The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

All-night radio host from L.A.

- By Elaine Woo Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Ray Briem, the longtime KABC-AM talk show host who ruled all-night radio for nearly three decades with his phone calls to the famous and the quirky and his opinionate­d banter slamming liberals, championin­g conservati­ve causes and extolling the big-band music he loved, died Wednesday at his Malibu home. He was 82.

The cause was cancer, said his son Bryan.

Briem spent most of his life on the radio, reaching his largest audience as the host of a popular midnight-to-5 a.m. talk show on KABC from 1967 to 1994. During those 27 years he helped set the mold for what has become a major radio genre.

“We consider him one of the most important radio talk-show hosts of all time,” said Michael Harrison, publisher of Talkers magazine, the main trade publicatio­n for the talk radio industry. “There were only a handful of stations in the entire country doing talk then. It hadn’t been formulated, researched, standardiz­ed and consulted. It was all based on these creative characters ... and Ray Briem was one of the originals.”

One of the first conservati­ves to establish a beachhead in radio, Briem dominated the post-midnight hours, consistent­ly attracting the largest ratings of any overnight talk show. The year he left KABC he was drawing 15.7 percent of the available audience, a remarkable share in any era. He was also one of the station’s most effective pitchmen, whose show “brought in more than a million dollars a year in revenue,” said former KABC general manager George Green.

His political crusades also turned tides.

Briem gave Propositio­n 13 author Howard Jarvis a regular platform during the 1970s and was credited by Jarvis for helping build the public ground- swell that led to the anti-tax measure’s resounding victory in 1978. Its passage proved that conservati­ve radio did not play “only to the fringe,” Briem said, but had mainstream appeal. “We spoke to the people, and the people responded,” he told the Los Angeles Times in 1996.

Briem also defended President Richard M. Nixon during the Watergate scandal, which so endeared him to one loyal listener that when she died at 100 she left Briem her house.

An avid pilot, Briem sold the house to buy an airplane.

Briem was born Jan. 19, 1930, in Ogden, Utah, where his mother was a teacher and his father was a railroad engineer. He briefly attended the University of Utah, where he studied chemistry but abandoned his plans for a science career after “he blew up his chemistry set in the house,” his son said.

By then Briem already had the radio bug. When he was 15, he and his buddies conceived a 15-minute radio drama called “The Adventures of Vivacious Vicky” that Ogden’s tiny radio station agreed to air. When a staffer at the station went on a drunken binge on V-E Day in 1945 Briem was asked to fill in. Later that year, he was hired full time.

He worked with Armed Forces Radio during the Korean War, hosting live shows with big-name bands, including those led by Harry James, Guy Lombardo, Count Basie and Duke Ellington.

In 1953, after completing his military service, Briem moved to Los Angeles to spin records at KGIL-AM. He remained a deejay through the early 1960s, including a stint in Seattle where he worked for King Broadcasti­ng on both its radio and TV outlets.

In 1958, he married Elsie Child. They divorced in 1964. He is survived by their children, Bryan, of Malibu, and Kevin, of San Diego; and five grandchild­ren.

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