San Francisco Chronicle

Introducin­g the Hall of Fame class of 2014

- By Ben Fong-torres Ben Fong-torres is a freelance writer. E-mail: sadolphson@sfchronicl­e.com

The Bay Area Radio Hall of Fame will formally induct nine new members Saturday. Well, as formally as you can at a seafood restaurant (Spenger’s in Berkeley).

Co-produced by the Broadcast Legends and the California Historical Radio Society, the luncheon event will also reconfirm the naming of KSAN-FM, in its progressiv­e rock years, as the Hall of Fame’s Legendary Station of the year. The ceremonies, featuring

Don Bleu of KOSF as host, are open to the public. For ticket info, go to www.broad castlegend­s.com.

Here are sketches of the Class of 2014.

Ed Cavagnaro is close to being a lifer at KCBS. A graduate of San Francisco State’s radio-TV-film department, he joined the station in its promotions department in 1977, when it had a news and talk format. He soon became a news editor, and in 1988, was promoted to director of news and programmin­g. Two years later, KCBS switched to all news, and after a decade of looking up at KGO in the ratings, Cavagnaro and company have been top-rated since 2010.

Bob Lazich was a reporter on KNBR for three decades, starting in 1965. He’d begun broadcasti­ng 20 years before. While attending the University of Montana, he hosted remote shows featuring country bands in Missoula. As a reporter on KNBR, Lazich covered stories involving Patty Hearst and

Angela Davis, and did nightly newscasts on the NBC radio network. He got the news that he was losing his job in 1995 — while on vacation.

Long before the Arbitron (now Nielsen) ratings reported audience measuremen­ts for noncommerc­ial stations, KQED-FM was known to be a consistent occupant of the Top 10. In more recent years, it’s often ranked No. 1 or 2. Through all those years, Jo

AnneWallac­e has been at the helm. Coming from NPR, she joined KQED in 1990 as general manager. In 1996, Wallace, a Stanford grad, was named VP/GM of radio, and this year she began supervisin­g programmin­g for KQED TV as well.

Norman Davis was part of the “Jive 95” crew at KSAN in the ’70s, when he was a latenight DJ and production director, creating station promos and commercial­s. But Davis was on the local airwaves long before KSAN. He arrived in 1958 from Spokane, Wash., to join KOBY, the first Top 40 station in San Francisco. There, he was “Al Knight.” Later, on KYA, he was “Lucky Logan,” until a new boss told him to revert to his real name. He found his stride at KSAN and never returned to formatted radio. He hosts a blues show on, among other outlets, fatmusicra­dio.com.

Steve Bitker is KCBS’ morning sports anchor, and has been since 1991. The job includes chatting with John

Madden for the popular “Daily Madden” feature at 8:15. A grad of UC Berkeley, Bitker, 61, began in radio in Fresno, worked at KNBR and did playby-play for the Oakland A’s on KFRC. (Before the A’s assignment, Bitker called games for the Sonoma County Crushers, the minor league club in Rohnert Park.) Bitker also wrote a book, “The Original San Francisco Giants,” about the 1958 team.

Celeste Perry has been a quick and witty presence on Bay Area airwaves since 1982, when she arrived from Hawaii, where she began her radio career, she admits, as a station mascot. “I had to wear a chicken suit and prance around at station events.” She would become a DJ, and her credits include KSFO, KYA, KYCY, KKSF (the “smooth jazz” FM version) and KFRC-FM. Perry, now on KOSF, is also a host on KOFY-TV and produced a podcast devoted to women’s issues. It’s called “HotFlash.”

Sam Van Zandt once was a radio journeyman. Before he landed at KBAY (94.5) in San Jose, where he’s been co-hosting the morning show with

Lissa Kreisler for nearly 10 years, Van Zandt worked at five stations in San Francisco: KYA, KIOI, the combo of KNEW-KSAN (with a country format), KCBS-FM (then a music station) and KFRC. Van Zandt, a San Jose native, was an announcer and cast member on “Candid Camera” on CBS from 1997 to 2005, and has worked on local TV shows, including “Evening Magazine” and “AM San Francisco.” KGO evening news anchor

Peter Finch is the only new inductee who’s also a playwright. In fact, he’s produced two plays, a “Citizen Kane” parody called “Aaah! Rosebud” in 2007, and “Aaron Trotter and the Incident at Bikini Beach” in 2009. He contrived the titles to land atop theater listings. His day job, for years, was news director at KFOG, where he was part of a popular morning ensemble anchored by Dave Morey. In late 2011, Finch joined KGO, where he also produces a regular feature, “The Finch Files.” Broadcast engineer Bill

Ruck has been keeping radio stations on the air for over 40 years, including a run with KFOG from 1978 to 1999. As ownership changed, his work expanded to sister stations KNBR and KSAN, where he was engineerin­g manager. At the same time, he served as chief engineer for KUSF, which he joined in 1972. He designed audio systems for NBC at the 2004 Summer Olympics, and is principal engineer at CSI Telecommun­ications, designing public safety and private communicat­ions systems. Newsy talk: On Aug. 25, two weeks after RobinWilli­ams’ death, Ronn Owens told his KGO audience that he has Parkinson’s disease and was diagnosed in 2001. “Simply put, it was time,” he wrote in an e-mail. “I hope, in the wake of Robin’s passing, that my experience with Parkinson’s may offer some encouragem­ent to others who’ve been recently diagnosed with it.” Since the announceme­nt, he said, he’s received supportive messages. “Many people with Parkinson’s have contacted me and said they’ve been helped by hearing about my experience with it. That’s been extremely gratifying.”

Before making his announceme­nt, Owens hosted The Chronicle’s DavidWiega­nd, the TV critic and executive features editor, whose story about Owens’ plans to go public ran that morning. They talked about television, and, at one point, Owens’ engineer played the theme from “Downton Abbey.” Owens asked Wiegand if he knew who composed the song, then told him:

Alex Trebek. “Really?” a waryWiegan­d replied. Owens laughed; he was kidding. Said Wiegand: “You’ve got a bully pulpit here. People believe what you’re saying.” But it was definitely a no-bull day.

 ?? Bay Area Radio Hall of Fame ?? Left: Jo AnneWallac­e, vice president and general manager of KQED radio. Right: Bob Lazich, a reporter for KNBR.
Bay Area Radio Hall of Fame Left: Jo AnneWallac­e, vice president and general manager of KQED radio. Right: Bob Lazich, a reporter for KNBR.
 ?? KQED ??
KQED

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