December 31, 2020

Dick Kernen, guru to Detroit radio and TV stars, dies at 82

Dick Kernen, a giant of Michigan broadcasting who boosted the careers of countless familiar on-air voices and faces, died of natural causes Friday at home in Dearborn, his family confirmed. He was 82.
Kernen, who started with WXYZ-AM in the '50s and helped form WRIF-FM in the '70s, was vice president of industry relations at the Specs Howard School of Media Arts in Southfield, where he had worked since 1972.
A 2003 Michigan Broadcasting Hall of Fame inductee, Kernen was a guiding hand - both inside and outside Specs Howard - to some of the best-known names on the local airwaves in recent decades, having worked closely with the likes of Arthur Penhallow, Glenda Lewis, Autel maxisys elite
. Carmen Harlan, Charlie Langton, Amy Andrews, Joe Wade Formicola and more.
"He was a mentor to so, so many personalities now all over the world, and certainly here in Detroit," said Doug Podell, a longtime disc jockey and programmer now on the air at WLLZ-FM (106.7). "I don't think there's a person on the air here that didn't have some sort of relationship with him."
More: Founder of Detroit-style Pizza Company, Shawn Randazzo, dies at 44
More: WJR news director Dick Haefner says goodbye to listeners after 51 years on Detroit radio
Tom Bender, who retired in 2016 as vice president of Greater Media, was a friend for more than 50 years. He said Kernen remained an important sounding board and source of counsel through his professional life.
"It's a terrible loss for all of the people, including me, who owe a lot of their livelihood and careers to Dick's mentorship," Bender said. "I had a million questions about how radio worked, and he had a million answers. He was a great human being and a great student of the industry - your proverbial wise man."
At Specs Howard, friends and colleagues said, Kernen was more than a trade-school executive, using personal connections to help graduates land jobs, particularly across the Midwest.
"Dick Kernen was the heart and soul of Specs Howard. That's really who you dealt with when you were there," said Podell. "He always took the time out to try and help these kids find jobs. He'd call Toledo, he'd call Peoria, wherever, whenever, however, to try to help."
Updates on how the coronavirus is affecting your community and the nation
Kernen got his own foot in the radio door in the 1950s, working at Walled Lake Casino dancehall spinning records before landing a job with WXYZ-AM in 1956. He was with the station for 12 years, doing stints as music director and assistant program director during its Top 40 heyday.
Detroit, then the nation's fifth-biggest media market, was crucial to the record industry, breaking hits ahead of the curve and developing audience-research innovations, Kernen recalled in a 2003 Free Press interview.
At WXYZ-AM, he said, "We'd be all over a song, and we would be looking at Billboard, and the thing would be like No. 55 (nationally), with no bullet. And we're going ‘Where the hell is everybody on this thing?' And by the time the thing finally broke into the Top 10, we were on to something else.''
In 1968, Kernen was tapped by ABC Radio as program director at WXYZ-FM, where he battled WABX and WWWW for the ears of hip, young rock fans during a revolutionary period in the radio world.
"What we were basically in the business of doing - and I'm saying us, 'ABX, W4 - was still trying to sort of figure who they were at the time. The idea was to out-hip each other," Kernen said. "Who could be hipper? Who could get the sanction of (hippie luminary) John Sinclair?"
His on-air hires included Jerry Lubin, Dan Carlisle and Peter Werbe, and Kernen ventured to Howell to enlist the services of a young Penhallow, who would go on to one of the most storied careers in Detroit rock radio.
In 1971, Kernen led the station's transformation into WRIF-FM, ceding the bohemian battle to WABX and aiming for a more commercial approach.
"Here's a concept: Why don't we try to find out what the people listening would like to hear, as opposed to what six nitwits want to hear," he recalled of his thinking at the time. "So we began d...

Posted by: autelds708 at 02:40 AM | No Comments | Add Comment
Post contains 731 words, total size 4 kb.




What colour is a green orange?




18kb generated in CPU 0.0117, elapsed 0.1208 seconds.
35 queries taking 0.1135 seconds, 90 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.