Open House Party

Open House Party

The Current Open House Party logo
Genre Top 40/CHR
Running time 5 hours (including commercials)
Country United States United States
Syndicates United Stations Radio Networks
Host(s)
  • Saturday: John Garabedian (1987-present)
  • Sunday: Kannon (2007-present)
Creator(s) John Garabedian, Sunny Joe White
Producer(s) RadioCraft, Inc.
Air dates since September 5, 1987
Website Open House Party

Open House Party (most of the time, shortened to OHP) is an American radio show hosted on Saturday nights by John Garabedian, and on Sunday nights, hosted by KVIL morning host Kannon. The show promotes itself as "the biggest party on the planet". It focuses on playing contemporary hit radio (CHR) music, also known as Top 40. The show differentiates itself from most Top 40 stations because it plays a fairly significant amount of electronic dance music. Unlike most radio stations or programs, OHP plays all music by listener requests. That means, that there are no automated playlists, and that every song played is by a request that a listener made. OHP started in 1987 and is syndicated to more than 75 stations in the United States.

The Saturday show originates from 1 of the 3 houses that Garabedian travels to each weekend to broadcast Open House Party. While the Sunday show is recorded, and is broadcast from Kannon's house in Dallas, Texas.

Open House Party is currently voiced by Doug MacAskill. MacAskill has been the voice over for OHP since 2006. Before this, Mike McKay was the voice over artist from about 2001 to 2006. When original longtime OHP voice over artist, Mark Driscoll left the show after being with the show since the start in 1987. Driscoll was also commonly known as "Mr. Voice", in which he was nicknamed that by the well known radio Disc Jockey, Rick Dees. Many of Driscoll's and McKay's old pieces are still heard today on the show.

The secondary logo for the Saturday broadcast of OHP. This is also the original logo of the show, when only Garabedian hosted OHP.

Only the Saturday edition of OHP is broadcast live (in Eastern and Central time only) via satellite from 7:00 p.m. to midnight (in Eastern and Mountain time) or from 6:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. (in Central and Pacific time). Some stations only broadcast OHP on Saturday, while others broadcast it only on Sunday, while most broadcast it on both Saturday and Sunday. Some stations only broadcast a portion of OHP to make room for a local or another syndicated program. Many stations rebroadcast OHP from midnight to 5:00 a.m. (in Eastern and Mountain time) or 11:00 p.m. to 4:00 a.m. (in Central and Pacific time). Open House Party is distributed via United Stations Radio Networks, and developed by RadioCraft.

History

In 1955, the original Open House Party was created as the afternoon show on radio station WORC in Worcester, Massachusetts.[1] A few years later, then 17-year-old John Garabedian was hired to DJ on Saturdays and Sundays. One night in 1987, Garabedian went to a party in Boston. There he bumped into Sunny Joe White, legendary radio programmer of Boston's WXKS-FM "Kiss 108". White asked Garabedian if he would do the weekend shift. The following week, the two of them met to discuss it at dinner, where Garabedian proposed the idea for a national interactive weekend party show. White loved it, and agreed to put it on Kiss 108 after Garabedian created a studio to do the show. After looking into various office buildings, Garabedian decided to do the show from his basement. He and his friends strapped a 50-foot pole to his chimney to hold up a little microwave antenna aimed at the Prudential Tower, 27 miles (43 km) to the east, in downtown Boston.[2]

On September 5, 1987 at 7 p.m., Open House Party hit the air for the very first time on Kiss 108.[3] Within six months it became the most listened to radio program in Boston on Saturday night, as well as the most listened to radio program every week in the Boston radio market with a 14.8 share.[4]

By the following April, stations across the country had heard about Open House Party's success and were signing on. The 50-foot pole was taken down and was replaced by a satellite dish. By 1990 over 100 stations were carrying Open House Party in the United States and another 40 in Canada.[1]

Garabedian continued to DJ on both Saturday and Sunday until March 2004, when WFLZ afternoon DJ Kane took over the Sunday night show from his house in Tampa. Kane later moved to Washington, D.C. and is now the morning host on WIHT. Kane now has his own syndicated program titled "Club Kane". In December 2007, Kannon, the current morning personality on Dallas 103.7 KVIL became the new host of OHP Sunday, and broadcasts the show from his house in Dallas.

Segments

These are a few of the segments that have formerly, or still air on the show each week:

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, February 14, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.