Michael Harrison
Michael Harrison graduated from Hofstra University in 1971. He is a charter inductee in the Hofstra Radio Hall of Fame and sits on the university’s Lawrence Herbert School of Communication Dean’s Advisory Board. Still active after a 52 year career as a broadcaster, he is a pioneer and innovator in both talk and rock radio as well as being a driving force in the industry’s trade publication field.
He was the founding architect and first program director of the progressive rock format that launched the legendary WLIR, Long Island to national fame in 1970 while still a student at Hofstra. He went on to become the ground breaking morning host at album rocker WNEW-FM, New York shortly after graduation.
Michael Harrison has served as the editor and publisher of Talkers, the leading trade publication in the American talk media industry for the past 29 years. In that capacity, he has become widely recognized as one of America’s leading authorities on radio, communications, and public opinion as it is expressed in the media as well as being director of the annual national Talkers Convention held in New York City for the past 22 years.
During his colorful career, Michael Harrison has also been an air personality or on-air program director at such stations as KMET, Los Angeles; KPRI, San Diego; WZLX, Boston; WCBS-FM and WPIX, New York; WTIC, Hartford and others. He owned and operated one of the early talkers of the modern era – WSPR, Springfield, MA. He currently finds time to guest-host talk shows at WTIC as well as WRKO, Boston. He hosts a weekly radio show, “The Michael Harrison Wrap” heard on iHeart’s WONK-FM, Washington, DC and KSCO, Santa Cruz, CA. And he serves as the anchor on the nationally syndicated upper demo weekend show, “A Touch of Grey: The Talk Show for Grownups.”
He has written about, defined, predicted or engaged in hands-on programming of major movements in radio’s evolution from coining new format terms to the development of music and talk-topic chart methodology. Among his inventions is the term “AOR” (Album Oriented Rock) which he coined in the early 1970s to describe the more commercially-accessible brand of “progressive rock” radio that remained a dominant format for more than 40 years. Today, it is called “classic rock.”
He has hosted and produced national radio programs syndicated by ABC Radio Networks, Westwood One, CBS Radio, MJI Broadcasting, RKO Radio and more. These include the legendary “Album Greats: The History of Album Rock,” “The Great American Radio Show” and “Mike Harrison’s Rock Connections” among others.
Harrison served as the first managing editor of Radio & Records during its formative years and radio columnist/record chart consultant for Billboard in the early 1980s.
He was one of the first media analysts to predict the rise of podcasting before the term was widely known, not to mention program director of the first radio station to have its own website.
He hosts PodcastOne’s “The Michael Harrison Interview” an award-winning weekly podcast geared to “media freaks, pop culture aficionados, political junkies and the philosophically curious” and operates an experimental “hyper-local” online talk station – Pioneer Valley Radio – in Western Massachusetts.