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Shadoe Stevens

 
Wikipedia: Shadoe Stevens
 
Shadoe Stevens at the 41st Emmy Awards

Shadoe Stevens (born Terry Ingstad on November 3, 1947 in Jamestown, North Dakota) was the host of American Top 40, heard by an estimated one billion people in 120 countries from 1988 to 1995. He currently hosts the internationally syndicated radio show, Top of the World and is the co-founder and creator of Sammy Hagar's new rock station "Cabo Wabo Radio" broadcasting worldwide from the Cabo Wabo Cantina in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. In television, he is the voice of The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson on CBS. His voice can also be heard as the voiceover for "G.O.D." in the Off-Broadway musical Altar Boyz. Shadoe is also often heard on Hits & Favorites, calling in at least once a week to share wisdom with his brother Richard Stevens and their friend Lori St. James.

Contents

Early life

Stevens first came to fame in 1957, when a Life magazine article about him, entitled "America's Youngest D.J." featured a photo of Stevens broadcasting live over radio station KEYJ (now called KQDJ) in his hometown of Jamestown. The accompanying article extolled the fact that he had built his own working transmitter in the attic of his home the year before, using a "souped-up" wireless broadcasting kit with a hundred foot antenna, however it omitted the additional information that the equipment and advice needed to build the transmitter, had both been furnished by the staff engineers at KEYJ, which happened to be owned by his father and uncle. He was later "discovered" in a "man on the street" interview by the station and was soon broadcasting a weekly rock show called "Spin with Terry." During his high school years, he maintained a full-time shift at the station, developing his now-famous "slow 'n low" style of speaking, as a host of the "Mister Midnight" program.

College & early career

He attended and graduated from the University of Arizona, where he was a member of Sigma Nu fraternity. He was an Art major and put himself through school working full-time in radio at KIKX in Tucson, where he quickly became the most popular DJ in town, under the on-air persona of "Jefferson K." Following college, he joined the Bill Drake-formatted station WRKO in Boston, during the winter of 1968-69. At WRKO, he worked the early evening (6-9 p.m.) shift during the station's peak in popularity. In the spring of 1970, he moved to Southern California to another Drake outlet, KHJ, as one of the last true "Boss Jocks", where his big baritone and energetic enthusiasm soon gained a following. Before long, he gained significant popularity on radio and became the announcer and sidekick on the nationally syndicated television series The Steve Allen Show.

He went on to be an award winning radio personality and program director in Los Angeles at KRLA. Attaining status as a programmer, he was hired to make a success of KMET-FM and then to create the programming for a new radio format on a new Los Angeles station, World Famous KROQ-FM, where he remained for five years.

1980s—rise to fame

During the early 1980s, Stevens gained an additional cult following when he created and produced "Fred Rated for Federated," a long-running series of offbeat television commercials for The Federated Group, a chain of home electronics retailers in the western and southwestern United States. These ads were so popular they were the subject of a two-page spread in Time Magazine and led to a movie deal, television shows, and American Top 40.

Acting career

He contributed several memorably deadpan readings of absurd material for The Kentucky Fried Movie and then gained national recognition as the announcer for two incarnations of The Hollywood Squares (the 1986–1989 and most of the 1998-2004 version) appearing in the middle square of the bottom row on the earlier version, as well as playing Kenny Beckett on the sitcom Dave's World (1993–1997). He appeared as himself on an episode of The Larry Sanders Show. In 1988, he starred in the film Traxx.

In 2006, Stevens was hired to be The Late Late Show's announcer, a position he still holds. He is also the author of a series of children's books. The first, released in 2006, was called The Big Galoot.

Family life

Stevens married his first wife in 1967 (divorced, 1978); he then married Cynthia Gaydos in 1980 (divorced, 1984). Lastly, he married Beverly Cunningham (an international model) in 1986. Stevens has three children, one son, Brad, from his first marriage and two daughters from his third marriage, Amber Dawn and Chyna Rose.

His daughter, Amber Stevens is an actress appearing in the ABC Family Channel series Greek. She made an appearance on the The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson on July 27, 2007, with her father to promote the show. As a child, she also made a cameo appearance with her dad on American Top 40 the weekend of December 24, 1989, as part of a Christmas skit.

See also

External links

Preceded by
Casey Kasem
American Top 40 Host
1988-1995
Succeeded by
Casey Kasem
Preceded by
Gene Wood
Hollywood Squares announcer
1986-1990 (John Davidson)
1998-2002 (Tom Bergeron)
Succeeded by
Jeffrey Tambor

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