Richard Bey | |
|---|---|
Bey at the 2012Tribeca Film Festival premiere ofÉvocateur: The Morton Downey Jr. Movie | |
| Born | Richard Wayne Bey (1951-07-22)July 22, 1951 (age 74) Queens, New York City, U.S. |
| Alma mater | University of California, Santa Barbara (B.A.) Yale School of Drama (M.A., 1976)[1][2] |
| Occupations | Talk show host, TV and radio personality |
Richard Wayne Bey (born July 22, 1951) is an American talk showhost. He was popular in the 1990s as host ofThe Richard Bey Show, a daytimetalk show containing ordinary people's personal stories incorporated into entertaining competitive games. The show was one of the first to pioneer the controversial genre oftrash TV, and contained the hard R-rated content that would typify the genre.
Bey was born inFar Rockaway, Queens,New York, to aJewish father and anIrish Catholic mother and attendedFar Rockaway High School.[3][4]
He is an alumnus of theUniversity of California, Santa Barbara and theYale School of Drama.
Prior toThe Richard Bey Show, Bey hostedPeople Are Talking, telecast inNew York City andPhiladelphia (in Philadelphia it aired onKYW, at the time, anNBC affiliate), and2 On the Town forWCBS.People Are Talking was a one-hour live broadcast covering topical news issues and one on one interviews with guests likeFrank Zappa,Steven Spielberg, PresidentJimmy Carter,Sammy Davis Jr.,Patricia Neal,Alexander Haig,Jerry Brown,Ross Perot andMartin andCharlie Sheen. The show was called9 Broadcast Plaza in its early years before changing its name toThe Richard Bey Show.
Among his roles on stage are Hamlet (title role) As You Like It, Twelfth Night, Troilus and Cressida as well as the world premieres of new plays by Richard Nelson, Chris Durang and Jim Lapine. He was a company member of the Yale Repertory Theater and understudied the National Theatre of Great Britain on Broadway and at the Kennedy Center. His film roles includeSacha Baron Cohen'sBrüno,Évocateur,Meet Wally Sparks andGeorge Washington.
The Richard Bey Show (1992–1996) was produced fromWWOR inSecaucus, New Jersey and latersyndicated across the country byAll American Television (known today asFreemantleMedia). The show originated as a combination of two hit shows which were very equally popular,People Are Talking, which was the first form ofBey, which was a true talk show that was serious and sometimes confrontational, similar toThe Morton Downey Jr. Show. It was nationally syndicated, but was produced by KYW. The show sometimes got confrontational, and it set the seeds for what would become his show, in 1992. Eventually, sometime in the late 80s, the show merged with9 Broadcast Plaza, and became a WWOR/MCA-TV production.9BP, which Bey also occasionally would host, whenMatt Lauer, the show's original host, would be absent or doing his assignment for his other show,Beyond the Screen (a major popular behind-the-scenes show that madeCinemax, its network, toppleHBO in views) was a combination of entertainment, that incorporated the local news (sometimes Lauer and Bey would talk to Reg Wells, Rolland Smith, Brenda Blackmon, on select telecasts, telesync), setting the stage for the likes ofStephen Colbert, and many others. On9BP, major elites from many countries, international superstars, and celebrities, were interviewed, hence makingBeyond the Screen similar to this. There would be high-line cuisine displays, and fun activities on the more family-friendly episodes, such as a pizza-making contest, whenSara Lee Kessler occasionally hosted. Bey eventually took over duties of the show, and the seeds ofThe Richard Bey Show were set. The shows got more adult-oriented (meaning TV-MA/hard R), although without the fights, abundant graphic language, sexually explicit content that ended up onBey. Both programs would be 18-rating by European standards.
From 1992 and on, asThe Richard Bey Show, the staples of trash TV became officially commonplace. The show had hard R/TV-MA-DLSV (18 by European standards) content - violence in the form of fights, some of which were graphic, graphic language, graphic sexual content. The show featured such competitive events as the "Miss Big Butt" contest, the "Mr. Puniverse" contest, "Country Drag Queens versus City Drag Queens", "Dysfunctional Family Feud" and "Blacks who thinkO.J. is guilty vs. Whites who think he is innocent". Young women who were guests on the show were sometimes placed in a spoof ofThe Dating Game in which the guest interviewed three hidden "bachelors", all of whom were an obvious mismatch for the "bachelorette", e.g., adrag queen or adwarf. The show was one of the first to set the stage fortrash TV, featuring hard R content such as graphic language, graphic sex, drug references, as well as fights, sometimes to the point of getting bloody. For a time, his show was considered the most graphic of the TV talk shows, only to be tied withThe Jerry Springer Show after 1996, which is when Bey's show ended.
Bey's show made frequent use of sound effects like "uh-duh" for an insane response, "I've been framed" for a guest proclaiming innocence and "You're busted!" for one accused of wrongdoing. Bey often exclaimed, "Where do they find these people?!" in the presence of unbelievable guests or audience members. During some shows, there would be a secret word ("Bey's Phrase That Pays"). If an audience member used it in a comment, he would receive $100, an homage to a prior talk and game show,You Bet Your Life. A joking suggestion was then made on how to spend it: "Lobster dinner tonight!"; in addition, he had other sound effects, such as "Shut up." Richard also famously lost his temper in a 1994 episode involving strippers, and had a guest named Jerry Saunders who criticized his opponents. Sometimes the content was uncensored, and Bey says "dick" (in the vulgar sense) in one episode, to poke fun at his name, for jokes.
The show was a precursor toreality television, featuring a variety of games incorporating guests' stories, most notoriously "The Wheel of Torture", in which a guest would be strapped to a spinning wheel while a spouse or lover poured slime on them as punishment for a misdeed. The show was executive produced by Bob Woodruff and David Sittenfeld.
Richard would frequently make fun ofJerry Springer on his show, as when he lost his contact lenses and was forced to wear eyeglasses, remarking, "Don't worry, you're not watching Jerry Springer" and showing Jerry in his "Bad Neighbors" segment, a reference to Springer's show being thelead-in or lead-out toBey on many stations in the early-to-mid 1990s. He also made light ofRicki Lake,Rosie O'Donnell,Phil Donahue, andOprah Winfrey's shows. He also incorporated a lot of humor. One famous episode of his show under the title9BP, was a controversial one dealing with Communism and had guest panels arguing.
Bey also hosted a prime time show called "Night Games". It was short-lived but ran around the time his daytime show was at its peak. It ran after 10 o'clock and was equally ribald with sexually clad women engaged in contests.[clarification needed][citation needed]
Bey claimed his TV show was canceled in December 1996, despite the high ratings it maintained,[citation needed] as a direct result of doing a program withGennifer Flowers, discussing her sexual relationship with then PresidentBill Clinton.[5]
A scene from the 2009 filmBrüno depicts the filming of an episode of a fictional variation on the show calledToday with Richard Bey. The production team, along with Bey, set up the program to invite an unsuspecting audience to participate in a segment where Brüno (Sacha Baron Cohen) appears as a guest, talking about his Black adopted son. In response to questions from the audience, Brüno reveals that he gave his son the "traditional African name"O.J. and claims that he "swapped" aniPod for his son. The predominantly Black audience becomes outraged over Brüno's responses.
A scene from the 1996 (season 9, episode 16)Married... with Children has Steve Rhodes asking his ex-wife Marcy if her new husband is at home watching Richard Bey.
After the TV show was canceled, Bey was an evening and later afternoon radio co-host along withSteve Malzberg onThe Buzz, which aired on New York'sWABC from 2000 to 2003.[6]
According to theNew York Post, he was one of only two talk hosts at the time on commercial New York radio to openly oppose theIraq War, contesting theWMD evidence.[citation needed] He has since hosted onSirius Satellite Radio,TheBill Press Show, and for the syndicatedThe Wall Street Journal: This Morning.
Bey hosted for a week onWXRK 92.3 FM from February 5 to February 9, 2007, from 10:00 pm to midnight. He regularly filled in forLynn Samuels andAlex Bennett on theSirius Satellite Radio channelTalk Left when they went on vacation or took a day off.
In August 2007, Bey began hosting a new show onWWRL in New York City from 8 to 10 pm. In November 2007, he was teamed up withMark Riley and moved to themorning drive, replacing the team of Sam Greenfield andArmstrong Williams.[7]
In March 2008, family reasons causedMark Riley to leaveWWRL by mutual agreement[8] to return toWLIB, and Richard was teamed up with longtime broadcaster Coz Carson. Bey later decided to leave WWRL himself, citing personal reasons (namely spending time with his son).
Until December 2009, he appeared daily on internet TV station UBA-TV from noon until 1:00 pm. Until 2019, he filled in on Sirius Left and hosted a blog on his now defunct website. In December 2013 he hosted the morning show in the final weeks of WWRL before it switched to Spanish language broadcasting.
As of 2009, Bey had never been married.[9][1] He lives inMidtown Manhattan in New York City.[9]
his syndicated TV talk show got yanked off the air back in 1996. Bey told theNew York Post that, even though his show had high ratings and he himself had a brand-new contract, "the day after [the Flowers episode] airs, I'm called into the office and told that we're going out of production."(scroll down)
Over on the AM dial, WABC (770) moved Michael Savage's show to a live airing last week. Savage is now heard weeknights from 8-10 PM, cutting Steve Malzberg and Richard Bey back to two hours, from 6-8 PM, and ending Malzberg's solo hour at 9.
Mark Riley and Richard Bey will take over the morning show Monday at WWRL (1600 AM), replacing Sam Greenfield and Armstrong Williams.
Bey said on the air Friday that his departure is purely for personal reasons. He has obligations that include a young son, he said, and he can't fulfill those when he has to get up at 3 or 4 a.m. for a morning show.