Dallas gardening guru Neil Sperry to lose longtime KRLD radio show after 30 
years

12:00 AM CST on Friday, February 5, 2010


By JOE SIMNACHER / The Dallas Morning News 
[email protected] / The Dallas Morning News 
Aida Ahmed contributed to this report.

Radio host Neil Sperry has announced that KRLD-AM (1080) will pull the plug on 
his weekend gardening program after his July Fourth show.

Sperry, whose name became synonymous with North Texas gardening during his 
30-year relationship with the Dallas station, said CBS executives in New York 
made the decision.

"There is pressure from the accountants," he said Thursday, "and I understand 
that and I respect that."

Allison Mandara, a CBS Radio spokeswoman in New York, said the company does not 
comment on programming issues. She said such decisions are made at the station 
level.

Brian Purdy, senior vice president and market manager for CBS Radio Dallas-Fort 
Worth, said, "I can't go into the details of a very difficult business 
decision."

But he added: "Neil has been a fixture at KRLD and in the Dallas-Fort Worth 
community for 30 years and has done a terrific job. It's a difficult parting, 
and we wish him the very best."

Sperry, 65, said that a KRLD official notified him during a three-minute phone 
call last month that his contract would end in 180 days.

He remains amicable about the decision but said he's confident he will be 
working for another station the weekend after his KRLD departure.

"I flat out intend to be on the air that Saturday," he said.

Sperry is the second KRLD veteran to be pushed off the station in recent months.

Last August, weatherman Brad Barton, who worked 31 years at the station, was 
fired. He said he was dismissed as part of cost-cutting at CBS Radio.

In October, Barton was back on the air as meteorologist for WBAP-AM (820).

For the past eight years, Sperry has purchased his Saturday and Sunday time 
slots for the program. He then gets advertisers to sponsor the program.

"That's pretty much the only way you can be on the air on the weekend, on radio 
anyway," Sperry said.

In the January call, a station manager said KRLD was exercising its out clause 
to sell the time at a higher rate, Sperry said.

He said the station did not allow him to negotiate a new deal.

"We asked if we had any negotiation room and were told, 'no,' " Sperry said.

Sperry does not know the fate of his daily and weekend segments that are 
carried by about 50 other stations by the Texas State Network, another CBS 
property.

"I've got the greatest job in the world," he said. "I get to talk about my 
hobby for a living.

"It's as good as it gets."

Sperry is a native Texan who grew up in College Station, where his parents were 
faculty members at Texas A&M University. He attended A&M but received his 
bachelor's and master's degrees in horticulture from Ohio State University.

In 1970, he returned to Texas to be a county extension service horticulturist.

In Dallas, he heard a KRLD program, Speak to the Experts, which he thought was 
"a crazy way to make a living."

Sperry joined WFAA-AM (570) in 1978 and moved to KRLD in May 1980.

He was switched to his current contract arrangement eight years ago.


Staff writer Aida Ahmed contributed to this report.
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