Bill wasn’t always a news anchor, though that’s what most of us may remember. He was a 25-year voice and face at KOMO –- reporter, writer, editor, news producer and, in his early TV days, a floor manager and production assistant.
Did you know Bru, as his friends call him, is also a published author, licensed pilot, retired U. S. Naval Reserve Captain (that’s equal to a full-bird Colonel, for you Army types), former Snohomish County Council member and one-time head of the Aviation Division as Assistant Secretary of Transportation for the State of Washington? This man is at least twice the citizen.
A Spokane native, Bill graduated Lewis & Clark High School and enrolled at Washington State College, forerunner of WSU, in Pullman. While his Cougar undergrad time was important, he’ll tell you to this day that his real broadcasting career started
Young Bill and two fellow college interns were at the time working for Roseburg radio station KRXL, which — unlike two competing stations — wasn’t destroyed by the blast. For several days the three budding broadcasters kept the station on the air, providing the only local information and community broadcast support. Below Bill Brubaker recalls the significance of the event . . .
Brubaker on Roseburg explosion of ’59 (Running Time :44)
Brubaker unknowingly tosses his boss out of the KOMO building (Running Time 1:48)
The man Bru removed was Oliver David Fisher, corporate executive of Fisher Broadcasting. By 1965, Bill wanted to shift his news skills to KOMO’s TV news operation. Starting in the TV Production Department and as a studio floor director, he got his first news reporting opportunity — again, this was the kind of assignment few reporters would ever get. In late July of ‘65, he anchored a five-day remote broadcast aboard a boat during the then-famous transit to Seattle of Namu, the first live captive killer whale.
Meanwhile, KOMO execs continued hiring other strong on-air talent. In 1965, Ray Ramsey, another Spokane native, was brought in from a disc jockey stint at KOL radio to become Channel 4 and KOMO radio’s prime weathercaster. Brubaker and Ramsey became a natural match, though Brubaker initially had reservations about Ramsey’s fast talking, wisecracking style.
Brubaker on Ray Ramsey (Running Time :50)
By the way, Ramsey remained KOMO’s weather guy for 20 years. In 1968, KOMO added sports anchor Bruce King, whose high-energy presentation was almost infectious. He rolled up 30+ years at KOMO and was four times voted the state’s sportscaster of the year. The Brubaker-Ramsey-King “power Trio” put Channel 4 on top in the city’s hot late-evening TV news ratings race for 13 years.
Before leaving KOMO-TV in 1987, Brubaker scored five more Sigma Delta Chi Excellence in Journalism Awards, and one Emmy for spot news reporting. In 1991, he was awarded the Freedom Foundation’s George Washington Medal for Public Communication.
There were more accolades in recent years, and Bill put his writing skills to work. He authored/co-authored three books — one about his radio-TV life, another Navy-related and a third about undersea seamounts off the coast of Washington.
He sometimes consults on aviation, the Navy, journalism and broadcasting, and stays active with his WSU alma mater. He’s an Associate Member, the Murrow College Professional Advisory Board. He’s also Project Ambassador for WSU’s Hall of Radio History, and in 2017 was inducted into the Edward R. Murrow College of Communications Hall of Achievement.
Bru has “retired” to enjoy more time with his wife, Marlene, their grown children and many faithful friends. Now hear this !! What a career !!!
If this post was interesting to you, here’s a link to a related story about another former Seattle TV news anchor — Jim Harriott: Life Before and After Seattle
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May 3, 2021 at QZVX
Jay Hamilton says:
I just read where family members announced on Monday that Bill Brubaker died this weekend. He was 85. I remember Bill well when I was a freshman and attending WSU. He was the Chief Announcer on KWSC, along with Jerry Yokom. As a young freshman I remember being highly impressed with his skills as an announcer. I thought he had one great voice. I happily discovered him again when he became the KOMO-TV anchor.
I see that in June 2000 he was inducted into The National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences’ Silver Circle.
May 5, 2021 at QZVX
Jack Eddy says:
Bill and I were classmates at WSU, and worked together at KOMO…He was serious about his profession and genuinely a nice guy…It is also interesting to note, that we also were classmates with Mike James, of KING , and John Sandifer who worked at a number of local stations..not bad for the WSU class of 1962,
May 5, 2021 at QZVX
Jay Hamilton says:
I remember being quite intimidated with the quality of young talent at WSU during the Bill Brubaker era at Wazoo. Being a kid from a small town I felt I must be way out of my league attempting to compete with that degree of young talent. Besides Mike James and John “Tex” Sandifer … I particularly remember Barry Serafin, who eventually became a renowned television journalist and former news anchor of ABC World News. There was also Art Eckman, who had a long career in sports announcing as the voice of supercross & motocross racing on television broadcast. These guys, along with Bill Brubaker, were on top of their game from the get-go.