Delilah (radio host)

Delilah Rene Luke (born February 15, 1960 in Reedsport, Oregon), almost always known mononymously as Delilah, is an American radio personality, author, and songwriter, best known as the host of a nationally syndicated nightly U.S. radio song request and dedication program, with an estimated 8 million listeners.[1]

Radio show

Format

The show, known simply as Delilah[2] begins at 7pm and ends around midnight local time. She takes calls from listeners in her home studio, providing encouragement, support, and receiving musical dedication requests. It is based in Seattle, Washington.

One of the cornerstones of the show is its use of callers. Most of the time the caller tells Delilah their situation or story and then she chooses the song that she feels best matches the caller's situation. Callers are recorded during the show and replayed later, sometimes within the hour during the show. She also plays songs by direct request.

Originally heard only on weeknights, stations that carry the show have the option of doing so six or even seven nights a week, with most stations doing so at least one night of the weekend (usually Sunday) in addition to the weeknight show.

There are several versions of the program that are available.[3] The most common formats are as follows:

The show includes "Friday Nite Girls," a "fan club"-style feature in which she honors groups of her regular female listeners with prizes. She occasionally also calls certain "Friday Nite Girls" chapters and speaks with them live on the air. She also airs a "Delilah Dilemma" each evening in the first hour of the broadcast.

Distribution

The show was originally syndicated by Broadcast Programming in the late 1990s, which was later bought by Jones Radio Networks. Delilah moved to Premiere Radio Networks in 2004, where she remains to this day. Jim Ryan, the Director of AC music programming for CBS Radio, is a consultant to the show.

Many of the stations carrying the show are owned by Premiere parent Clear Channel Communications (now iHeartMedia), which led to speculation that the company would drop similar locally produced "lovesongs" programs in New York and Los Angeles in order to place her on the air in the nation's top two radio markets. In November 2006, WLTW in New York began carrying her, after longtime evening hostess J.J. Kennedy was laid-off as part of a major company-wide layoff at Clear Channel (in addition, the version of the show that runs on WLTW is a separate specially tailored version of the show produced just for that station, with music programmed by local WLTW Programming). In 2007, longtime lovesongs host Zoe Bonet was dropped from KODA Houston and replaced with her. In March 2012, she went on the air in Los Angeles on KFSH-FM. iHeartRadio has an online Delilah station where listeners can hear the show all the time regardless of time zone or broadcast market. In early January 2014, a number of AC stations (some owned by CBS Radio) have dropped the show as noted on her post on her official Facebook page.[4] This was mostly due to certain AC stations (such as KVIL in Dallas) going for a Hot AC or Adult Top 40 leaning fare.

The show in a fictional sense also plays a role in the Hallmark Channel television series Cedar Cove, which is based on writer Debbie Macomber's book series and set in a fictional Pacific coast town in Washington state. Quotes and other inspirational pieces voiced by Delilah especially for the series set up some of the plot devices which occur in the course of each episode.

Audience

The show is popular among women between the ages of 25 and 54. Delilah says that it is a "safety zone where listeners take off their armor, slip into a "Mr. Rogers" cardigan, sit around the electronic hearth, and share their secrets."[2]

Personal life

Delilah is a mother of 13 children, 10 of whom are adopted.[5] Her adopted son, Sammy Young Dzolali Rene, died on March 12, 2012 of complications of sickle-cell anemia.[6] She has been married four times (and divorced three times), which she tells as a common joke on the show and mentioned when giving advice to her callers.[1] She is an Evangelical Christian[1] and a public advocate of adoption. Her on-air persona is said to be remarkably similar to her real personality.[5] In 2004, partly because of her personal experience with the foster care system, and partly because her heart was touched by a fact-finding trip to Ghana, she founded a humanitarian aid, non-profit organization, Point Hope, as a voice for forgotten children everywhere. It is focused on saving lives, providing purpose and restoring hope for foster children in America and for refugees and other vulnerable persons in Ghana and Liberia, providing a sustainable helping hand-up instead of a hand-out to these persons. The work in Ghana began through providing fresh, safe drinking water, thus alleviating the suffering of Liberian refugees who were camped at Buduburam, a refugee camp that was established in Ghana following the Liberian civil war.[2]

Delilah has written three books: Love Someone Today, Love Matters, and Arms Full of Love. She lives near Port Orchard, Washington.[5] She owned and operated a business in downtown Port Orchard called Delilah's Cozy Kitchen, but it is no longer in business.

Delilah voiced Sarah in the VeggieTales episode "Abe and the Amazing Promise", released by Big Idea Productions.

On October 27, 2012 Delilah married her longtime friend, Paul, at her home. The invited guests (and most of the staff) were only aware they were attending her Halloween party.[7]

Awards

In 2007, the show was nominated for the Syndicated Personality/Show of the Year award by Radio & Records magazine. Other finalists included Blair Garner, Steve Harvey, Kidd Kraddick, The Lia Show, and John Tesh.[8]

In May 2012, Delilah received a GRACIE Award celebrating influential women in the media.

References

External links


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