Stephen Capen
Stephen Harold Capen (February 28, 1946 – September 12, 2005) was an American announcer and disc jockey whose humor found favor with audiences in several major cities but particularly in the San Francisco Bay Area. In the mid-1960s, he began his radio career in Caribou, Maine. BiographyEarly life and educationCapen, the second of four children, was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts[1] to Hobart Ashley Capen and Mary Capen (née Morgan).[citation needed] Career1960s and 1970sWCSB in Boston, MA (1964). 1980sKSAN-FM in San Francisco, CA in (1980–1981) - (Last year of its pioneering 12-year run as a progressive rock station before it switched to a country format) with long time friend and producer, Hank Rosenfeld. 1990sCapen resisted the media-merger consolidation of radio stations and developed alternative interests in psychology, photography and travel, writing for publications including San Francisco magazine, The Village Voice, the Pacific Sun, Shambhala Sun, Writer's Digest, and LensWork Quarterly, lecturing at the University of San Francisco and California State University, Hayward, and making pilgrimages to Cuba, China, Greece, and the mountains of Peru. He filed occasional broadcast reports for CBS News Radio and its affiliated network of stations, reported news for KVON/KVYN-FM in Napa, California, and, in his final radio work in July 2004, commentaries from Boston's 2004 Democratic National Convention for CBS all-news affiliate KNX (AM) in Los Angeles, California.
DeathCapen died on September 12, 2005, near Plymouth, Massachusetts, of lung cancer, aged 59.[1] References
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