Discussion:
Radio DJ Deaths: The "Crash Curse" And Other Awful Ends
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Hoodoo
2005-02-12 20:59:50 UTC
Permalink
Radio DJ Deaths: The "Crash Curse" And Other Awful Ends

http://radio.about.com/

Being on the Radio may be more dangerous than it seems.

According to a section of the Rock Radio Scrapbook website called
Rock Radio Heaven, DJs and Radio personalities have had their
share of untimely deaths.

DJ Crash Curse

One has to wonder if there is some sort of "DJ Crash Curse". For
instance:

Irv Smith, morning man at WINS, New York, died in a car crash on
January 31, 1959.

J.P. Richardson, a DJ from KTRM, Beaumont, Texas, also known as
"The Big Bopper", died intheplane crash that also killed Buddy
Holly and Ritchie Valens, February 3, 1959.

Don Owens, aka "Big Daddy", from WLCY, Tampa, died in a
motorcycle crash in 1964.

Dick Norman, from WFLA, Tampa, died in an auto accident on
January 26, 1989.

Barney Pip, who worked at many stations including WCFL, Chicago
and WOKY, Milwaukee, died in a car crash in 1994.

Bobby Simon, who worked at stations including KZOK, Seattle and
WIFE, Indianapolis, died in a car crash November, 2002.

More Unfortunate Exits

Car and plane crashes aside, DJs have also had their share of
unsavory endings:

On January 22, 1965, the man who coined the phrase, "Rock 'n'
Roll", Alan Freed, drank himself to death at age 43.

Terry Steele, known as "The Bear", who worked at several Toronto
Radio stations including CHUM, died after a freak fall in his
bathtub.

Roger Christian, who spent most of his Radio career at Los
Angeles Radio stations including KHJ and KRTH, committed suicide
July 11, 1991 at age 56.

Steve Feinstein worked at KLOS, Los Angeles, WYSP, Philadelphia
and others. He killed himself at age 40 by jumping off the 30th
floor of a hotel building.

In South Africa on February 9, 2005, Popular DJ Benny Kamati from
Radio Energy, better known as BK to his listeners, committed
suicide.

The Pefect DJ Farewell

Maybe the one DJ who exited the best was Jack Spector. Spector
worked at many New York City Radio stations during his career and
when it was time, he died on-the-air during his show at
WHLI,Garden City, New York.
Hal Horn
2005-02-12 21:41:48 UTC
Permalink
Jane Dornacker isn't listed; didn't she perish in a helicopter crash on the
air in 1986?

HCH
Post by Hoodoo
Radio DJ Deaths: The "Crash Curse" And Other Awful Ends
http://radio.about.com/
Being on the Radio may be more dangerous than it seems.
According to a section of the Rock Radio Scrapbook website called
Rock Radio Heaven, DJs and Radio personalities have had their
share of untimely deaths.
DJ Crash Curse
One has to wonder if there is some sort of "DJ Crash Curse". For
Irv Smith, morning man at WINS, New York, died in a car crash on
January 31, 1959.
J.P. Richardson, a DJ from KTRM, Beaumont, Texas, also known as
"The Big Bopper", died intheplane crash that also killed Buddy
Holly and Ritchie Valens, February 3, 1959.
Don Owens, aka "Big Daddy", from WLCY, Tampa, died in a
motorcycle crash in 1964.
Dick Norman, from WFLA, Tampa, died in an auto accident on
January 26, 1989.
Barney Pip, who worked at many stations including WCFL, Chicago
and WOKY, Milwaukee, died in a car crash in 1994.
Bobby Simon, who worked at stations including KZOK, Seattle and
WIFE, Indianapolis, died in a car crash November, 2002.
More Unfortunate Exits
Car and plane crashes aside, DJs have also had their share of
On January 22, 1965, the man who coined the phrase, "Rock 'n'
Roll", Alan Freed, drank himself to death at age 43.
Terry Steele, known as "The Bear", who worked at several Toronto
Radio stations including CHUM, died after a freak fall in his
bathtub.
Roger Christian, who spent most of his Radio career at Los
Angeles Radio stations including KHJ and KRTH, committed suicide
July 11, 1991 at age 56.
Steve Feinstein worked at KLOS, Los Angeles, WYSP, Philadelphia
and others. He killed himself at age 40 by jumping off the 30th
floor of a hotel building.
In South Africa on February 9, 2005, Popular DJ Benny Kamati from
Radio Energy, better known as BK to his listeners, committed
suicide.
The Pefect DJ Farewell
Maybe the one DJ who exited the best was Jack Spector. Spector
worked at many New York City Radio stations during his career and
when it was time, he died on-the-air during his show at
WHLI,Garden City, New York.
H Glazer
2005-02-12 23:18:36 UTC
Permalink
She wasn't a disc jockey; she was a traffic reporter.
Post by Hal Horn
Jane Dornacker isn't listed; didn't she perish in a helicopter crash on the
air in 1986?
HCH
Post by Hoodoo
Radio DJ Deaths: The "Crash Curse" And Other Awful Ends
http://radio.about.com/
Being on the Radio may be more dangerous than it seems.
According to a section of the Rock Radio Scrapbook website called
Rock Radio Heaven, DJs and Radio personalities have had their
share of untimely deaths.
DJ Crash Curse
One has to wonder if there is some sort of "DJ Crash Curse". For
Irv Smith, morning man at WINS, New York, died in a car crash on
January 31, 1959.
J.P. Richardson, a DJ from KTRM, Beaumont, Texas, also known as
"The Big Bopper", died intheplane crash that also killed Buddy
Holly and Ritchie Valens, February 3, 1959.
Don Owens, aka "Big Daddy", from WLCY, Tampa, died in a
motorcycle crash in 1964.
Dick Norman, from WFLA, Tampa, died in an auto accident on
January 26, 1989.
Barney Pip, who worked at many stations including WCFL, Chicago
and WOKY, Milwaukee, died in a car crash in 1994.
Bobby Simon, who worked at stations including KZOK, Seattle and
WIFE, Indianapolis, died in a car crash November, 2002.
More Unfortunate Exits
Car and plane crashes aside, DJs have also had their share of
On January 22, 1965, the man who coined the phrase, "Rock 'n'
Roll", Alan Freed, drank himself to death at age 43.
Terry Steele, known as "The Bear", who worked at several Toronto
Radio stations including CHUM, died after a freak fall in his
bathtub.
Roger Christian, who spent most of his Radio career at Los
Angeles Radio stations including KHJ and KRTH, committed suicide
July 11, 1991 at age 56.
Steve Feinstein worked at KLOS, Los Angeles, WYSP, Philadelphia
and others. He killed himself at age 40 by jumping off the 30th
floor of a hotel building.
In South Africa on February 9, 2005, Popular DJ Benny Kamati from
Radio Energy, better known as BK to his listeners, committed
suicide.
The Pefect DJ Farewell
Maybe the one DJ who exited the best was Jack Spector. Spector
worked at many New York City Radio stations during his career and
when it was time, he died on-the-air during his show at
WHLI,Garden City, New York.
Hal Horn
2005-02-13 00:50:43 UTC
Permalink
Post by H Glazer
She wasn't a disc jockey; she was a traffic reporter.
True, and musician, which may be why I thought of her as more of a radio
personality than traffic reporter.

HCH
Brad Ferguson
2005-02-13 04:52:29 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hal Horn
Post by H Glazer
She wasn't a disc jockey; she was a traffic reporter.
True, and musician, which may be why I thought of her as more of a radio
personality than traffic reporter.
I guess everybody knows she also played the slightly mustachioed nurse
in "The Right Stuff."
m***@aol.com
2005-02-13 05:04:02 UTC
Permalink
This post might be inappropriate. Click to display it.
Bill Schenley
2005-02-12 23:36:55 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hoodoo
Barney Pip, who worked at many stations including
WCFL, Chicago and WOKY, Milwaukee, died in a
car crash in 1994.
Barney Pip was a DJ at WJET in Erie, PA ... in the early 60s.
MWB
2005-02-13 00:11:15 UTC
Permalink
Bob Anderson "The Duke of Portland" the morning DJ at WYNZ died on the air
3/29/03.


Mark
Brad Ferguson
2005-02-13 00:30:19 UTC
Permalink
Post by MWB
Bob Anderson "The Duke of Portland" the morning DJ at WYNZ died on the air
3/29/03.
There was a fellow named the Mad Monster who worked at WINS in New York
around 1963. He got a job with an FM station elsewhere in town but
killed himself just before he went on the air.

I tried googling for details but came up dry.
King Daevid MacKenzie
2005-02-14 18:47:28 UTC
Permalink
Post by Brad Ferguson
There was a fellow named the Mad Monster who worked at WINS in New York
around 1963. He got a job with an FM station elsewhere in town but
killed himself just before he went on the air.
I tried googling for details but came up dry.
...you're thinking of Pete "Mad Daddy" Myers, whose show aired right
after Murray The K's on WINS in the Beatlemaniac year of 1964. Try
http://wusb.fm/top/rockandroll/maddaddy.html and knock yerself out at
Sponge Rubber Hall...

...oh, and he replaced Alan Freed at WJW Cleveland when Freed moved to
WINS in '55. While in Cleveland, Myers parachuted into Lake Erie during
a publicity stunt...
--
King Daevid MacKenzie, WLSU-FM 88.9 La Crosse, Wisconsin, USA
http://wpr.org/music/ http://ultimajock.blogspot.com
"Why do people take drugs anymore, when reality has become a
hallucination?" LEWIS BLACK
Brad Ferguson
2005-02-14 19:40:56 UTC
Permalink
Post by King Daevid MacKenzie
Post by Brad Ferguson
There was a fellow named the Mad Monster who worked at WINS in New York
around 1963. He got a job with an FM station elsewhere in town but
killed himself just before he went on the air.
I tried googling for details but came up dry.
...you're thinking of Pete "Mad Daddy" Myers, whose show aired right
after Murray The K's on WINS in the Beatlemaniac year of 1964. Try
http://wusb.fm/top/rockandroll/maddaddy.html and knock yerself out at
Sponge Rubber Hall...
...oh, and he replaced Alan Freed at WJW Cleveland when Freed moved to
WINS in '55. While in Cleveland, Myers parachuted into Lake Erie during
a publicity stunt...
Ah. Thanks for that.

Mad Daddy was followed on WINS once a week by a folk show I really
liked. There'd be Mad Daddy yelling and screaming, and all of a sudden
there'd be Peter, Paul & Mary singing "If I Had a Hammer," which was
the theme of the folk show. I have no idea who hosted it.
Tregembo
2005-02-13 01:29:37 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hoodoo
Radio DJ Deaths: The "Crash Curse" And Other Awful Ends
http://radio.about.com/
Being on the Radio may be more dangerous than it seems.
Boss Jock Jim O'Brien did stints in San Diego, L. A., Detroit, and New York
before settling at WFIL, Philadelphia, in its '70's heyday. He also
branched into TV as the top local weatherman and midday movie host. Jim was
killed in a parachuting accident September 25, 1983 near Pottstown, PA. His
parachute became entangled with another skydiver's chute. Jim cut himself
loose, but his backup parachute did not open in time to slow his descent.

Jim daughter is Peri Gilpin, Roz of Frazier.

Ray Arthur
m***@aol.com
2005-02-13 05:10:22 UTC
Permalink
I remember Bruce Wayne, the traffic reporter for KFI radio in LA died
in a helicopter crash some years back, but I don't remember if it was
live on the air. And Francis Gary Powers was the pilot of a radio
traffic copter out there when it crashed in 1977 and he died, but he
didn't give the reports IIRC, he just flew the chopper.
Brad Ferguson
2005-02-13 08:30:33 UTC
Permalink
Post by m***@aol.com
I remember Bruce Wayne, the traffic reporter for KFI radio in LA died
in a helicopter crash some years back, but I don't remember if it was
live on the air. And Francis Gary Powers was the pilot of a radio
traffic copter out there when it crashed in 1977 and he died, but he
didn't give the reports IIRC, he just flew the chopper.
I was in Los Angeles the day that happened. It was 1 August 1977.
Powers was flying his station's (KNBC) news helicopter; he'd
volunteered as a spotter in aid of those fighting a big forest fire in
the L.A. area. The copter got into trouble and Powers apparently
intended to make an emergency landing on a baseball diamond in a park,
but he spotted kids playing a game, so he purposefully crashed the
copter well short of the diamond. No one on the ground was injured.

I always keep in mind that this was the same man who was derided by the
usual kooks as a coward for not having committed suicide rather than be
captured when his U-2 crashed in the Soviet Union.

Powers' widow Sue, who never remarried, died of pulmonary problems in a
Las Vegas hospital on 17 June 2004. She was buried next to her husband
at Arlington National Cemetery on 13 July.
King Daevid MacKenzie
2005-02-14 19:04:30 UTC
Permalink
Post by Tregembo
Boss Jock Jim O'Brien did stints in San Diego, L. A., Detroit, and New York
before settling at WFIL, Philadelphia, in its '70's heyday. He also
branched into TV as the top local weatherman and midday movie host. Jim was
killed in a parachuting accident September 25, 1983 near Pottstown, PA. His
parachute became entangled with another skydiver's chute. Jim cut himself
loose, but his backup parachute did not open in time to slow his descent.
Jim daughter is Peri Gilpin, Roz of Frazier.
...another late jock whose daughter is an actress of note: Jim Runyon of
KYW Cleveland (before the station moved back to Philadelphia) and WCFL
Chicago, as well as the narrator on Dick Orkin's "Chickenman." Died of
cancer in 1973, at the far-too-young age of 42. His daughter is Jennifer
Runyon, whose '80s film credits include THE IN CROWD, about dancers on a
Philly TV disc-jockey show in post-"Bandstand" '65 (also in it was Joe
Pantoliano, obviously apeing legendary Philly jock Jerry Blavat)...
--
King Daevid MacKenzie, WLSU-FM 88.9 La Crosse, Wisconsin, USA
http://wpr.org/music/ http://ultimajock.blogspot.com
"Why do people take drugs anymore, when reality has become a
hallucination?" LEWIS BLACK
Joe Pucillo
2005-02-15 05:01:29 UTC
Permalink
This post might be inappropriate. Click to display it.
Mk40
2005-02-16 01:36:32 UTC
Permalink
Post by King Daevid MacKenzie
...another late jock whose daughter is an actress of note: Jim Runyon of
KYW Cleveland (before the station moved back to Philadelphia) and WCFL
Chicago, as well as the narrator on Dick Orkin's "Chickenman." Died of
cancer in 1973, at the far-too-young age of 42. His daughter is Jennifer
Runyon, whose '80s film credits include THE IN CROWD.
A little trivia: Jennifer Runyon was in the very first episode of
"Quantum Leap". Her last acting credit was in 1993, according to the
IMDb. She was kinda cute.
King Daevid MacKenzie
2005-02-16 09:07:40 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mk40
Post by King Daevid MacKenzie
...another late jock whose daughter is an actress of note: Jim Runyon of
KYW Cleveland (before the station moved back to Philadelphia) and WCFL
Chicago, as well as the narrator on Dick Orkin's "Chickenman." Died of
cancer in 1973, at the far-too-young age of 42. His daughter is Jennifer
Runyon, whose '80s film credits include THE IN CROWD.
A little trivia: Jennifer Runyon was in the very first episode of
"Quantum Leap". Her last acting credit was in 1993, according to the
IMDb. She was kinda cute.
...more than kinda. At last hear, she's now living in Oregon and happily
raising a family...
--
King Daevid MacKenzie, WLSU-FM 88.9 La Crosse, Wisconsin, USA
http://wpr.org/music/ http://ultimajock.blogspot.com
"Why do people take drugs anymore, when reality has become a
hallucination?" LEWIS BLACK
Brad Ferguson
2005-02-16 09:47:19 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mk40
Post by King Daevid MacKenzie
...another late jock whose daughter is an actress of note: Jim Runyon of
KYW Cleveland (before the station moved back to Philadelphia) and WCFL
Chicago, as well as the narrator on Dick Orkin's "Chickenman." Died of
cancer in 1973, at the far-too-young age of 42. His daughter is Jennifer
Runyon, whose '80s film credits include THE IN CROWD.
A little trivia: Jennifer Runyon was in the very first episode of
"Quantum Leap". Her last acting credit was in 1993, according to the
IMDb. She was kinda cute.
Very cute, actually. For those a little younger than I, she was The
Other Cindy Brady in 1988's TV-flick "A Very Brady Christmas."

Terry Flahiff
2005-02-13 07:13:19 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hoodoo
Radio DJ Deaths: The "Crash Curse" And Other Awful Ends
DeeJay deaths aside, I can't help but become nostalgic thinking about
the great announcers of the early sixties. The two who immediately come
to mind for me are Cousin Brucie Moorow at WABC in NYC and Dick Biondi
from WLS Chicago (and one time at WKBW in Buffalo NY). Does anyone know
whether they are both still alive?

A great number of the DeeJays from Toronto have died, most recently Bob
McAdorey from CHUM.
David Samuel Barr
2005-02-13 08:28:48 UTC
Permalink
Post by Terry Flahiff
Post by Hoodoo
Radio DJ Deaths: The "Crash Curse" And Other Awful Ends
DeeJay deaths aside, I can't help but become nostalgic thinking about
the great announcers of the early sixties. The two who immediately
come to mind for me are Cousin Brucie Moorow at WABC in NYC and Dick
Biondi from WLS Chicago (and one time at WKBW in Buffalo NY). Does
anyone know whether they are both still alive?
Cousin Brucie Morrow is very much alive, well and still on the air at
oldies station WCBS-FM in NYC. He also does a great deal of charity
work, especially for Variety-The Children's Charity.
SYSYPHUS' SISTER
2005-02-13 13:43:31 UTC
Permalink
Post by Terry Flahiff
Post by Hoodoo
Radio DJ Deaths: The "Crash Curse" And Other Awful Ends
DeeJay deaths aside, I can't help but become nostalgic thinking about
the great announcers of the early sixties. The two who immediately come
to mind for me are Cousin Brucie Moorow at WABC in NYC and Dick Biondi
from WLS Chicago (and one time at WKBW in Buffalo NY). Does anyone know
whether they are both still alive?
A great number of the DeeJays from Toronto have died, most recently Bob
McAdorey from CHUM.
Dick Biondi is still alive and broadcasting here in Chicago....check
this out!
http://www.wjmk.com/dj_dickbiondi.shtml

SYSYPHUS' SISTER
Terry Flahiff
2005-02-13 20:21:12 UTC
Permalink
Thank you (and thanks to David as well) for the responses on both Dick
Biondi and Cousin Brucie. A couple of years ago We could have listened
to live stream feeds of programmes like these on the air but, because of
red tape, most of these have disappeared. Kind sad - I used to really
enjoy listening to all those "far away" stations
Post by SYSYPHUS' SISTER
Post by Terry Flahiff
Post by Hoodoo
Radio DJ Deaths: The "Crash Curse" And Other Awful Ends
DeeJay deaths aside, I can't help but become nostalgic thinking about
the great announcers of the early sixties. The two who immediately
come to mind for me are Cousin Brucie Moorow at WABC in NYC and Dick
Biondi from WLS Chicago (and one time at WKBW in Buffalo NY). Does
anyone know whether they are both still alive?
A great number of the DeeJays from Toronto have died, most recently
Bob McAdorey from CHUM.
Dick Biondi is still alive and broadcasting here in Chicago....check
this out!
http://www.wjmk.com/dj_dickbiondi.shtml
SYSYPHUS' SISTER
R H Draney
2005-02-13 23:58:04 UTC
Permalink
Post by Terry Flahiff
Thank you (and thanks to David as well) for the responses on both Dick
Biondi and Cousin Brucie. A couple of years ago We could have listened
to live stream feeds of programmes like these on the air but, because of
red tape, most of these have disappeared. Kind sad - I used to really
enjoy listening to all those "far away" stations
A site I stumbled across a few years ago attempts to keep track of the
whereabouts of radio personalities...see http://www.440int.com ....

The usual pattern is that a DJ disappears abruptly, and unless there's some
scandalous story in the local papers about the reason why, it's as if they never
existed in the first place; their old station no longer has anything to say
about where they went, and acts as if the new guy has *always* been there....r
m***@aol.com
2005-02-14 02:44:38 UTC
Permalink
Post by R H Draney
The usual pattern is that a DJ disappears abruptly, and unless
there's some
Post by R H Draney
scandalous story in the local papers about the reason why, it's as if they never
existed in the first place; their old station no longer has anything to say
about where they went, and acts as if the new guy has *always* been there....r
I was a part-time radio DJ for a number of years, and unless the DJ
retires, they NEVER announce what happened or where he or she was
headed to. For contractual reasons, the day he or she does their final
show the Station Manager finds every single piece of commercial
copy/upcoming events promos/teasers/drops/etc. the DJ's voice is on and
removes it from the air studios so that DJ's voice never appears on
that station's airwaves again. In such a case, other vocal talents at
the station are pressed into service to re-record commercials the
departed DJ had done before he left.

These days with the Internet and nearly every radio station having a
website it is much easier to answer the "Whatever happened to..."
questions with a quick Google search.
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