Ralph Louis Barbieri[1] (October 28, 1945[2] – August 3, 2020) was an American sports radiopersonality from San Francisco, California. Along with former NBA player Tom Tolbert, Barbieri hosted the afternoon sports radio show The Razor and Mr. T on KNBR (AM) from 1996 to 2012. With Barbieri, the show was the highest-rated show in the Bay Area for the 25–54 male demographic since 2000.[3]
Barbieri was a stringer for Sport magazine before he joined KNBR in 1984 at the sports news desk. He was later given his own sports talk show and transferred to the prime afternoon-time slot.[4] In 1996, he was teamed with Tolbert, a former NBA player. Barbieri's nickname was "The Razor" because of his raspy voice,[7] thought by some listeners to resemble a barber's electric razor and his "no-nonsense" approach to interviews. The nickname, which may have also been inspired by his surname's resemblance to "barber", was given to him by longtime San Francisco Chronicle columnist Herb Caen.[8]
Barbieri was described as a "bulldog of an interviewer" who exuded an "opinionated" and "abrasive" interviewing style.[9] At the same time, his critics took the view that his questions were long-winded and restrained, which he said enabled listeners to get a better grasp of the people he was interviewing.[4] In 2007, Barbieri renewed his four-year contract with KNBR through November 2011.[8] Barbieri was known to end his show with, "Angels fly because they take themselves lightly", a quote from G. K. Chesterton.[4]
In 2011, Barbieri disclosed to KNBR and the public that he was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in 2005.[10] On April 11, 2012, the 66-year-old Barbieri was let go by KNBR.[11] KNBR's parent company, Cumulus Media, said he "refused to honor some of the most basic terms of his contract".[12] Barbieri's legal team cited age discrimination and disability discrimination in the termination.[12] In 2013, he settled with Cumulus for an undisclosed amount, reportedly over $1 million.[4][13]
Personal life
Barbieri was a vegetarian, a believer in animal rights, and a follower of eastern religious philosophies.[14] In 1995, he avoided jail time by pleading no contest to a third-offense drunk driving charge; he spent 120 days in a residential treatment program.[15] Following the incident, Barbieri settled down, giving up what he called "25 years of sex, drugs and rock and roll". In 2000, Barbieri fathered a son, Tayte Ali, via In vitro fertilisation, using an egg donor and a surrogate mother.[14] In 2004, the American Diabetes Association named Ralph Barbieri one of five "Bay Area Father of the Year" award winners.[16]
Barbieri died on August 3, 2020, at his home in Novato, California. He was 74, and suffered from Parkinson's disease since he was diagnosed in 2005.[4][9]
References
^ ab"1967 Don". Gleeson Library Digital Collections (Yearbook). The University of San Francisco. 1967. p. 102.