Robert D. Raiford

'Robert D. Raiford (December 27, 1927 – November 17, 2017) was an American radio broadcaster and actor, best known for his political/social commentaries delivered during The John Boy and Billy Big Show, a morning radio program heard on stations throughout the American South. He was from Concord, North Carolina and majored in communication at the University of South Carolina. Raiford got his start in broadcasting in 1944 by calling play by play at baseball games. His first real radio job was at WEGO (AM) in Concord, North Carolina. Raiford has appeared in 28 movies, often portraying judge characters. He frequently closed his commentaries with the line "Who says that? I say that!", which also served as the title of a book containing excerpts from these segments. Early in his career, Raiford worked for WTOP radio and WTOP-TV, both CBS News affiliates in Washington, D.C.. His best-known work was a live radio broadcast on WTOP, a CBS Radio affiliate, covering the state funeral of President John F. Kennedy.[1] He also worked at Charlotte radio station WBT, and hosted a show on WIST, which aired Charlotte's first telephone talk radio format. Raiford later taught Communications at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. From 1978 to 1986, Raiford was a news anchor and talk show host for Charlotte's NBC television affiliate, known as WRET-TV and later WPCQ-TV during his tenure there (it is now WCNC-TV).[2]

Robert D. Raiford
Born(1927-12-27)27 December 1927
Died17 November 2017(2017-11-17) (aged 89)
Alma materUniversity of South Carolina
Career
ShowThe John Boy and Billy Big Show
CountryUnited States

On the June 9, 2016, episode of The John Boy and Billy Big Show, John Isley ("John Boy") announced that Raiford had retired from the show, due to suffering a stroke the previous August that greatly affected his speech and mobility. Raiford had not delivered any commentaries during the intervening months, choosing to focus on his recovery instead.[3]

Raiford died on November 17, 2017 at age 89.[2]

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1990The Handmaid's TaleDick
1991Billy BathgateJudge
1992In the Line of Duty: Street WarJudgeTV movie
1993Super Mario Bros.TV Announcer
1993The ProgramChancellor Wilson
1993-1995MatlockJudge Michael Stern / Warden / Mr. McEvoy5 episodes
1994Radioland MurdersBen Butter
1994A Burning Passion: The Margaret Mitchell StoryHarlee BranchTV movie
1994Bionic Ever After?MinisterTV movie
1995Death in Small DosesDr. ButlerTV movie
1997Paradise FallsRich Man on Train
1999The Rage: Carrie 2Senior D.A.
2005A Tale About BootleggingJudge Bob Landis(final film role)
gollark: =tex <:amulet:629795914680369166>
gollark: =tex <:urn:627264769195245578><:thunking:570387193290293284><:thonking:570312812916637696><:printedpage:478293474098020353><:pocketsimple:478293474085437450><:pocketadvanced:478293474030911499><:neuralinterface:478293474047819777><:monitorbasic:478291787505467392><:monitoradvanced:478291787035967492><:modemender:478291787300208661>
gollark: == (tau + pi) / 2
gollark: Good mathbot.
gollark: == tau

References

  1. Knox, Michael (November 22, 2013). "At JFK funeral procession, Raiford was witness to history". Independent Tribune.
  2. Washburn, Mark (November 18, 2017). "Charlotte radio curmudgeon Robert Raiford dies at 89". The Charlotte Observer. Charlotte, North Carolina. Retrieved March 26, 2020.
  3. Washburn, Mark (10 June 2016). "Stroke mutes radio's curmudgeonly Robert D. Raiford". The Charlotte Observer. Charlotte, North Carolina. Retrieved June 19, 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.