The Day

Radio host, former NYC mayoral candidate Barry Farber dies

- By DAVID BAUDER AP Media Writer

New York — Pioneering radio host Barry Farber, who hosted a conservati­ve talk show for decades in New York City and ran unsuccessf­ully for mayor in 1977, has died.

Farber died of natural causes Wednesday at home in New York, a day after his 90th birthday, his daughter, Celia Farber, said.

Raised in Greensboro, N.C., Farber worked in New York City for his entire career and was still doing a regular digital talk show for CRN up until last week. Injuries from a fall hastened his demise, his daughter said.

He began on the air at WINS-AM, the only talk host on a rock ’n’ roll station. Farber moved to WOR-AM in 1962 and worked in the evening and through the night. He left the station for his mayoral run and, after losing as a Conservati­ve Party candidate to Democrat Ed Koch with 4% of the vote, went to work for WMCA-AM for 11 years.

He was a member of the National

Radio Hall of Fame.

Farber was a traditiona­l conservati­ve working in one of the nation’s most liberal cities. He was a wordsmith and extraordin­ary orator, said Michael Harrison, publisher of Talkers magazine.

“He spoke as if he was writing an essay,” Harrison said.

He spoke more than 20 languages, including Albanian, Swedish, Finnish and Yiddish, along with the more standard French, German, Spanish and Chinese, according to an obituary.

Farber was past his peak of influence by the time conservati­ve talk radio became an industry that made national stars of Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity. He would joke about “being big in the old days and old in the big days,” Harrison said.

“I just wish we had started it in my generation,” Farber told Talkers in a 2012 interview. “It never occurred to us.”

Farber was known for ending his show with the phrase, “To be continued.”

 ?? DAN GROSSI, AP PHOTO, FILE ?? Conservati­ve Barry Farber, who was far behind in the New York City mayoral race, thanks supporters Nov. 8, 1977, at his headquarte­rs in New York. Farber died of natural causes Wednesday at home in New York, a day after his 90th birthday, his daughter, Celia Farber, said.
DAN GROSSI, AP PHOTO, FILE Conservati­ve Barry Farber, who was far behind in the New York City mayoral race, thanks supporters Nov. 8, 1977, at his headquarte­rs in New York. Farber died of natural causes Wednesday at home in New York, a day after his 90th birthday, his daughter, Celia Farber, said.

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