Difference between revisions of "Peter B. Collins"
m (Text replacement - " has served as " to " has been ") |
m (Text replacement - "Early life and education" to "Background") |
||
Line 22: | Line 22: | ||
He has been a talk show for several radio stations, and unusual for being a liberal in a genre dominated by conservatives. He also hosted a program on food and wine. From 2005 to 2009, he hosted ''The Peter B. Collins Show'', a syndicated, progressive, radio talk show based at KRXA in Monterey, California. He now produces his show on the internet, via listener-supported podcasts. Occasionally, Collins substitute hosts on KGO AM in San Francisco. | He has been a talk show for several radio stations, and unusual for being a liberal in a genre dominated by conservatives. He also hosted a program on food and wine. From 2005 to 2009, he hosted ''The Peter B. Collins Show'', a syndicated, progressive, radio talk show based at KRXA in Monterey, California. He now produces his show on the internet, via listener-supported podcasts. Occasionally, Collins substitute hosts on KGO AM in San Francisco. | ||
− | == | + | ==Background== |
Collins grew up in Cincinnati, where he attended public schools. He went to college at Northwestern University in Chicago, where he became interested in radio broadcasting. | Collins grew up in Cincinnati, where he attended public schools. He went to college at Northwestern University in Chicago, where he became interested in radio broadcasting. | ||
Revision as of 12:46, 13 September 2024
The content of this page was imported from the Wikipedia article as it appeared 4 October 2021.
Peter B. Collins (Radio host) | |
---|---|
Born | 1954 |
Nationality | American |
Member of | NewsBud |
Peter B. Collins is an American talk radio host,[1] voiceover talent, entrepreneur, and media consultant based near San Francisco. He moved there in 1976 after growing up in the Midwest and starting on a radio talk show in Chicago.
He has been a talk show for several radio stations, and unusual for being a liberal in a genre dominated by conservatives. He also hosted a program on food and wine. From 2005 to 2009, he hosted The Peter B. Collins Show, a syndicated, progressive, radio talk show based at KRXA in Monterey, California. He now produces his show on the internet, via listener-supported podcasts. Occasionally, Collins substitute hosts on KGO AM in San Francisco.
Background
Collins grew up in Cincinnati, where he attended public schools. He went to college at Northwestern University in Chicago, where he became interested in radio broadcasting.
Career
Collins got his start with a nightly talk show at ABC-owned WZZN (WLS-FM) in Chicago (Illinois). This was during the era of the Watergate scandal, and Collins was discussing it at the age of 19.[2]
In 1976, he moved to co-owned KGO AM in San Francisco. KLLC (KCBS-FM) hired him a few years later to host their morning show. He remained there even after KCBS flipped to an album-oriented rock format as KRQR in 1982.
In 1989, Collins returned to talk radio with an afternoon program on KNBR AM. He also co-hosted a daily one-hour food and wine show on KNBR, featuring many acclaimed winemakers and chefs.
When rival station KSFO adopted a talk radio format in 1993, it hired Collins for the "afternoon drive" time slot. Their billboard campaign endorsed his show as "a little to the left," playing on his politics and the station's dial position (560 AM). Citadel Media, Disney, also owner of KGO, purchased KSFO in 1994. It converted the station to the first all-conservative talk format and dropped Collins' show.[2]
Since leaving KSFO, Collins has produced other radio shows, such as Childhood Matters on KISQ. He also began working as a political media consultant.[2]
Collins has performed as a voice-over artist for hundreds of radio and TV commercials, as well as station promos for television and radio, non-broadcast sales and training programs, CD-ROMs and voice mail systems. He is the host of Behind the Wheel, a new-car review show that airs on radio stations and on the Internet.
In May 2003, Collins returned to talk radio as host of All-American Talk Radio, which was heard on I.E. America Radio Network and SIRIUS Left, as well as via webcast. Subscribers paid to hear it through SIRIUS. Unlike some conservative talk show hosts, Collins did not screen callers to ensure that people of other opinions were excluded. He attracted callers from a range of political backgrounds.[2]
In 2005 Collins and other investors purchased KRXA, based in Monterey, California. He started to broadcast the Peter B. Collins Show that year. Also progressive, it ended on March 20, 2009. Collins described it as a liberal talk show "infused with dangerous San Francisco values like compassion, justice, and a living wage".[3]
He produced his show on the internet, via listener-supported podcasts. Occasionally, Collins serves as a substitute host on KGO AM in San Francisco.
He did collaborate with Sibel Edmonds to do interviews for her Boiling Frogs Post. In addition, he regularly contributes essays and produces podcasts for the WhoWhatWhy investigative media website.[4]
Other activities
Since 1986, Collins has been board president of the Freedom Foundation, a nonprofit based at San Quentin Prison. It provides legal and investigative assistance to inmates in California who claim to have been wrongfully convicted and seek reviews of their cases.
Collins is an officer of the San Francisco Local of the American Federation of TV and Radio Artists (AFTRA). He also serves on AFTRA's national board.
External links
- Official Website, The Peter Collins Show, includes archives of podcasts, available for free from 2009 to June 2021
- KRXA 540 website
- "Collins proving left-leaning radio host can succeed", San Francisco Chronicle, 17 October 2003
- "Peter B. Collins To Launch Radio Free America", Bay Area Radio Digest
- Archives of the Peter B. Collins Show, 2006 to 2009, White Rose Society
Wikipedia is not affiliated with Wikispooks. Original page source here
References
- ↑ http://web.archive.org/web/20160303230431/http://blogs.sacbee.com/capitolalertlatest/2009/04/garamendi-hires.html
- ↑ a b c d http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/Chronicle/a/2003/10/10/NBG2U272051.DTL&ao=all
- ↑ "Archive: Peter B. Collins Show Archived 2008-05-20 at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ https://whowhatwhy.org/author/peter-b-collins/