Current:Home > MarketsJerry Springer, talk show host and former Cincinnati mayor, dies at 79 -Quantum Finance Bridge
Jerry Springer, talk show host and former Cincinnati mayor, dies at 79
View
Date:2025-04-17 13:19:33
Jerry Springer, a broadcaster, author, politician, journalist, actor, lawyer and host of a daytime show so outrageous he once apologized by saying it "ruined the culture," died today at age 79 in his suburban Chicago home after a brief illness, according to a statement from his family.
Though he had a lot of high-profile jobs over his lifetime – including mayor of Cincinnati – Springer was best known as host of The Jerry Springer Show, a syndicated TV program which lasted for 27 years, featuring provocatively sensational topics and confrontations among the guests, sometimes degenerating into fistfights.
Springer started his talk show in 1991 as a more conventional affair. Dressed in a suit and tie with glasses, he looked like a younger version of talk-TV titan Phil Donahue, and questioned guests while roaming the crowd with a wireless microphone in the same way.
But over time, Springer began to feature more outrageous guests and subjects, with cheating spouses, open racists, and button-pushing, explicit issues guaranteed to spark arguments.
Success in a televised circus
The show's success became one of the pillars of the tabloid talk show movement which included hosts like Maury Povich, Sally Jessy Raphael, Jenny Jones, Montel Williams and Morton Downey Jr. Springer, a likable, charismatic guy with a conventional look and just-asking-questions manner, always came across as a more buttoned-down counterpoint to his outrageous guests.
When I first met Springer as a critic working for the St. Petersburg Times newspaper back in 1997 — at a taping in Florida centered on the case of a white man sentenced to jail for using threats and racial slurs to drive away his African American neighbors – he insisted his show was about sparking dialogue.
"When TV is at its best, it's like a mirror," he told me. "If this does nothing more than get people to sit around the dinner table and discuss this, it's done some good."
Unfortunately, the show also ginned up scandalous arguments to build viewership and ratings, with Springer as the genial, criticism-deflecting ringmaster.
An early career in politics and law
Born Gerald Norman Springer in London England, he emigrated to Queens, N.Y., at age 4 with his family, eventually graduating from Tulane University and Northwest University Law School by the late 1960s.
He practiced law in Cincinnati, eventually getting elected to the city council in 1971; by 1974 he had to resign, admitting he'd paid a sex worker by check, but was re-elected in 1975. And in 1977, he served for a year as mayor of Cincinnati.
But his emergence as a TV personality came in the 1980s, when Cincinnati NBC affiliate WLWT hired him as a political reporter and commentator, eventually promoting him to primary news anchor and managing editor.
When The Jerry Springer Show originally launched he was still working as a news anchor, commuting from Cincinnati to Chicago, according to an interview Springer gave with WLWT.
The success of Jerry Springer opened up lots of doors for the host, who played a version of himself in the 1998 film Ringmaster, briefly replaced Regis Philbin as host of the variety show America's Got Talent, appeared on Dancing with the Stars and hosted a courtroom show called Judge Jerry which ended last year. Even his security guard, Steve Wilkos, got his own talk show, which remains on the air.
But the show's circus-like atmosphere – in which participants sometimes seemed to step onstage knowing they were expected to be disruptive and fight – could have serious consequences. The show was sued in 2002 by the son of a former guest who was killed by her ex-husband after the episode she appeared on was broadcast. And the program was also sued in 2019 by the family of a man who killed himself after appearing on an episode where his fiancée admitted cheating on him.
In an interview last year with the Behind the Velvet Rope podcast, Springer apologized for the impact of the show, saying, " What have I done? I've ruined the culture...I just hope hell isn't that hot, because I burn real easy."
But the host's brash good humor could also deflect critics. When I interviewed him again in 2012 for the Tampa Bay Times, I asked about normalizing violent behavior for viewers. He had a ready response:
"Our show, every day is a morality play where the good guys win and the bad guys lose... I would argue, when you have shows or movies with violent behavior and all the people are really beautiful and sexy looking, that could inspire a kid. There's never been a human being who watches our show and says, 'Boy, I wanna be just like that when I grow up.'"
In their statement, Springer's family asked fans to "make a donation or commit and act of kindness to someone in need" in his memory, noting "as he always said, 'Take care of yourself, and each other.' "
Rose Friedman and Ciera Crawford contributed to earlier versions of this story.
veryGood! (75253)
Related
- Average rate on 30
- Social Security COLA increase will ‘return to reality’ in 2024 after jump, predictions say
- 850 people are still missing after Maui wildfires, mayor says
- Djokovic outlasts Alcaraz in nearly 4 hours for title in Cincinnati; Coco Gauff wins women’s title
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Worker gets almost 3 years in prison for stealing $1M from employer
- More hearings begin soon for Summit’s proposed CO2 pipeline. Where does the project stand?
- Spain's federation wastes no time giving its players the middle finger after World Cup win
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- Hundreds of unwanted horses end up at Pennsylvania auctions. It may mean a death sentence
Ranking
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- Swiss glaciers under threat again as heat wave drives zero-temperature level to record high
- A presidential runoff is likely in Ecuador between an ally of ex-president and a banana tycoon’s son
- Djokovic outlasts Alcaraz in nearly 4 hours for title in Cincinnati; Coco Gauff wins women’s title
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- This queer youth choir gives teens a place to feel safe and change the world
- Rihanna and A$AP Rocky Welcome Baby No. 2: Get Lifted Up by Their Cutest Family Pics
- Ukraine’s Zelenskyy visits Athens to attend meeting of Balkan leaders with top EU officials
Recommendation
Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
NPR's podcast and programming chief Anya Grundmann to leave after 30 years
Salmonella outbreak across 11 states linked to small turtles
How to turn modest retirement contributions into a small fortune over time
Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
'Strays' leads the pack for R-rated dog comedies
Alabama can enforce ban on puberty blockers and hormones for transgender children, court says
Judge blocks Georgia ban on hormone replacement therapy for transgender minors