John DeBella | |
---|---|
Born |
Queens, New York City, New York, United States |
July 29, 1951
Show | The John DeBella Show |
Station(s) |
102.9 WMGK-FM Philadelphia, 93.3 WMMR, 94.1 WYSP |
Time slot | 6:00 - 9:00 AM |
Spouse(s) | Annette DeBella Lisa Sabol |
Website | jdbshow |
John DeBella is an American DJ in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on 102.9 WMGK-FM. He was born in Queens, New York.
Before arriving in Philadelphia, DeBella did a stint at WLIR Garden City. In the early 1980s he hosted The DeBella Travesty and helped to introduce the Dare to be Different new wave format on WLIR. During that time he befriended singer Joan Jett and received a gold record for his efforts in promoting Jett's chart-topping hit "I Love Rock and Roll".
He became famous in Philadelphia as part of WMMR's Morning Zoo, along with former WLIR co-alumnus Mark "The Shark" Drucker. He was number one in the morning ratings through most of the 1980s and was a popular figure in the city of Philadelphia before being overtaken by The Howard Stern Show. After WMMR dropped DeBella, Stern made sure he worked at exactly the same station he did. Every year he would host the "DeBella DeBall," which was held on December 7, the date was emphasized in promos with Franklin Delano Roosevelt saying "a date which will live in infamy.". DeBella's favorite musician was Peter Gabriel and he enjoyed discussing Gabriel's many hits on the air. Throughout the mid 1980s, DeBella did on-air promos for the morning and afternoon cartoon blocks on WTAF Channel 29.
In 2002, he returned to radio hosting, working with WMGK. His show runs from 6:00am to 9:00am. The show features cohost Jen Posner and the goofy antics of the two are accompanied by producer Rob Calvert. The show is not only a talk format but also plays a number of classic rock songs throughout the morning including a "Breakfast with the Beatles" segment from 7:10 until 7:20am. Additional appearances by comedian Grover Silcox happen from approximately 8:00-8:45am every Thursday. The show almost always closes with the song "Always Look on the Bright Side of Life" by Eric Idle of Monty Python fame. Both "Breakfast with the Beatles" and "Always Look on the Bright Side of Life" ending the show were also staples of his WMMR show. DeBella then closes out his broadcast with "Have a great day, Philadelphia. Don't take any crap from anybody."