Larry King

Larry King

U.S. Talk Show Host

Larry King. Born Lawrence Zeiger in Brooklyn, New York, November 19, 1933. Educated at Lafayette High School. Married: I) Freda Miller, 1952 (annulled); 2) Alene Atkins, 1961 (divorced, 1963); 3) Mickey Sutphin, 1963 (divorced, 1963); 4) Alene Atkins,  1967  (divorced,  1971); child: Chaia; 5) Sharon  Lepore,  1976 (divorced,  1982); 6) Julia Alexander, 1989 (divorced, 1992); child: Andy; 7) Shawn Southwick, 1997; children: Chance South­ worth and Cannon Edward. Disc jockey and host, radio interview show at various stations, Miami, Florida, 1957-71; columnist, various Miami newspapers, 1965-71; freelance writer and broadcaster, 1972-75; radio talk show host, WIOD, Miami, 1975-78; host, Mutual Broadcasting System's Larry King Show, from 1978; host, CNN's Larry King Live, since 1985; host, the Goodwill Games, 1990; columnist, USA Today and The Sporting News. Member: the Friars Club and the Washington Center for Politics and Journalism. Recipient: George Foster Peabody Award, 1982; National Association of Broadcasters' Radio Award, 1985; Jack Anderson Investigative Reporting Award, 1985; International Radio and TV So­ ciety's Broadcaster of the Year, 1989; American Heart Association's Man of the Year, 1992; named to Broadcasters Hall of Fame, 1992.

Larry King, circa 2000.

Courtesy of the Everett Collection

Bio

    Larry King, television and radio talk show host, claims to have interviewed more than 30,000 people during his career. In 1989 The Guinness Book of World Records credited him as having logged more hours on national radio than any other talk show personality in history.

    His nationwide popularity began with his first national radio talk show, premiering over the Mutual Network in 1978. In 1985 the Cable News Network (CNN) scheduled a nightly, one-hour cable-television version of King's radio program. Larry King Live has become one of CNN's highest-rated shows and positioned King as the first American talk-show host to have a worldwide audience. Currently, the program reaches more than 200 countries, with a potential audience of 150 million.

    Called cable television's preeminent pop-journalist, King is characterized as an interviewer, not a journalist. He is an ad-lib interviewer, who claims not to over­ prepare for his guest. "My lack of preparation really forces me to learn, and to listen," he says. His guests are given a wide range of latitude while responding to questions that any person on the street might ask. Rather than acting as an investigative reporter, King prides himself in asking "human questions," not "press-conference questions." He sees himself as non­ threatening, nonjudgmental, and concerned with feelings.

    King's radio broadcast career began with a 1957 move to Miami, Florida, where he worked for station WAHR as a disc jockey and sports talk show host. He changed his name from the less euphonious Larry Zeiger when the general manager noted that his name was "too German, too Jewish. It's not show-business enough."

    After a year, he joined WKAT, a station that gave DJs a great deal of freedom to develop their personalities. King took advantage of the opportunity by inventing a character called "Captain Wainright of the Miami State Police." Sounding like Broderick Crawford, Wainright interrupted traffic reports with crazy suggestions, such as telling listeners to save a trip to the racetrack by flagging down police officers and placing their bets with them. The Wainwright character became so popular that bumper stickers appeared bearing the slogan "Don't Stop Me. I Know Capt. Wainwright."

    In 1958 King's celebrity status led to his first major break as host of an on-location interview program from Miami's Pumpernick Restaurant. He interviewed whoever happened to be there at the time. Never knowing who his guest would be and unable to plan in advance, he began to perfect his interviewing style, listening carefully to what his guest said and then formulating questions as the conversation progressed.

    Impressed with King's Pumpernick show, WIOD employed him in 1962 to do a similar radio program originating from a houseboat formerly used for the ABC television series Surfside Six. Because of the show's on-the-beach location and because of the publicity it offered the television series, Surfside Six became an enormous success. WIOD gave King further exposure as the color commentator for broadcasts of Miami Dolphin football games. While riding a tide of popularity during 1963, he did double duty as a Sunday late-night talk show host over WLBW-TV. In 1964 he left WLBW-TV for a weekend talk show on WTVJ-TV. He added newspaper writing to his agenda with columns for The Miami Herald, The Miami News, and The Miami Beach Sun-Reporter.

    Of this period, King said he was "flying high." Unfortunately. his life flew out of control. He ran up outrageous bills and fell $352,000 into debt. Still worse, he was charged with grand larceny and accused of stealing $5,000 from a business partner. On March 10, 1972, the charges were dropped, but the scandal nearly destroyed his career. It would take four years before he worked regularly in broadcasting again. King candidly presented this period of his life to the public in his book, Larry King.

   From 1972 to 1975, King struggled to get back on his feet. In the spring of 1974, he took a public relations job with a horse racing track in Shreveport, Louisiana. In the fall, he became the color commentator for the short-lived Shreveport Steamers of the World Football League.

    In 1975. After returning to Miami, he was rehired by a new general manager at WIOD for an evening interview show similar to his previous program. Over the next several years, he gradually recovered as a TV interviewer, a columnist for The Miami News, and a radio commentator for the Dolphins. Still deep in debt, he claimed bankruptcy in 1978.

     In the same year, the Mutual Broadcasting Network persuaded him to do a late-night radio talk show, which debuted on January 30, 1978, in 28 cities as the Larry King Show. It was first aired from WIOD, but beginning in April 1978, it originated from Mutual s Arlington, Virginia, studios, which overlook the capital. Originally, the show's time slot was from midnight to 5:30 A.M. and was divided into three distinct segments, a guest interview, guest responses to callers, and "Open Phone America." King greeted callers by identifying their location: "Memphis, hello."

     In February 1993, King's radio talk show on Mutual (now Westwood One) moved from late night to an afternoon drive time reaching 410 affiliates. By June 1994, Westwood also began simulcasting King's CNN live show, the first ever daily "TV/radio talk show." As part of the agreement, King dropped his syndicated radio show, a move that ended his regular radio broadcasting activities.

     Larry King's CNN program received a huge boost in 1992 by attracting the presidential candidates. On February 20, his interview with H. Ross Perot facilitated Perot's nomination. Viewers of Larry King Live learned of Perot's candidacy even before his wife died. Because of King's call-in format, Perot was approachable as he responded to questions from viewers. The interview initiated a new trend in campaigning as other candidates followed suit by sidestepping traditional news conferences with trained reporters in favor of live, call-in talk shows. The new boom in "talk show democracy" invited voters back into the political arena formerly reserved for politicians and journalists, and marked a new stage in television's influence on the U.S. political process.

     In addition to his work in radio and television as a talk show host, King has made appearances (usually playing himself) in many movies, including Ghostbusters (1984), Primary Colors (1998), and America's Sweethearts (2001), and he has guest-starred (again playing himself) on a number of sitcoms such as Murphy Brown, The Simpsons, The Larry Sanders Show, Frasier, and Spin City. From the 1980s until November 2001, he published a weekly column for the national newspaper USA Today. In 2002 King signed a four­ year contract with CNN.

See Also

Works

  • 1985- Larry King Live

  • Ghostbusters, 1984; Lost in America, 1985; Eddie and the Cruisers II: Eddie Lives!, 1989; Crazy People, 1990; The Exorcist Ill, 1990; Dave, l 993; Open Season, 1996; Courage Under Fire, 1996; The Long Kiss Goodnight, 1996; Contact, 1997; Mad City, 1997; The Jackal, 1997; Primary Colors, 1998; Bulworth, 1998; Enemy of the State, 1998; The Kid, 1998; The Contender, 2000; America's Sweethearts, 200 l; John Q, 2002.

  • Larry King Show, 1978-94; Larry King Live, 1994- .

  • Larry King (with Emily Yoffe), 1982

    Tell It to the King (with Peter Occhiogrosso), 1988

    Tell Me More (with Peter Occhiogrosso), 1990

    When You' re from Brooklyn, Everywhere Else Is Tokyo (with Marty Appel), 1992

    On the Line: The New Road to the White House (with Mark Stencel), 1993

    The Best of Larry King Live: The Greatest Interviews, 1995

    Anything Goes! What I've Learned from Pundits, Politicians, and Presidents (with Pat Piper), 2000

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