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Alan Colmes

It was the day broadcast industry experts
thought would never come. On October 7, 1988 the flagship station of
the National Broadcasting Company, the legendary WNBC, was going off
the air for good. NBC brass wanted the final show to be a fitting
tribute to its incredible history. That’s why NBC’s afternoon talk host
Alan Colmes was tapped to preside over its final hours. As a little boy
growing up on Long Island, in the shadows of the world's number one
radio market, Colmes would stay up late into the night, hiding under
his covers with an old clunky earpiece, listening to WNBC when it was
New York's state of the art conversation station in the 1960’s. Now
television crews from every major media outlet, and historical radio
figures, were swirling around him, following his lead, as he sadly put
this radio icon to bed. As Colmes said in his closing remarks that day,
“Little did I know that the last words I would say on WNBC would be the
last ones anyone would say”.
Just
as the American hostages were seized by the Iranian government in 1979,
Colmes began doing talk radio. Never quite the author-channeling
publicist-stroking flack so many interviewers become, Colmes’ first
exploit was to call the American embassy in Tehran. Shortly after his
dialogue with a “student” named “Z,” the U.S. state department banned
all calls to Iran.
This kind of
sharp-sightedness got him noticed by WABC who hired Colmes at the
inception of its talk format in 1982. As overnight host, Colmes’ rapier
wit and incisive questioning was reminiscent of his radio idols, Long
John Nebel and Barry Gray. (When Colmes joined WMCA radio, both Nebel's
and Gray’s alma mater, in 1989, Colmes paid homage to both of these
legends by featuring Barry Gray and Long John’s widow, Candy Jones, on
his maiden broadcast.) On the late-night show, Colmes was as
comfortable at home with names like Marcel Marceau, Ramsey Clark and Ed
Asner discussing topics like domestic politics, U.S. foreign policy,
and first amendment rights, as he was with a bunch of New York deli
owners debating who made the best sandwich.
WABC
plucked Colmes from late-nights in 1984 and installed him in the
all-important morning spot. Ratings and revenues steadily rose and
Colmes’ morning numbers by the mid-eighties were the highest the
station had achieved in some years. Colmes' recognition within the
industry began to grow. Within a short period of time, he participated
at William Paley's Museum of Broadcasting presentation on talk radio, a
Fred Friendly conclave on the first amendment and an appeared on the
CBS Evening News with Dan Rather commenting on that same topic. In
1990, Colmes hosted the third annual Emerson Radio Hall of Fame Awards,
as did John Gambling and Don Imus before him.
In
the afternoons at WNBC Colmes continued to bring to his audience
entertainment and interviews unavailable elsewhere: George Bush, Dick
Gregory, Gloria Steinem, Jay Leno, and the first in-depth interview
with Jessica Hahn at the height of the Jim Baker scandal. So prescient
was Colmes in his timing of the Hahn interview (He promised her a
stretch limo with a color TV and a Carnegie Deli sandwich) that WNBC
television waited outside his studio for two hours to nab her for that
afternoon’s Live at Five. The people from Donahue, originating a few
floors up from the Colmes show, got wind that she was in the building
and she went national the next day. Months later, after Hahn’s Playboy
spread appeared, she did the Colmes show again. This time, Colmes
played back interviews with her parents and statements she had made
months earlier, many at variance with her present story, “You could cut
the tension in the room with a Pocket Fisherman,” according to Colmes.
Even
guests he couldn't get got Colmes noticed. Activist Al Sharpton stood
him up four times and finally Alan got him on the phone live on the
air. “I don’t like the things you’ve been saying about me,” Sharpton
blasted. “Well, I don’t like being stood up four times,” Colmes shot
back. Sharpton, “Well we can end it all right now!” upon which the good
reverend hung up the phone. Days later it was vintage Colmes who got
Sharpton’s hair stylist to reveal what the former back-up man for the
godfather of soul is like under the dryer. The New York Post did a page
one story on the interview.
When
NBC sold its radio division WMCA snapped Colmes up and put him on in
the evening. But that alliance was not to last either. Even WMCA’s
management didn't know that its parent company, known more for real
estate than broadcasting, was preparing to sell its operation to a
religious broadcaster. But among Alan’s WMCA achievements is an
hour-long sit-down with the aforementioned Reverend Sharpton. Not
surprised by his toughness, but impressed with Colmes’ fairness and
preparation, Sharpton wrote what Colmes regards as a most enjoyable
note: “You’re not as bad as I thought and you’re not as good as you
think.” They are now on speaking terms. In fact, Reverend Sharpton
guest hosted Alan’s national show a few times and often guests on
Hannity and Colmes.
As morning
host on WZLX, Boston, Alan Colmes continued his groundbreaking
interviews and commentary. When he jokingly asked then-Vice President
Quayle if he planned to keep Bush on the ticket with him in the 1992
campaign, Quayle’s response, “I think the question is whether he’ll
keep me,” made the national press, including Newsweek and USA Today. A
week before the release of Nelson Mandela Colmes spoke to the Victor
Verster Prison. “World sentiment would certainly favor the release of
Mr. Mandela,” Colmes implored. “You won’t be disappointed,” was the
immediate reply. Shortly after that, Colmes did an exclusive radio
interview with Archbishop Desmond Tutu.
The
summer of 1990 was an important time in the evolution of talk radio and
in the career of Alan Colmes. ABC Talk radio decided to disband its
weekday line-up, not content with the profit margin of its nationally
syndicated talk product. With the phenomenal success of Rush Limbaugh
as a hard-hitting, controversial, conservative host, a group of
maverick broadcasters thought they knew better. That group included the
legendary Barry Farber, his trusted executive producer, Michael
Castello, and Alan Colmes. ABC was to stop delivering its shows on
September 28. The following Monday, October 1, there would be lots of
stations needing programming. The plan was to be up and running on that
date, offering Farber and Dr. Joy Brown, already staples on ABC Talk
radio, and to round out the presentation with America's first
nationally syndicated liberal: Alan Colmes. Castello, Farber, Colmes,
and technical wizard Miguel Laboy created Daynet, and only one thing
stood between them and the dream they shared of creating America’s
newest radio network: money. With the help of a group of local
investors and every penny the assembled participants could spare,
Daynet hit the ground running on October 1, 1990 with much more of a
wing than a prayer. In fact, many industry pundits suggested prayer as
the only way to stay afloat. Astounding onlookers (and some network
personnel), Daynet not only survived, it thrived, enabling all parties
concerned to build upon their careers. Impressed with “the little
engine that could,” Major Networks purchased Daynet at the beginning of
1994. Two years later, building on an association Alan had developed
years earlier when he worked at New York’s WHN, Farber and Colmes
reclaimed their network and formed an association with the legendary
Nick Verbitsky and Dick Clark at United Stations. Colmes, Farber and
Verbitsky developed the talk radio arm of United and finally had the
resources they had dreamed of to put the final polish on their
syndicated efforts.
In October
1996, when Rupert Murdoch launched Fox News Channel, Fox News CEO Roger
Ailes tapped Alan to co-host the channel’s nightly prime time debate
show. Finding a liberal in conservative times was not easy. Perhaps
that is why conservative Sean Hannity had already been hired and the
working title for the show was Hannity and LTBD, or Liberal To Be
Determined. Colmes’ nickname during his first few months at Fox was
“LTBD.” Hannity and Colmes, as it is now widely known, is the second
highest rated program on cable news television, having bested former
ratings champion Larry King, and regularly winning its time slot
Alan
Colmes was thrilled to be on nightly television, but his radio show,
although heard nationally, was not cleared in the one place that meant
the most to him - New York. There was always that nagging desire to be
part of the late-night radio niche. When WEVD came calling in 1998 with
an opportunity to re-enter the New York radio market with a late-night
program, Colmes grabbed the opportunity. Alan was heard nightly on
WEVD, from 11p.m.-2a.m., until September of 2001, when WEVD was leased
to ABC/Disney for its ESPN sports format. Ironically, Colmes was,
again, the last voice heard on an historic radio station before the
switch to an all-sports format. During his tenure at WEVD, Colmes
consistently had the highest ratings at the station, closing out with a
respectable share of the late night radio pie, rivaling his more
heavily promoted and financed competitors.
In
February 2003, Fox News created a new radio venue for Colmes. Alan's
radio show became the lead offering of the new Fox News Radio division.
Once again, Colmes found himself breaking new ground bringing the Fox
brand name to radio and instantly establishing himself as the reigning
liberal in the medium. This wildly popular show is being grabbed up by
stations all over the country, and garnering ratings and revenue. Alan
is thrilled that in April, 2005, his radio show launched in his
hometown on WWRL 1600AM in New York City.
"Red White and Liberal: How Left is Right and Right is Wrong"
went on sale in October, 2003. Alan’s take on America, published by
Regan Books, won raves from former President Bill Clinton, former Vice
Presidential nominees Jack Kemp, and Geraldine Ferraro, and former
House Speaker Newt Gingrich. As America’s most prominent broadcast
liberal amidst a sea of right-wing conservative talk show hosts, Alan
Colmes might be described as a professional dragon slayer. Unlike many
talkfests, filled with harmonious voices soothing the ego of the host,
Colmes' program and Hannity and Colmes, are cacophonies of discordant
voices, many of whom regard Colmes as the guy they love to hate. Colmes
will often say he'd rather be the guy you love to hate then the person
you hate to love. Love him or hate him, revere or disdain him, know
that Alan Colmes has never forgotten that little boy, up late at night,
awake under the covers, earplug fastened in, fantasizing about a career
on radio and television; all the while hoping his parents didn''t know
he was up listening to the masters. He brings that sense of wonderment
to each of his broadcasts. After all, somewhere, off in the darkness,
another pair of young ears may be listening.
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