Elvis Duran - Elvis Duran and The Morning Show

Elvis Duran and The Morning Show

He began hosting his daily radio show on New York’s Z100 in April 1996. The show expanded to Sussex County NJ in 2004 and Y100/WHYI-FM in Miami/Ft. Lauderdale on May 22, 2006. Since then, the show has enjoyed much success resulting in a national deal in March 2009 with the country’s leading radio syndication company, Premiere Networks, a subsidiary of Clear Channel. In only a year, Elvis Duran and the Morning Show added more than 30 stations including Power 96.1/WKLS-FM in Atlanta, 96.5 KISS FM/WAKS-FM in Cleveland Q102/WIOQ-FM in Philadelphia, MOViN 97.5/KMVA-FM in Phoenix, Ariz., WERZ (107.1 FM) in Portsmouth and NOW 105.7/KZBD-FM in Spokane. The show also airs on XM Satellite Radio, iHeartRadio.com, the iHeartRadio mobile app, and The Elvis Duran Channel on www.ElvisDuran.com.

Elvis Duran considers himself the host of the party on his national radio show, Elvis Duran and the Morning Show. Consistently ranking #1 across multiple demographics and over 50 markets, EDMS is the most listened to Top 40 morning show in the U.S. Broadcasting live from New York’s Z100, Duran and his on-air crew entertain listeners with up-to-the-minute entertainment, pop culture news, celebrity guests, hit songs, and regular features including the gossipy “The Sleaze”, and the ever-popular prank “Phone Taps”.

Read more about this topic:  Elvis Duran

Famous quotes containing the words elvis, morning and/or show:

    Commercial to the core, Elvis was the kind of singer dear to the heart of the music business. For him to sing a song was to sell a song. His G clef was a dollar sign.
    Albert Goldman (b. 1927)

    Men are as innocent as the morning to the unsuspicious.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    Editing should be, especially in the case of old writers, a counseling rather than a collaborating task. The tendency of the writer-editor to collaborate is natural, but he should say to himself, “How can I help this writer to say it better in his own style?” and avoid “How can I show him how I would write it, if it were my piece?”
    James Thurber (1894–1961)