An outpouring of grief and memories on Sunday followed the sudden death of David “Kidd” Kraddick, a nationally syndicated radio personality and “an energetic dynamo with a huge and caring heart,” according to The Dallas Morning News.
Kraddick, 53, hosted the Dallas-based Kidd Kraddick in the
Morning on KissFM KHKS-FM 106.1 and more than 75 stations nationally. It is also
broadcast on the television show Dish Nation.
Kraddick died Saturday in New Orleans at a golf tournament for Kidd’s
Kids, a nonprofit he started that sponsors trips to Disney World for
chronically and terminally ill children.
His cause of death has not been released.
Kraddick’s fans reeled from his death Sunday. Some called in
to the station or left notes and flowers outside the radio studio. Celebrities
tweeted condolences. His Facebook page and Twitter drew a steady stream of listeners’
memories.
KLUV-FM 98.7 radio host Jody Dean said the outpouring
reflected Kraddick’s ability to connect with a wide audience of teenagers,
commuters and soccer moms alike. His talent made it hard for Dean and other
broadcasters to compete, he said.
“What’s remarkable about Kidd is that he took that wall
that’s always been there between broadcasters and audience and in his show, he
completely wiped it out,” Dean said. “You didn’t feel like you were listening
to a show. You felt like you were listening to a friend.”
Longtime friend Dr. Phil McGraw, called Kraddick “an
energetic dynamo” on the airwaves, but also described Kraddick as a generous
philanthropist and devoted father to his grown daughter, Caroline.
Kraddick loved “cutting up” with McGraw and doing
impressions of him on the radio, but off the air they exchanged advice about
family, parenting and show business.
Kraddick, who was divorced in 2007, was planning to get married
again. Two weeks ago, he showed McGraw the engagement ring. “I’ve never seen
him happier,” McGraw said.
“My biggest asset was also my biggest detriment,” Kraddick
told The Dallas Morning News in 1994. “I have a young, non-radio sounding
voice. Teens really turned on to my voice and thought, ‘Hey, he’s 16.’”
He described his humorous and energetic style as “radio
without a net.”
Retired morning broadcaster Ron Chapman described Kraddick
as a trailblazer in the radio business.
“He reinvented how morning radio was delivered to a new
generation,” Chapman said.
In the early 1990s, Kraddick started a subscription-based
newsletter called Bitboard where radio personalities exchanged ideas to use in
different markets. First distributed by fax machine, it became a business
concept that Kraddick later sold.
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