John Derringer
John Derringer (born John Hayes on September 21, 1962) is a former Canadian radio personality. Though he worked in several markets in the 1980s and 90s, he's best known for his long association with CILQ-FM (Q107) in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, initially from 1984 to 1993, and again from 2000 until 2022.[1]
Derringer lives in nearby Aurora. He hosted a weekday morning show, Derringer In The Morning, until it was suspended in May 2022. Throughout the early 2000s, Derringer's opinions also appeared in the form of a regular column in the Toronto Sun. As of 2016, Derringer has been named "Radio Personality of the Year" by Canadian Music Week 10 times, and has been named "Favourite Toronto Radio Personality" by the Sun, Eye Weekly, Now Magazine and Top Choice Awards.[2]
In March 2012, Derringer received the Allan Waters Lifetime Achievement Award and was inducted into the Canadian Broadcast Industry Hall of Fame at Canadian Music Week in Toronto.[3]
In 2012, he received the Queen Elizabeth Diamond Jubilee Medal for his work with the Canadian Centre for Abuse Awareness.[4]
In May 2022, Derringer was suspended from Q107 pending an investigation after several former employees of the station, including Jennifer Valentyne, had accused him of misconduct and gender discrimination.[5] He and the station agreed to "part ways" permanently in August 2022.[6]
History
[edit]Derringer was born September 21, 1962. Born John Hayes, he changed his name to Derringer because his brother, Bill Hayes, was in the radio broadcast business and chose to have a different last name.[citation needed] While attending St. Michael's College School, Derringer started as an operator in 1979 at CFTR (AM) in Toronto. That was followed by on-air work at CKJD in Sarnia, CFGO in Ottawa and K97 in Edmonton. He joined Q107 for the first time in 1984 and stayed until 1993. From 1993 to 1995 he was the morning host at CHOM-FM in Montreal, Quebec. He went on to host Jock and Roll, a 90-second segment which featured a pre-recorded interview with an athlete or a rock musician. Jock and Roll was syndicated to more than 20 radio stations throughout Canada. In 1995, he took over Bob McCown's morning show at Toronto's sports radio station The Fan 590. For almost 5 years he hosted the Fan morning show with Pat Marsden.
Derringer returned to CILQ-FM in 2000, replacing Howard Stern as the morning host.[2] For a short time he supplemented his duties with an afternoon show for brother station CFMJ (Mojo Radio).
In 2005, Derringer was one of the interview subjects on Paul McCartney's "The Space Within Us" DVD.[7]
Philanthropy
[edit]As of Christmas 2015, the "Derringer's 13 Days of Christmas" fundraising campaign has raised almost $9 million for The Martin Kruze Memorial Fund and the Canadian Centre For Abuse Awareness.
In 2004, Derringer launched an all-day fundraising drive to benefit the family of Louise Russo, a 45-year-old mother-of-three who was hit by a stray bullet while ordering a sandwich at a Toronto restaurant on April 21, 2003. The bullet shattered her spine, leaving her paralyzed. The station raised CDN$218,000 for the family.[8]
Every year Derringer, a motorcycle enthusiast, leads "The B.A.D. Ride", a charity ride for the benefit of the Distress Centres of Toronto.[9]
Controversy
[edit]In 2003, Justice Richard Schneider of the Ontario Court of Justice filed a lawsuit against Derringer seeking $3 million in damages for libel.[10] On the May 29, 2003 episode of Tool of the Day, Derringer criticized the judge's ruling in a child pornography case involving a 20-year-old man. Justice Schneider sentenced the man to 9 months' house arrest, with no jail time, a sentence Derringer declared too lenient. Derringer called Justice Schneider a "supposed Judge", and a "disgrace to our justice system."[11] He went on to say sterner penalties for child pornography would not come about until "a Justice like [Judge Schneider] is gonna have evidence brought into court in a case like that of Yong Jun Kim, and it's gonna be his kid being forced to perform fellatio on a man and sent around the world on the Internet".[11] The Canadian Broadcast Standards Council (CBSC) ruled that Derringer "made improper personal attacks on the judge", and that "[the] Derringer commentary also sanctioned or promoted possible personal attacks on the children of the judge".[11]
In response to the lawsuit and a complaint lodged with the CBSC by Justice Schneider's ex-wife, the radio station acknowledged Schneider's concerns while defending Derringer's actions as "without actual malice".[10] In a letter to Schneider, CILQ-FM stated that "the Program, like many radio shows, can sometimes be controversial in nature and not for everyone's taste. However, many of Q107's core audience, which is mainly adults in the 25- to 54-year-old age group, in particular, men, find the program humorous."[11] Derringer issued an on-air apology and, following the CBSC's ruling, the station was required to broadcast a series of announcements regarding the contentious statements.
Derringer was criticised for supporting the Ontario chapters of the Hells Angels in an August 31, 2005 column for the Toronto Sun. In it, he dismissed recent media reports about the Hell's Angels as "filled with innuendo, lies, half-truths and complete fabrications."[12]
On May 22, 2022, former Q107 radio host Jennifer Valentyne posted a video on Instagram describing years of verbal abuse and gender discrimination by an unnamed co-worker. While she did not name names in the video, Valentyne separately confirmed that she had filed a Canadian Human Rights complaint against Corus Entertainment Inc., Q107's parent company, and that John Derringer is named in the complaint.[13] Shortly after the video was posted, several former Corus employees made similar allegations against John Derringer and Corus itself, which they say turned a blind eye. Shortly after the accusations were reported, Corus placed the station's “Derringer in the Morning” show on hiatus as it undergoes a formal ethics investigation conducted by Rachel Turnpenney from Turnpenney Milne LLP.[13][14]
On August 9, 2022, Corus Entertainment released a statement confirming Q107 Toronto and Derringer had parted ways, effective immediately.[6]
References
[edit]- ^ "John Derringer finished at Q-107 amid investigation". Toronto Sun. August 9, 2022. Retrieved August 9, 2022.
- ^ a b "Wake up Toronto! Derringer takes on the mornings on Q107". Canada NewsWire. 2001-11-23.
- ^ "Canadian Music Week 2015". Canadian Music Week 2016. Retrieved 2016-02-21.
- ^ "As John Derringer celebrates his 5,000th show on Q107, let's appreciate the DJ who's been rocking Toronto for nearly 30 years". Toronto Star. Retrieved October 3, 2022.
- ^ "'Derringer in the Morning' radio show placed on hiatus amid misconduct investigation". MSN.
- ^ a b "Radio host John Derringer and Q107 'part ways' amid misconduct investigation". CBC News. August 9, 2022. Retrieved August 9, 2022.
- ^ "Paul McCartney: The Space Within US (2005)". www.dvdmg.com. Retrieved 2016-02-22.
- ^ Ballantyne, Robert (2004-06-05). "$218K raised for shot mom". The Toronto Star. pp. B07.
- ^ Bond, Steve (2005-05-28). "Motorcycle charity runs this weekend". The Toronto Star. pp. G31.
- ^ a b Powell, Betsy (2003-09-25). "Judge sues radio host for $3M". The Toronto Star. pp. A03.
- ^ a b c d R. Stanbury; M. Ziniak; H. Hassan; M. Maheu; M. Oldfield; J. Pungente (2004-10-02). "CILQ-FM re John Derringer's "Tool of the Day"". Canadian Broadcast Standards Council. Archived from the original on 2006-10-24. Retrieved 2006-08-16.
- ^ Reinhart, Anthony (2005-05-03). "Derringer under the gun for too many friends? Hells Angel arrest in Russo shooting may put Q107's straight-talking morning man in a bit of a bind". The Globe and Mail. pp. A13.
- ^ a b Ahsan, Sadaf (26 May 2022). "Former Corus employees allege Q107′s John Derringer's behaviour has long been a problem". Globe and Mail. Retrieved 2022-05-27.
- ^ "'Derringer in the Morning' radio show placed on hiatus amid misconduct investigation". CBC News. Retrieved 2022-05-27.
External links
[edit]- Pavilons, Mark (26 October 2016). "Podcast bridges the generation gap". King Weekly Sentinel. Retrieved 11 January 2017.