Pete Tauriello: Difference between revisions
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{{Wikify|date=February 2008}} |
{{Wikify|date=February 2008}} |
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Pete Tauriello is a veteran traffic anchor on [[1010 WINS]], [[WKXW]] and [[WJRZ-FM]] and several other [[radio station]]s in the New York area including a few years on the Z-100 "Morning Zoo." He has also served as a traffic reporter on [[WWOR-TV]] and more recently on [[WNBC-TV]]'s "Today In New York." |
'''Pete Tauriello''' is a veteran traffic anchor on [[1010 WINS]], [[WKXW]] and [[WJRZ-FM]] and several other [[radio station]]s in the New York area including a few years on the Z-100 "Morning Zoo." He has also served as a traffic reporter on [[WWOR-TV]] and more recently on [[WNBC-TV]]'s "Today In New York." |
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Tauriello graduated from [[Seton Hall University]] in [[South Orange, New Jersey]] where he was active in the college's radio station, [[WSOU-FM]]. |
Tauriello graduated from [[Seton Hall University]] in [[South Orange, New Jersey]] where he was active in the college's radio station, [[WSOU-FM]]. |
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Pete was a weekend disc jockey on oldies formatted WMTR in Morristown for three and a half years until the station dismissed it jocks in favor of a satellite delivered format. For 24 years he has been the morning traffic anchor on 1010 WINS Radio in New York City. |
Pete was a weekend disc jockey on oldies formatted WMTR in Morristown for three and a half years until the station dismissed it jocks in favor of a satellite delivered format. For 24 years he has been the morning traffic anchor on 1010 WINS Radio in New York City. |
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Pete's voice can be heard in the motion picture "No Reservations" and in numerous |
Pete's voice can be heard in the motion picture "No Reservations" and in numerous documentaries about the September 11th attack on the World Trade center. |
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When not reporting traffic or playing the oldies, he can also be found behind the microphone singing, along with his wife of 32 years,Maureen Conroy Tauriello, at St. Joseph's Church in [[Maplewood, New Jersey]] in two of the church's music ministries..a praise band called "Trinity" and a more traditional choir. He and Maureen met while attending Seton Hall University and volunteering at the campus radio station WSOU. The Tauriello's have three children, Sean Peter, Kimberly Rose, and Mark Alan. |
When not reporting traffic or playing the oldies, he can also be found behind the microphone singing, along with his wife of 32 years,Maureen Conroy Tauriello, at St. Joseph's Church in [[Maplewood, New Jersey]] in two of the church's music ministries..a praise band called "Trinity" and a more traditional choir. He and Maureen met while attending Seton Hall University and volunteering at the campus radio station WSOU. The Tauriello's have three children, Sean Peter, Kimberly Rose, and Mark Alan. |
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[[Category:Living people]] |
[[Category:Living people]] |
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[[Category:American radio personalities]] |
[[Category:American radio personalities]] |
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{{US-radio-bio-stub}} |
Revision as of 04:43, 21 April 2009
Template:Wikify is deprecated. Please use a more specific cleanup template as listed in the documentation. |
Pete Tauriello is a veteran traffic anchor on 1010 WINS, WKXW and WJRZ-FM and several other radio stations in the New York area including a few years on the Z-100 "Morning Zoo." He has also served as a traffic reporter on WWOR-TV and more recently on WNBC-TV's "Today In New York."
Tauriello graduated from Seton Hall University in South Orange, New Jersey where he was active in the college's radio station, WSOU-FM.
Prior to joining Shadow Traffic in 1982, he served as the morning host on WADB in Point Pleasant, New Jersey (1976-78). Later he went on to program WBRW in Somerville, New Jersey and WERA in Plainfield, New Jersey(as Peter Jaye) with announcer stints at beautiful music WPAT-FM, WNSR New York and WFAS AM/FM White Plains.
Pete spent 12 years at WEVD New York as a pop standards DJ on the "Saturday Morning 1050 Club" and later became "The Pragmatic Talk Host" when the station dropped standards for talk. His position was that he refused be identified as being liberal, conservative or anything else. "I'm a pragmatist!", he would say, "What works...works. Why must any good thought or work come from one party or the other..one ideology or the other?"
During his 27 years at the Shadow Traffic Network New York, Tauriello served as both an assistant program director and program director having hired and/or trained some of market one's most well-known traffic reporters including Debbie Mazella, Tom Note and Cande Roth. His expertise is in talent development and radio programming for talk/AC hybrids.
Pete was a weekend disc jockey on oldies formatted WMTR in Morristown for three and a half years until the station dismissed it jocks in favor of a satellite delivered format. For 24 years he has been the morning traffic anchor on 1010 WINS Radio in New York City.
Pete's voice can be heard in the motion picture "No Reservations" and in numerous documentaries about the September 11th attack on the World Trade center.
When not reporting traffic or playing the oldies, he can also be found behind the microphone singing, along with his wife of 32 years,Maureen Conroy Tauriello, at St. Joseph's Church in Maplewood, New Jersey in two of the church's music ministries..a praise band called "Trinity" and a more traditional choir. He and Maureen met while attending Seton Hall University and volunteering at the campus radio station WSOU. The Tauriello's have three children, Sean Peter, Kimberly Rose, and Mark Alan.
A born radio enthusiast, he is also an amateur radio operator and serves as a vice president of the Tri County Radio Association of Union and a member of the Electronic Technology Society of New Jersey of Greenbrook. He also serves as an advisor to the Drew University radio station, WMNJ Madison, New Jersey. His younger son, Mark, has been the station's General Manager for 3 years and is credited with brining the small station back from sporadic operation to full time operation with automation and live student programming. The younger Tauriello also envisioned and led the station's move into Internet broadcasting.