Radio Career
1982: KBBX, a gospel station in Bountiful, Utah, as a producer and engineer.
1985–1989: K-LITE 93 FM in Salt Lake City, Utah, as producer for the John and Dan Show,
1989–1991: Short stints at KZHT, KMGR, and KJQN, also in Salt Lake City.
1992: Hiatus from broadcast radio, during which he taught classes at the American School of Broadcasting and also published a horror fanzine called B-Lame, which he continued through 1994.
1993–1995: Returned to the former K-LITE, which had become Z-93, where he resumed producing the John and Dan Show. He created his own show, "In the Pink", where he synchronized Pink Floyd music with sound effects and movie soundtracks.
1995–1997: KCNR, Salt Lake City, where he was a CNN regional correspondent, reported for Metro News, co-hosted the show Drive-By Radio with Rick Emerson, and began Ground Zero, the show he is best known for.
1997–1999: KBER, Salt Lake City, continuing Ground Zero.
1999–2001: Moved to Portland, Oregon to produce the Rick Emerson Show during its year-and-a-half syndication. Ground Zero became syndicated March 12, 2000 on the NBG Network until 2001. Its flagship station was Portland's KXL.
2001–2005: KOTK, Portland, Oregon, continuing Ground Zero. KOTK became Max 910 in 2004, and changed its format in 2005, removing Ground Zero from terrestrial radio.
2005–2009: Lewis continued Ground Zero in the form of a weekly presentation called Ground Zero Lounge at a Portland nightclub, Dante's, which was recorded and broadcast over the Internet.
2009–2011: Ground Zero returns to terrestrial radio on Portland's KUFO FM on December 13, 2009, broadcasting from 10 PM to 12 AM on Sundays. In April 2011 KUFO changes their format to talk and merges with KXL.
2011–present: Ground Zero returns to terrestrial radio on Portland's KXL AM/FM on April 11, 2011, broadcasting from 9 PM to 12 AM Monday to Friday.
July, 2012: Premiere Radio Networks announced the nationwide syndication of Ground Zero Radio with Clyde Lewis starting August 27, 2012. The show will air on Premiere Radio Networks.
Read more about this topic: Clyde Lewis
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