Johnny Walker (born as
James Lewis Embrey in
New Albany, Indiana) (August 13,1948 - March 1, 2004) was an
American radio personality, best known as a
disc jockey on
WFBR, a
Baltimore, Maryland AM radio station from 1974 to 1987. His radio name was taken from
Johnnie Walker, a brand of whiskey, which supported his persona which has been described as "madcap" or "
shock jock", which on occasion drew the ire of the
Federal Communications Commission. For most of those years, his show was the top rated in the morning drive-time. For a time he owned a self-named club that was promoted on the radio station. He also briefly worked at WFBR with Robin Quivers (Howard Stern Show).His first radio job was at WLRS-FM in Louisville at the recommendation of future radio personality/consulatant Steve Warren, his school classmate at New Albany High School.
He helped
Ira Glass, host of
This American Life, get his radio start as his joke-writer while Glass was in high school. While in High School, himself, Embrey was a standut local magician.
Walker's early career included on-air positions at AM radio stations WMAK (1300 kHz) in
Nashville and WDXB (1490 kHz) in
Chattanooga,
Tennessee. He had previously worked at
WPTR in
Albany, New York under the
pseudonym "Wild Child".
He died in 2004 due to complications associated with
lung cancer.
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