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Luke Burbank

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Birth name
  
Luke Burbank

Country
  
United States

Station(s)
  
Podcast

Name
  
Luke Burbank


Station(s)
  
Podcast, Public Radio

Spouse
  
Carey Burbank

Style
  
Talk Show

Luke Burbank The Luke Burbank Show Luke Burbank KIRORadiocom

Born
  
May 8, 1976 (age 47) Eureka, California (
1976-05-08
)

Previous show(s)
  
Bryant Park Project (host),Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! (guest host and panelist),Too Beautiful to Live,Ross and Burbank (co-host),The Luke Burbank Show (host)

Marriage location
  
Fort Worden State Park, Port Townsend, Washington, United States

Similar People
  
Dori Monson, Peter Sagal, Tom Bodett, Roxanne Roberts, Adam Felber

Education
  
University of Washington

Luke burbank is confused


Luke Burbank (born May 8, 1976) is an American radio host and podcaster who hosts the Portland, Oregon-based syndicated variety show Live Wire Radio and the Seattle-based former radio program and current podcast Too Beautiful to Live. He was most recently co-host of "The Ross and Burbank Show" and host of "The Luke Burbank Show" on Seattle's KIRO-FM radio station. Burbank is also a correspondent for CBS News Sunday Morning.

Contents

uniforms luke burbank in a blazers commercial for alaska airlines


Early life

Luke Burbank BlatherWatch Luke Burbank

Burbank was raised at Lighthouse Ranch, on Table Bluff, in Humboldt County, California, where he spent his private time listening to radio shows. In the 1980s his parents moved to Seattle, Washington, where he also attended high school.

Radio

Luke Burbank Luke Burbank is hip vain back in town and back on the air The

Early in his radio career, Burbank worked in Seattle as a producer for the conservative talk show host Kirby Wilbur, as well as the public radio station's KUOW 94.9 FM local talk show The Conversation and the public radio satire show "Rewind". Later, Burbank moved to Los Angeles, California, where he began booking appearances for the National Public Radio (NPR) program Day to Day and worked as an assignment reporter on shows All Things Considered and Morning Edition. On November 2, 2001, he had a story aired on This American Life.

Luke Burbank Seattles Luke Burbank talks about hosting Live Wire and

In July 2006, he became a panelist on the radio game show Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!. He substituted as host for Peter Sagal for some weeks while Sagal finished his book, and he fills in whenever Sagal takes a vacation.

Luke Burbank A dads take on teen fatherhood CBS News

Burbank spent two months as host of NPR's short-lived morning show The Bryant Park Project, an experiment in alternate programming by the network that aired on 13 public radio stations. Burbank left the show in mid-December 2007 in order to spend more time with his daughter in Seattle. His last appearance on the program was on December 14, 2007.

Luke Burbank A dads take on teen fatherhood CBS News

After leaving NPR, Burbank returned to Seattle to host a local show called Too Beautiful to Live. The program ran for 18 months (initially on KIRO-AM and then on KIRO-FM). It was Seattle Weekly's choice as "Best Radio Talk Show" in July 2009, but after a poor showing in the July Arbitron ratings, the radio program was canceled in September. Burbank and KIRO said that the program would continue as a daily podcast. The podcast has continued since its radio cancellation, currently on American Public Media with longest serving co-host Andrew Walsh, a veteran radio producer and sometime host in his own right.

On October 26, 2010, after one year off the KIRO airwaves, Burbank joined The Dave Ross Show as co-host. The show was renamed to The Ross and Burbank Show. On January 7, 2013, the show was involved in a KIRO morning lineup change. Ross anchored Seattle's Morning News from 6 to 9 a.m., then co-hosted The Ross and Burbank Show from 9-10 a.m. Burbank hosted The Luke Burbank Show from 10 a.m. to 12 noon. with co-host Tom Tangney. On August 2, 2013, Burbank announced that he was leaving both shows to pursue longer-form broadcast opportunities.

On March 11, 2013, Burbank became the interim host for the syndicated public radio variety show Live Wire Radio. In September of that year he became the full-time host.

Burbank was the first person to air the phrase "personality sonar". It was explained during NPR's October 20, 2012, Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! show

Other appearances

He previously appeared in a regular weekly segment called "Awesome, Not Awesome" on the Madeleine Brand show on KPCC until its cancellation in September 2012.

In September 2013 he starred in a Microsoft online video advertisement with his wife Carey Burbank, which made headlines after it was pulled by the company less than 24 hours later following viewer backlash. The Huffington Post declared the ad was "terrible" while The Next Web described it as "cringeworthy." Burbank defended the ad, however, saying it was "successful."

References

Luke Burbank Wikipedia