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John Hood Garabedian (born December 20, 1941) is an American radio personality and disc jockey.He is best known as the creator and former long-time host of Open House Party.
Darren Rockwell, a frequent visitor to the show in the late 90s and early 2000s, serves as the film's producer. Later on, the project was renamed "Be Your Dream: The Story of John Garabedian & the Open House Party". On October 25, 2016, it was announced that John Garabedian would not return as the host of Open House Party in 2017. Having hosted ...
In 1987, White asked Boston icon John Garabedian (who previously owned, programmed and DJ'd on WMEX, WBCN, and V66/WVJV-TV) to do a weekend shift. Garabedian proposed the idea of a live, nationally syndicated, all-request show called Open House Party for Saturday and Sunday nights.
In late 1996, B-104 began broadcasting Open House Party with John Garabedian on Saturday nights after it was dropped by Pottsville's WAVT-FM (T-102). By 1997, B104 began playing a lot more "softer" songs during the day that a lot of other CHR's didn't play (like "Here in My Heart" by Chicago ), to pick up listeners who felt displaced by the ...
The station was originally owned by longtime New England radio broadcasters John Garabedian (who later became host of the nationally syndicated radio show Open House Party) and Arnie "Woo-Woo" Ginsburg. Garabedian also owned WGTR (1060 AM, now WQOM); both WVJV and WGTR operated from studios in Natick.
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John Anker is a former mayoral candidate and 29-year resident of Columbus. Anker is the founder and president of the manufacturing and logistics company Ankerpak.
In the period around 1975, John Garabedian, now recognized for the nationally syndicated Open House Party (which was once heard locally on WXKS-FM), was an afternoon DJ on WBCN. In 1979, the station was purchased by Hemisphere Broadcasting, who let go several longtime employees who they determined "non-essential".