Other names | Jack Berch and His Boys The Kitchen Pirate The Sweetheart Serenader |
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Genre | Variety and talk |
Country | United States |
Language(s) | English |
Syndicates | ABC CBS Mutual NBC |
Announcer | Joe Bier Eddie Dunn Ed Herlihy John Reed King |
Written by | Howard Blake Dick Charles |
Directed by | Dick Charles Henry Hull, Jr. Herb Leder |
Produced by | Robert Ross Smith |
Air dates | 1935 to 1954 |
Sponsored by | Fels Naptha Soap Gulfspray Insect Killer Kellogg Prudential Insurance Sweetheart Soap |
The Jack Berch Show was a radio variety/talk program in the United States. It was broadcast on ABC, CBS, Mutual, and NBC at various times 1935-1954. The program at times went by other names, including The Kitchen Pirate (1935–36) and The Sweetheart Serenader (1939-1941).
The Berch programs featured "light music and informal chatter. When housewives tired of listening to the tribulations of their soap opera characters, they turned for relief to the songs of Berch."
Berch usually began his program with a whistle and a song. In an article in the January 1949 issue of Radio and Television Mirror, he gave the reason for that: "I was reading the morning paper. Suddenly I realized that the whole front page was full of disaster -- fires, murders, political troubles, jealousy and strife between persons and between nations. ... 'Now,' I said to myself, 'something ought to be done about this. And, in my own small way, I'm the guy to do it.' Then and there, in theory at least, the Heart to Heart Hookup and the Good Neighbor Club came into being."
The Heart to Heart Hookup and the Good Neighbor Club were features of Berch's program. Heart to Heart Hookup featured Berch reading "letters dedicated to the encouragement of more unfortunate people in the world." The Good Neighbor Club highlighted good deeds sent in by the program's listeners.
In that same article, Berch wrote: "There's a certain informality about the Jack Berch Show. We like to think of ourselves as coming into your living room for a visit every morning ... you'd get pretty tired of stiff and formal guests every day, wouldn't you?" The program featured a variety of types of songs, "from the old favorites to the latest popular tunes from Tin Pan Alley.
The show's ability to not only entertain listeners but to prompt them to act was demonstrated in 1950. After a listener wrote to Berch requesting used Christmas cards for a project, NBC received more than 5 million Christmas cards.
A review in the April 20, 1937, issue of the trade publication Radio Daily commented: "Berch offers an enjoyable program of singing and chatting that is well geared to appeal to the feminine ears. Jack's style is friendly, and he slips in the commercial remarks in a manner that makes them easy to take." Another comment in the same publication four months later said, "The singing of Berch is particularly well designed to give the day a sunny sendoff." On the other hand, a 1943 comment in the trade publication Billboard described Berch's program as "strictly a long quarter-hour of flimsy whimsy."