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James Everett Bohannon (January 7, 1944 – November 12, 2022) was an American broadcaster who worked in television and radio and hosted the nationally syndicated late night radio talk show The Jim Bohannon Show originally broadcast on the Mutual Broadcasting System and later the Westwood One Network from 1985 to 2022.
America in The Morning is a news program airing on numerous talk radio stations, syndicated by Westwood One, a subsidiary of Cumulus Media.The one-hour live program airs weekdays at 5:00 a.m. Eastern Time and is hosted by John Trout.
NBC Talknet's operations also moved to the Arlington facilities in 1992 [202] and largely continued until 1993, when it was limited solely to Bruce Williams' weeknight show—ceding the other three-hour slot to Jim Bohannon's Mutual talk show [203] —and was eventually rebranded as a Westwood One program. [170]
Jim Bohannon - Radio talk show host (retired October 14, 2022), member of the National Radio Hall of Fame. His career began at KLWT while a teenager growing up in Lebanon. His career began at KLWT while a teenager growing up in Lebanon.
The show is owned by NOW! Media and runs on about 70 nationwide affiliates. [1] [2] It is also heard worldwide in 177 countries and 150 ships at sea through the American Forces Network. [3] Bob Lacey and Sheri Lynch have co-hosted the show since 1992 when Bob, already established on WBT-FM's morning show, chose Sheri as co-host from over 65 ...
Jim Bohannon's interview/call-in show, which debuted on Mutual in 1985 (and was a direct descendant of Larry King and Herb Jepko's shows), continued until his abrupt retirement on October 14, 2022. [229] Rich Valdés took over hosting duties for the program, which became Rich Valdés America at Night in January, 2023. [230]
Dirk Van was the show's longtime host from 1989 to 2015, with Evan Haning taking the hosting chores upon Van's retirement. [3] In August 2018, Haning announced he would be stepping away from full-time hosting and Michael Toscano would replace him as host of First Light. Haning would continue to occasionally fill in as host. [4]
Three of the fired DJs and staff (Dan Taylor, Bob Shannon, and Mr. G) returned to the station, along with newsman Al Meredith (who had stayed at the station during Jack FM doing his Sunday morning public affairs show), as well as DJ Pat St. John who had previously left CBS-FM for Q104.3 about a year before the flip to Jack. Steve O'Brien, a ...