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Monday, November 12, 2012

Radio HOF: Stern, NPR’s Gross No Shows At Induction

To no one’s surprise, the self-described “king of all media,” Howard Stern, inducted into the National Radio Hall of Fame, did not attend the ceremony Saturday evening at the Museum of Broadcast Communications on North State Street.  Also not showing was Terry Gross, whose National Public Radio program Fresh Air was inducted.

However, according to marinacityonline.com, there was no shortage of big names, though. Reporter and talk show host Geraldo Rivera hosted the hour-long event, broadcast live to a national audience by Premier Radio Network.

Chattanooga's Luther Masingill
Inductees included Cincinnati broadcaster Gary Burbank, Art Laboe, who coined the phrase “oldies but goodies,” Dallas radio icon Ron Chapman, 90-year-old Luther Masingill, on the air for more than 70 years in Chattanooga, and Jack L. Cooper, who was radio’s first African-American disc jockey.

Among the presenters were National Baseball Hall of Famer Johnny Bench, former National Public Radio newscaster Carl Kasell, country music radio and television host Ralph Emery, and former WLS disc jockey Dick Biondi.

MBC founder Bruce DuMont, who spoke to the audience before the national broadcast, said radio is still relevant in the Internet age. “People not only talk on the radio but frequently listeners talk about what is said on the radio. Radio still has that powerful word into each and every home and each and every heart and each and every mind.”

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