
Following that affinity as an adult, he quickly built a successful radio career even drawing praise from Howard Stern who dubbed Kennedy The Leonardo DaVinci Of Radio. While helping launch a new Alternative station, Kennedy was the funny man in the room. Everybody was trying to figure out how we could brand the station so people would know what music it played and that we had the Stern in mornings, he says. We must have been in this meeting for an hour when I finally said, How about we just name it Howard 93-7? When Howard heard about it, he loved it and talked about him on the air for 10 minutes.
Despite the VP title he earned at CBS Radio and his conference room successes, Kennedy didnt enjoy the work. I felt like an impostor, he says. I never felt like I belonged in any of those meetings. Instead, he jumped into a new job with a Nashville-based record label a logical decision considering that gig also involved lots of meetings. I kept getting promoted into executive roles that, frankly, I hated, he says. When I was on the air in radio, I would host club gigs setting up the musical acts, doing giveaways all that crap. I enjoyed that a lot more and being on a mic wasnt totally foreign to me. Radio also helped with writing and timing. Then, towards the end of my career in the record business, I was in front of large groups introducing artists, and I realized everyone was more comfortable if I could get them laughing.