Kenneth Edward "Ken" Beatrice was an American radio personality. He hosted a Washington, D.C.-area radio call-in sports show for 23 years, first on WMAL between 1973 and 1995, later on WTEM from 1995 to 2000.
After occasionally appearing on WBZ radio sports shows as a guest, Beatrice joined the station in 1975 as the weekend host of Calling All Sports. He replaced Guy Mainella as weekday host in 1976, but was moved back to weekends after five weeks and succeeded by Bob Lobel.
WMAL
In 1977, Beatrice joined WMAL as host of Sports Call, the station's nightly sports show, and the Washington Redskinspregame show. He became one of the city's most prominent and highest rated radio hosts. On February 20, 1981, Beatrice admitted to The Washington Star that he had made "exaggerations" about his accomplishments on the air. He confessed that he did not play football at Boston College, that his doctorate degree was from a diploma mill in Ohio, and that his scouting system only involved people who scouted as a hobby. His admission came as The Washington Post was about to publish a story by Tony Kornheiser written after several weeks of intense questioning in which Beatrice admitted that he had no role in the Boston Patriots drafting Fran Tarkenton. He took a leave of absence after the story broke, but returned after five weeks. On August 16, 1991, Beatrice suffered a heart attack, which required him to undergo triple bypass surgery and miss many weeks of work. By 1995, Beatrice's ratings had decreased to 5,000 listeners per fifteen minutes. On October 4, 1995 it was announced that WMAL was dropping Beatrice's show. The station's decision resulted in 200 phone calls and about 40 letters from supporters. His final program aired on October 6 and featured calls from Washington Redskins head coachNorv Turner, Redskins general manager Charley Casserly, and Washington Bullets head coach Jim Lynam.
WTEM
On October 16, 1995, Beatrice signed a contract to host a sports program on a radio network owned by Sam Huff. The program originated from Middleburg, Virginia, but was syndicated nationally, including on WTEM in Washington, D.C. On April 20, 2000, Beatrice retired from radio.
Style
Beatrice was known for his high-pitched voice, pronounced Boston accent, encyclopedic knowledge of sports, opinionated nature, respectful treatment of kids who called into his show, and his long running promos for Arby's. Some believe he had a tendency to talk over guests and callers, go off on tangents, and lecture guests. His catchphrase was "You're next!"