over a few things, namely asking talent to come to Seattle at no charge to play at a Concert he put on. John had come from WTIX Fresh Orleans where I guess the rules were different. This is likely what made him think he could record his own band, “John Stone and The Adventures,” make it the pick of the week, and stir it up the charts, unsupported by sales or requests. (Hiring John and his band for my dances was also required of me.)

Anyway, Johns dismissal in late one thousand nine hundred sixty brought in Bill Stewart of midwest radio fame as the fresh PD. He instantly clashed with GM Galen Blackford, leading to his firing and Lee Perkins took the PD chair for a period of time. I’m forever grateful to Bill Stewart as it was he who awarded me the afternoon drive slot that I occupied for eight years until becoming KJR GM.

Did Stone require I share my Spanish Castle revenues with him as a token of appreciation for his hiring me? YES. Again, very likely different rules in Fresh Orleans. 🙂

All of these happenings at KJR leisurely led us to a formula that prevailed. Once named PD I guiltlessly copied Chuck Blores formula at KFWB Los Angeles. Personality plus, powerful cutting edge news, superb promotions, total total local involvement, break fresh hits, and have joy joy joy! Oh, identically significant, it had to be the same twenty four hours a day.

Sadly, todays button down minded PD’s fail to understand these are radios basics. AM remembers this, leading to it’s resurgence, albeit with talk programming!

Thanks for reading this. Our industries history is a treasure that needs to be preserved. Like it’s been said, “It’s hard to know where your going if you don’t know where you’ve been or how you got there.”

John Trimble – BigJohnTrimble.com Big John Trimble’s East Coast Opry

John Tucker from KOAQ Denver became PD of KMO Tacoma in 1979.

John Welch DJ at KTAC

John Williams – on the air @ Oldies 106.7/Portland LinkedIN

Johnny Carver – Air personality at KVI (The Carver Clan) and KOMO.

Johnny Clark KRPM dj.

Johnny Dakota [KKMO]

Johnny Forrest – Newsman at KIRO, KOL, KFKF, KNX, KFI – deceased – John R. Forrest, known as Johnny (born in 1908, died in 1971), was a multi-talented Northwest celebrity. He was an announcer/newscaster, disc jockey and program director of Seattle’s KOL radio for over three decades and a producer of a free-lance newscast on KIRO. Among his many achievements are his Suspense Theater plays, “Mission Finished” (starring James Stewart) and “Daisy Chain.”

A songwriter, he composed “Blue Tears” (sung by Lola Sugia) and “Weathervane” (Lola Sugia), recorded and engineered at Joe Boles Recording Studio in Seattle and released on the Golden Crest Record Label. He composed many popular Northwest radio jingles, including a long airing, catchy tune (with Lola Sugia’s vocals) for “G.O. Stud Drugs,” and a musical, produced by the University of Washington, called, “Johnny Appleseed.”

John was also a writer-performer for Lux Radio Theater and Creeps By Night, in Hollywood (inbetween one thousand nine hundred thirty nine and 1945), and was known in Seattle as sportscaster for radio KOL’s broadcast of the Seattle Seafair Hydroplane Races (broadcast from Bob Gilliam’s boat, the “KOLroy”) during late 50’s and early 60’s. Johnny’s final radio gig was as morning news anchor on KFKF / Bellevue, from one thousand nine hundred sixty eight to 1970. (Johnny’s daughter Maia Santell)

Johnny Hayden – Air personality at KAGT (Anacortes).

Johnny Novak [Jack Boulton] Came from KGA, Spokane in one thousand nine hundred sixty nine and was at KVI in Feb. One thousand nine hundred seventy and was fired as PD in Dec. 1972. He displayed up as PD and a radio personality at KOL less than a month later. He was at KOL as PD and on the air until Sept one thousand nine hundred seventy four when he left the air to become a KOL salesman. The next and last time he shows up in The Times is in June one thousand nine hundred eighty two when he is now working for Wood Specialty Products of Mountlake Terrace as the assistant sales manager-administration.

Jon Ballard became the after-midnight disk jockey on KISW just as the entire daytime staff escaped to a contesting station. He stayed for nine years. Previously he was “but a lowly intern at KZOK,” but had been on the air in Palm Springs, CA. (“Gravely, I had indeed forgotten that.”)

What he does recall is attending an event in Seattle as a youth, eyeing a disk jockey. Not just a disk Jockey. It was KJR’s Emperor Smith. “He wore a toga and carried a sceptre. I told my mom I dreamed to do that. It took twenty years to realize not all disk jockeys wore togas.”

Ballard now is afternoon fellow & PD at 105.1 ‘THE BLAZE’ Fresno Calif. Previously he worked at WBIG and WWDC, both Washington DC, and KZZP, Phoenix.

“I hope to proceed to learn, and evolve, as radio proceeds to switch,” Ballard said. “I’m lithe. And, being from Seattle, I make a pretty good cup of coffee.”

Jon Jensen – last at KWHT/KTEL Walla Walla, now “on the beach” as of April 2011

Jon Kertzer – has moved to Edmonton, AB to direct the folkwaysAlive! Project

John Spring left KING AM to become John Pricer @ KIRO AM

Joni Balter – on the Seattle Times Editorial Board

Jon R. W. Wailin – KUUU, KYYX Jon lives in San Leandro and is doing airborne traffic reports for KGO, San Francisco.

Jordin Silver – Now at KYSR Los Angeles [LINK]

Joyce Taylor KING five News

Jude Noland works at NewsData, Inc. Seattle as a Senior Contributing Editor

Judy Griffin aka Judy Kuneman at KAYE/KJUN -In one thousand nine hundred fifty eight I commenced working at radio station KAYE as JUDY KUNEMAN. The station later became KJUN. For two years I sang with the Bar- K Gang at local remote broadcasts most Saturdays. This is also the same band Buck Owens went to work with when he came up to this part of the country. Unluckily, when Buck was here I was no longer in the band. I never met him until he had several records out.

Judy St. John [KBSG] Judy St John was an announcer, shortly, at oldies KBSG in 2003. But she gravitated to commercial-traffic manager – did that for nine years – and with other administrative abilities became employed for two yeas at KZZU, Spokane, and then got on at Northwest Cable News.

Previously she had been a legal assistant at the state Attorney General’s office and later at private law firms. She has also been a “shoe-fitter” at stores in Seattle, Bellevue and Federal Way. LINK

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