San Francisco Chronicle

KNBR’s ‘Razor’ dies after long battle with Parkinson’s.

RALPH BARBIERI 1946-2020

- Barbieri is survived by his son, Tayte, and his sister, Annette Dell Osso of Novato. Chronicle staff writer Henry Schulman contribute­d to this report. By Tom FitzGerald Tom FitzGerald is a former San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: sportsdesk@sf

Longtime San Francisco radio personalit­y Ralph Barbieri died at his home in Novato on Monday after a long battle with Parkinson’s disease. He was 74.

He spent 28 years at KNBR (680 AM). Over the final 15, he teamed with Tom Tolbert on a popular afternoon show called “The Razor and Mr. T.”

Barbieri was dubbed “Razor Voice” many years ago by the late Chronicle columnist Herb Caen because of his raspy, highpitche­d delivery.

“Even though we knew it was coming, it was still a mule kick,” Tolbert said Monday.

“I think of him as somebody who was San Francisco through and through. He could be loud. He could be abrasive. He could be fiercely loyal to the people he loved, and his family. He was going to hold onto his opinions for dear life and wasn’t going to back down. He was going to do what he thought was right, everybody else be damned.

“I loved the guy. I loved working with the guy. I don’t think anyone will ever have the magic that we had.”

Critics found Barbieri’s interview questions interminab­le and thought he was too easy on his subjects. He thought his approach allowed listeners to know his subjects better than they would have had he been more confrontat­ional. In any case, his show drew a loyal audience.

“What a character, what an iconic voice if you’ve lived in the Bay Area,” said A’s manager Bob Melvin, a Palo Alto native and UC Berkeley alum. “It takes you all of two seconds to know when Ralph Barbieri is on the radio. Really sad, heavy heart.”

He signed off each show with a quote from British novelist and poet G.K. Chesterton: “Angels fly because they take themselves lightly.”

In 2005, Barbieri was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, a degenerati­ve disorder of the central nervous system. He didn’t disclose his illness to KNBR management and his listeners until 2011.

Six months after his announceme­nt, he was fired in April 2012. He sued KNBR’s parent company, Cumulus Media, alleging discrimina­tion based on his age (then 66) and his illnesses.

At the time, Cumulus vice president Bill Bungeroth called the charges “baseless,” pointing out that the company knew about his illness when it renewed his contract the previous fall. He said Barbieri was let go because he refused to honor the terms of his contract. In 2013, the suit was settled for an undisclose­d amount, believed to be more than $1 million.

As Chronicle columnist Scott Ostler wrote in 2011, Barbieri went into “full attack mode” when he first got the Parkinson’s diagnosis, going to the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota and even a mystical healer named John of God in a remote corner of Brazil. Barbieri’s medical approach, Ostler wrote, eventually included acupunctur­e, Chinese herbs, meditation, yoga, exercise and about 85 pills a day, mostly herbs.

For more than a decade, Barbieri said, he became almost obsessed with becoming a father, even though he never wanted to be married. Through in vitro fertilizat­ion with a surrogate mother, his son, Tayte Ali, was born in 2000, and Barbieri embraced his new role as a father.

He told an interviewe­r in 1992, “I spent the better part of 25 years carousing and leading the single life.” After three drunkendri­ving charges in a 12month period, he had entered a 120day treatment program in 1995. He later said he swore off alcohol and drugs when he became a father.

Raised in Millbrae, he attended the University of San Francisco on an academic scholarshi­p — he was a member of the cheerleadi­ng squad — and earned a degree in political science with a minor in philosophy. He received an MBA at Penn and worked in advertisin­g in New York for a year and a half.

After returning to San Francisco, he decided to write an article about Bill Walton, the iconoclast­ic center of the Portland Trail Blazers. They met in a hotel in Oakland, where the Blazers were playing the Warriors. Barbieri accepted an invitation from Walton to spend a week at his home in Oregon to let him see how he lived. Barbieri eventually sold the long story to Sport magazine.

After he wrote a cover story for Sport on decathlete Bruce Jenner — who would win gold at the 1976 Olympics in Montreal — he made a guest appearance on Scotty Stirling’s radio show on KNBR. Barbieri decided that talk radio was what he wanted to do.

Following the sale of KNBR by NBC to Susquehann­a Radio Corp. in 1989, general manager Tony Salvadore gave Barbieri the “SportsPhon­e 68” nighttime sportstalk show after hearing him sub for Dave Newhouse. Salvadore wanted somebody more controvers­ial. Eventually, Barbieri was shifted to the prized afternoond­rive slot as the station moved to a 24hour allsports format.

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 ?? KBHK 1992 ?? Former Giants first baseman Will Clark (right) joins Barbieri for an interview on his television show in 1992.
KBHK 1992 Former Giants first baseman Will Clark (right) joins Barbieri for an interview on his television show in 1992.
 ?? Michael Macor / The Chronicle 2011 ?? Ralph Barbieri was a fixture on KNBR for decades, including a long stint as the cohost of “The Razor and Mr. T.”
Michael Macor / The Chronicle 2011 Ralph Barbieri was a fixture on KNBR for decades, including a long stint as the cohost of “The Razor and Mr. T.”

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