Bryan Johnson's golden anniversary
After 50 years of reporting for KOMO radio and TV, it seems the Seattle broadcast veteran has covered every story at least once ... and faked his way through "Album of Classics" too.
KOMO, via Wikipedia
KOMO
He’s seen it all, and helped us see it, too, for half a century. He’s KOMO reporter Bryan Johnson, who today, Saturday, marks an almost unbelievable 50 years with the local TV and radio operation at Fourth & Broad. Fifty years is a long time in any business. It’s rare in broadcasting, and pretty much unheard of with the same station. I spoke with Johnson on the eve of this milestone about what he’s seen in the past five decades and about what may lie ahead.
It’s an understatement to say Johnson has seen vast changes in the broadcasting industry. The TV news business began changing, and not for the better, in the 1970s, says Johnson. He points to San Francisco station KGO’s wild ratings success back then with a bold and sensationalist approach — KGO, says Johnson, stands for “Kickers, Guts and Orgasms” — and the move everywhere toward “if it bleeds, it leads” journalism. Johnson remembers when media were “watchdogs, not lapdogs,” and he’s even more worried these days about the future of news, given the rise of social media.
Asked whether he blogs, Johnson says, “God, no!” You won’t find Johnson on Facebook, and he doesn’t Tweet (but he does use those websites to gather information). While he acknowledges that bloggers could be viewed as latter-day equivalents of Martin Luther tacking up theses or Thomas Payne publishing pamphlets, he says the “dittoheads” in the blogosphere are not engaged in a dialog, not exchanging ideas the way it was when discourse was face to face, but instead seeking out only those who share their views.
Johnson, who is 73 and lives in Shoreline, immigrated from the UK with his mother in 1948, and graduated early from Vashon High School. After a short stint at the University of Washington, he went to vocational school in Tacoma to become a radio engineer. He was hired at age 18 by Joe Chytil to work at radio station KAPA in Raymond in southwest Washington, then moved to sister station KELA in Centralia.
Chytil took a shine to Johnson and insisted that the young man get a bachelor’s degree in order to realize his full potential. Johnson told Chytil he couldn’t afford it on what Chytil paid him. A week later, Chytil showed up at the radio station with a new suit for Johnson, and told him that he’d enrolled Johnson at the UW. Johnson protested again about not being able to afford tuition. Chytil said not to worry, that he’d sent an audition tape to a station in Seattle and that Johnson had a part-time job waiting for him that paid enough cover his tuition. Johnson’s first day at KOMO was Oct. 10, 1959, when Dwight Eisenhower was president and three years before the Seattle World's Fair.
Johnson worked part-time at KOMO while studying Russian at the UW, with an eye toward becoming a codebreaker for the U.S. government. When Johnson realized that his language studies weren’t headed anywhere interesting and that his status as a naturalized citizen meant he likely couldn’t get a job as a cryptologist, he took a full-time news job offered to him by KOMO in 1962.
KOMO radio’s format in those days was different than its current news and talk. “It was weird, freakin’ weird,” in Johnson's description, and harked back to the “something for everybody” radio format more common in the 1930s and 1940s. Johnson says KOMO had music, local news and Paul Harvey in the mornings, then the syndicated national program “Don McNeill’s Breakfast Club” (which had been on the air since the 1930s), followed by household advice from “Katherine Wise” (a Betty Crocker-like local character of sorts played by Ruth Fratt). Next came more Paul Harvey at noon followed by local news, and then mostly music for the rest of the day, including “dinner music” at 6 p.m., “with Lester Lanin-type stuff and Lawrence Welk,” says Johnson, who worked the night shift in his early years at KOMO.
Johnson’s roles on the night shift were many — including deejay, as well as writer and anchor for the “Bedtimer’s Edition” of the news, which came on at 11 p.m. Because of KOMO’s powerful 50,000-watt signal which traveled hundreds of miles at night, the “Bedtimer’s Edition” included weather forecasts for most of the West Coast, from Northern California to Alaska.
Most challenging, says Johnson, was deejaying the program that came on after the news: a classical music program called “Album of Classics” that was scripted by local expert Dick Cornwell. All of this made for a busy night. “You had to be able read the news. You had no help, you were alone. You were spinning records up till then. You were ripping stuff from five different wires and stapling it onto sheets of paper. Meanwhile you were trying to pull the music for the “Album of Classics” and looking to see if you knew the names of the composers, and if you didn’t, how the hell did you pronounce them?”
One of Johnson’s most memorable occasions on the job came when he was working the day shift. “I heard, for the first and only time I have heard it, 15 bells [of alarm on the UPI teletype], meaning ‘FLASH.’ The 15 bells went off and everybody was chilled, thinking ‘what the devil has happened?’ I raced in there and it said 'DALLAS TEXAS SHOTS FIRED,’ that’s all it said. I went on the air and was trying to ad lib about the president being in Dallas, that shots had been fired apparently at the motorcade, and then somebody raced into the studio with the second part of it that was ‘PRESIDENT HIT.’ We were one of the first stations on because we ran with the ‘SHOTS FIRED.’”
Johnson initially was only on radio at KOMO, then started doing television news as well in the mid-1960s, working on special reports about pollution, the Port of Seattle and Boeing. He also was a rotating host (along with Jim Harriott) in the mid-1970s of the KOMO-TV weekend public affairs program “Viewpoint.”
Over the years, Johnson has interviewed pretty much anyone who was anybody, including Sen. Henry M. “Scoop” Jackson, whom he met with at the senator’s Everett home just three hours before Jackson died in 1983. Among Johnson’s other favorite characters who are no longer around are Fremont activist Arman Stepanian; architect Victor Steinbrueck; restaurateur Ivar Haglund; former Gov. Dixie Lee Ray; and Washington’s other longtime senator, Warren G. Magnuson, who, Johnson says, always said, “Hi Byron.” Johnson says that though he was tempted, he never addressed Maggie the way crooner Perry Como once did on the air: “Hi Senator Mag-NEW-son!”
Johnson says there are several benefits to being in the news business in one market for 50 years. One is a sense of local history from having lived through it and reported it. When issues come up at City Hall, the Port of Seattle, or in Olympia, chances are Bryan Johnson was there the last time around 10 or 20 (or 30 or 40) years ago. Second is access — newsmakers know Johnson (many of them, personally) and take his calls. Johnson mentions familiarity with a variety of longtime local figures including former Gov. Dan Evans; gun rights activist Alan Gottlieb; defense attorney Tony Savage; and former Seattle Mayors Wes Uhlman and Charlie Royer.
How has Johnson managed to go 50 years with the same radio and TV station? “When John Behnke first hired me, he said, ‘When you join Fisher, you get married.’” He credits his longevity to love of the business, and to being on the street gathering information rather than moving up into management and having to sit in meetings all day. KOMO, says Johnson, could stand for “Keep On Meeting On.”
Johnson, who lives with his fiancée and who has two adult sons who live in Okanogan, likes to cook in his spare time and has no plans to retire anytime soon. “I am still in the business because despite all the warts, despite all the emphasis on sex and violence, despite the shrinking audiences, we in TV, radio and newspaper remain the only real hope for a rational, marginally educated people,” he says.
So, while he celebrates his 50th anniversary at KOMO this week, is Bryan Johnson also looking ahead and planning to be at KOMO for his 60th?
He answers with the brevity of a half-century's experience: “God, no."
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Comments:
Posted Sat, Oct 10, 8:15 a.m. Inappropriate
Feliks,
Thanks for doing this piece. Fifty years later, Bryan is still one of the best in town.
Casey Corr
Posted Sat, Oct 10, 4:57 p.m. Inappropriate
Puff piece. Pretty much useless. No real information here. Having been around so long and seen so much what does he think of...(you name it)?
The current state of government
Tim Eyman
The Bush administration/The Obama administration, etc.
The piece does not get inside his mind at all.
Posted Sun, Oct 11, 12:04 p.m. Inappropriate
It's a 50th anniversary profile, not an exposé. Perhaps we'll hear about Johnson's opinions once he retires from KOMO.
I caught the tail end of KOMO 1000's piece on Johnson last night, and remember thinking "Bryan Johnson? THAT Bryan Johnson? Not possible. 1959?" But then I Googled for him when I got home, and up popped this piece. Fifty years in broadcasting, at one station — in 2009, that is news in itself. And the bits about the Kennedy assassination, Johnson's having been born in Britain and studied Russian at the UW, and being engaged (congratulations! perhaps he should read Anthony Robinson's piece, http://crosscut.com/2009/10/07/lifestyle-leisure/19281/) were things I never knew. Anyone can have an opinion on Tim Eyman, but these historical and personal details are what help make broadcasters more human, I think.
Little did I know when I first started becoming aware of Johnson when I was a kid in the early '80s that he'd already been on KOMO for 20+ years! Amazing.
Posted Mon, Oct 12, 8:10 a.m. Inappropriate
An "old school" journalist in the very best sense. We all have biases, but Bryan has been one of the very best at presenting facts and analysis without letting an agenda creep in -- instark contrast to far too many in the news media today.
Posted Mon, Oct 12, 8:58 a.m. Inappropriate
I think the caption on your picture may be inaccurate. As I recall, KOMO lost their NBC affiliation to KING in 1958, the same year that KIRO won the CBS affiliation away from KTNT.
Posted Mon, Oct 12, 9:44 a.m. Inappropriate
Bryan is a "reporter's reporter": funny, smart, fearless and not so cynical. I loved being on the streets with him "back in the day" when we were both competitive and helpful to one another. And I had no idea it had been 50 years. Congrats, Bryan. Kathleen Warren
Posted Mon, Oct 12, 10:35 a.m. Inappropriate
CarlyBoaz: Johnson has always been a true professional, a reporter who doesn't let his own opinions interfere with reporting the news. There are plenty of loudmouths out there bloviating about Eyman, Obama, Bush, etc.; I want to read about the man himself.
Posted Mon, Oct 12, 10:39 a.m. Inappropriate
Bryan has long been one of the grown-ups in the TV-radio biz -- serious, as unbiased as reporters can be, and a helluva good story-teller. And what a great milestone!
Posted Wed, Oct 14, 10:19 a.m. Inappropriate
Bryan also takes reporting seriously. Not as a vehicle for fame, but as a responsibility in being an informed citizen. Substance over Style.
Years ago (1972, 73 ish) as an intern in news, I worked at a station that was one of several that shared a radio frequency used by reporters in the field. Bryan had just "scooped" a good one at city hall and was radioing in to the city desk at KOMO that he had a great story, then remembered others were listening in... and said, I will be at the studio shortly, I will need an editing room, and make room in the next newscast for this. The newscaster at my station giggled, and picked up the mic and said, "Aw Comeon Bryan, Share!" to which he responded, "You can listen in like the rest of em..."...
From time to time he does offer opinions. If one takes time to listen to KOMO, you would know the answers to where he stands on a lot of issues.
A good reporter. Congrats on 50 years... and thanks Feliks.
Posted Mon, Oct 19, 3:53 p.m. Inappropriate
During my 28 years at King County Courthouse I always enjoyed chatting with Bryan when he was there on business; but never could understand how he could speak just like the locals, rather than his proper British accent.
Owen Clarke
Posted Fri, Oct 30, 4:21 p.m. Inappropriate
I received this tribute and comment from Barbara Spaeth:
Bryan’s intellectual and intestinal fortitude is legendary, as he clearly knew his own limits within the dynamics of a locally owned broadcasting company. Our region is lucky that Fisher Broadcasting and Bryan have maintained that balance for a half century. Bryan was news director at KOMO-AM when the famous billboard was posted asking the last person leaving Seattle to turn out the lights. Jobs were evaporating, but he hired me then to not only report, but to anchor newscasts when not another major station in the market would give a female voice such a chance, and his program director at the time (who shall remain nameless) was sure it would kill the ratings. It didn’t. Working with Bryan and for him was exciting and fulfilling for anyone serious about journalism’s mission to accurately report the workings of our government and economy. For all of his sometimes cynical away-from-the-microphone cracks, he was a compassionate colleague who overcame many challenges in early life. I will never forget his tales of training himself to speak with an American accent and doing mattress commercials in his early radio career. Bryan is surely one of the smartest people ever to fall prey to the calling of journalism – our good fortune. Barbara Stenson Spaeth
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