John Hines
Born
John Peter Hines

November 8, 1953
NationalityIrish-American
OccupationRadio Broadcaster
Children2

John Hines (Sept 1953 - ) is a Minnesota Hall of Fame radio broadcaster known for being a disc jockey and talk-show host. His career spanned over four decades, across numerous stations in Minneapolis–Saint Paul, including KSTP, WLOL, KEEY-FM and WCCO (AM).

Biography

Hines graduated from Roosevelt High School in 1971 before enrolling at Brown College three days later. His broadcasting career began in Normal, Illinois. After 13 months, Hines returned to Minneapolis to work at WWTC-AM in 1973.[1]

Hines' radio career began to skyrocket when he moved to 15 The Music Station in 1975 and teamed up with longtime Twin Cites broadcaster Charlie Bush. Hines's irreverent humor alongside Bush's newsman gaffing wowed audiences across the Minneapolis–Saint Paul area.[2]

When daytime television hosts Steve and Sharon Edelman left KSTP-TV in 1980, the young upstart was tapped by Hubbard Broadcasting as their replacement, hosting "Twin Cities Today" for one year.[3]

"I didn't like shaving and putting on a tie every day," Hines said. "So I thought lets go back to radio as quick as possible."[1]

Hines quickly returned to radio however, and in 1981 he joined Bob Berglund at WLOL-FM[4] in a magical pairing that more than doubled the station's ratings in a single year.[5] Over the next 8 years, no one surpassed Hines and Berglund when it came to promotion.

"Fact is, around the Twin Cities, these guys are seen nearly as often as they're heard. They've done broadcasts from the roof of the Metronome, a billboard near Interstate Hwys. 94 and 35W, the beat at Lake Nokomis and from a bus."[6]

Hines stayed in morning drive at WLOL until its eventual sale to Minnesota Public Radio in 1990. He was quickly snatched up by K102,[7] where he was reunited with Charlie Bush. The move ignited the country station, quickly catapulting it to second in listenership and first in the 25-to-54 demographic.[8] Hines continued to work mornings at K102 for almost 17 years while helping them earn a Station of the Year award from the Country Music Association.

In 2006, Hines moved up the dial to sister-station KTLK-FM where he hosted a morning talk show in an effort to bolster the startup station's star power.[9]

John Hines in 2014

Then, after almost two decades at Clear Channel, Hines joined News Radio 830 WCCO in 2010, where he first hosted an evening show. In 2011, Hines replaced John Williams in the midday time slot, where he worked daily broadcasting in 2018.[10]

Hines was inducted into the Pavek Museum of Broadcasting in 2017.[11]

Hines was active with many charities throughout his career, including once being buried alive for 48 hours to help raise funds for Twin Cities food shelves.[12] He has been married three times and has two sons.

References

  1. 1 2 Yuccas, Jamie (June 24, 2014). "Minnesotan To Meet: WCCO Radio's John Hines". CBS News. Retrieved August 30, 2023.
  2. Stickler, Jeff (February 3, 1978). "KSTP's Hines and Bush: Shooting people out of bed". Minneapolis Star Tribune.
  3. Gendler, Neal (August 15, 1980). "Hines, Moehrl chosen for 'Twin Cities Today'". Minneapolis Tribune. pp. 7C.
  4. Carman, John (September 2, 1981). "Radio's yearly musical chairs". Minneapolis Tribune. Minneapolis Tribune. Retrieved August 30, 2023.
  5. Carman, John (July 9, 1982). "WLOL whistling happy tune over Arbitron ratings" (PDF). Minneapolis Star and Tribune. pp. 14b.
  6. Levy, Paul (December 6, 1987). "The Awakening of Morning Radio". Minneapolis Star Tribune. p. 18. Retrieved August 30, 2023.
  7. CJ (January 15, 1991). "A four-year hitch in country country for WLOL's Hines". 2B. Retrieved August 30, 2023.
  8. Holston, Noel (May 13, 1991). "Twin Cities warmed up to country this winter: KEEY second to WCCO". Minneapolis Star Tribune. p. 93.
  9. Caulfield Rybak, Deborah (March 8, 2007). "Twin Cities morning radio lineup shuffled". Minneapolis Star Tribune. pp. A2. Retrieved August 30, 2023.
  10. CJ. "WCCO-AM's John Hines is calling it a career after the State Fair". Minneapolis Star Tribune.
  11. "John Hines Hall of Fame". August 30, 2023.
  12. Holston, Neil (October 12, 1989). "John Hines getting buried in his work". Minneapolis Star Tribune.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.