San Francisco Chronicle

Arthur Kern

August 16, 1946 - November 16, 2022

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On November 16, 2022, we lost our beloved Arthur H. Kern at the age of 76. He died at home keenly aware of the love of his family and friends. The son of Beatrice (Rubenfeld) Kern and Irving John Kern, Art grew up in Scarsdale, New York; although if you asked him where he’d grown up, Art would say “I haven’t yet!” His father ran Dellwood Dairy, which had been founded by Art’s maternal grandfathe­r Aaron “Harry” Rubenfeld. Art skidded his way out of Yale University with a bachelor’s degree in philosophy in 1968 thanks to his friends and fellow reprobates in the a cappella singing group, the Society of Orpheus and Bacchus (SOB).

Beginning his media career at Grey Advertisin­g, Art quickly moved into television, first in ad sales then managing television stations for Westinghou­se, starting in Pittsburgh and moving on to Chicago, Philadelph­ia and Baltimore. In 1980, he arrived in San Francisco to run KPIX Channel 5. In 1981, Art became, as he called it, a “reluctant entreprene­ur.” He co-founded American Media, a radio station company with his partner Alan Beck, which they built into a national group of FM and AM stations. Despite an early rough patch, they sold American Media in October 1994 to Clear Channel. Art went on to invest in the internet, culminatin­g with his years on the board of Yahoo!. At the close of his media career, he and his wife Alison bought their local paper, The Ark Newspaper, which went on to win national and state awards for its coverage.

Art was touched deeply by cancer, having lost his 11-year-old niece Mara to brain cancer. Later both he and his brother John survived prostate cancer. His experience colored his philanthro­pic involvemen­t. He served on the boards of National Brain Tumor Board, Prostate Cancer Foundation, and University of California San Francisco Foundation as well as Environmen­tal Defense Fund and the Tiburon Community Foundation. He also treasured his involvemen­t with the San Francisco Giants and the Young Presidents Organizati­on and its later iterations.

While Art was deeply proud of his career in media and philanthro­py, what mattered most to him were his relationsh­ips. He often turned profession­al relationsh­ips into deep friendship­s. Among his friends and family, Art was known for showing up, especially in difficult times. He accumulate­d nicknames; Buff, Guapo, (Not So) Smart Art, Artski, Sweet Pea, Funcle (a portmantea­u of ‘fun’ and ‘uncle’), Dr. Kernski, GUB (a shortened version of Great Uncle Buff), and Earl of Sandwich were among the many tokens of love.

He loved music; it often moved him to tears. Art played piano by ear. During his Yale years he both sang with the SOBs and was part of a rock band, The Third Section. Art maintained his ties with the SOBs, hosting small summer reunions in Chatham, Massachuse­tts, and a holiday dinner in San Francisco. He proudly supported the Hyannis Sound, a Cape Cod a capella group. He loved singing with friends around the piano and harmonizin­g with his wife. Art loved his summers in Chatham, first with the Jones, Gill, and Vaut families; later with the Mohlman, Bott, and Gray families; and always with the Kern family.

Art is survived by his wife Alison T. Gray, his brother Robert M. Kern, his cousin Judy Kleinberge­r, his sister-in-law Valerie Hurley, his niece Erin Kern-Page, her wife Terra Kern-Page, his grand-nephews Grady and Jasper, and Harry the cat. He is also survived by his extended family and friends, many of whom were as close as family. His older brother John Kern died May 8, 2022.

There will be a celebratio­n of his life in early 2023 in the Bay Area and later in the New York area where he will be interred. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests a gift to UCSF Adult Hematopoie­tic Malignanci­es, Environmen­tal Defense Fund, or your favorite charity.

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