Longtime Twin Cities radio voice Brian Oake let go by Cities 97.1

KDWB’s Zach Dillon will move to Oake’s afternoon slot.

The Minnesota Star Tribune
February 22, 2024 at 3:35AM
Brian Oake is the new co-host of the Current's morning show.
Longtime radio personality Brian Oake has been dismissed at Cities 97.1. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Longtime Twin Cities radio personality Brian Oake was let go Wednesday by Cities 97.1. iHeart Media, which runs the station and several others in the Twin Cities, announced a few personnel changes including Zach Dillon moving from KDWB to Oake’s afternoon drive slot on Cities 97.1.

Oake could not be reached for comment but confirmed his departure to Bring Me the News. His Wednesday show was filled with music and no announcer.

In November, Oake was quietly shifted from Cities 97 morning show to the afternoon program, and Paul Fletcher moved to mornings. Oake rejoined Cities 97 in 2021 where he had been a franchise personality for 15 years, doing afternoons starting in 2001 before moving to mornings in 2012. In 2016, he joined Minnesota Public Radio’s 89.3 the Current for its morning show.

In 2019, Oake left the Current after he was suspended over social-media posts. The last ones involved him complaining about Palace Theatre staff for kicking him out of a concert there after his daughter, then 20, was seen drinking from his cocktail glass. (Oake claimed it was empty except for ice.)

Between radio gigs, Oake, who has a distinctively sonorous voice, did a podcast and clerked at Mill City Sound record store in Hopkins.

Oake stopped by Mill City Sound on Wednesday, the store’s owner Rob Sheeley reports, and will be “working more at the store and expanding his podcast.”

Other broadcasters weighed in. “Brian Oake is brilliant at his job, he will be heard again, if program directors are smart, he will have multiple offers soon,” WCCO Radio personality Chad Hartman tweeted on Wednesday evening.

Meanwhile, at KDWB, Colt Parkey will take over Dillon’s slot on the afternoon show, pairing with Falen Bonsett. Dillon will continue to serve as assistant program director at KDWB as well as adding the similar position at Cities 97.1.

about the writer

Jon Bream

Critic / Reporter

Jon Bream has been a music critic at the Star Tribune since 1975, making him the longest tenured pop critic at a U.S. daily newspaper. He has attended more than 8,000 concerts and written four books (on Prince, Led Zeppelin, Neil Diamond and Bob Dylan). Thus far, he has ignored readers’ suggestions that he take a music-appreciation class.

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