Rob Weingarten

Rob Weingarten is a veteran sports talk radio programmer and talk show host. He most recently was the Program Director of radio in St. Louis, Missouri. He served in that position from 2004 until resigning in March 2006.
Rob's sports radio involvement began in 1990 as a part time board operator and producer at in New York. He left WFAN in 1992 to take a full-time position with WTEM in Washington, D.C..
Within three months of the inception of WTEM, Weingarten moved from board operator to overnight talk show host. He spent two years in the overnight chair developing a significant cult following after WTEM began to syndicate much of its programming nationally. Afternoon host Rich "The Coach" Gilgallon began referring to him as "The Nocturnal Warrior" and the handle stuck and was incorporated into the show.
The show's first producer was future "Young Turk" and "At the Movies" host Ben Manckiewicz (then using the handle of "Baseball Ben"). After leaving to pursue a television news job, he was followed as producer by Gary "Big Time Braun" (who would later move to the Tony Kornheiser show) and Scott Linn.
The overnight show was ahead of its time. Weingarten used sketch comedy, poetry readings, offbeat game shows and had an assortment of oddball regular callers. "The Undertaker", "Giant Mike", and "Kevin the Musical Postman" were on most nights. The show was much different from the standard phone call Q&A stuff that was on the station the rest of the day. It a forerunner of the guy-talk genre that is now prevalent in sports-talk.
The show had a loyal following. Early in WTEM's history, they stopped doing live overnights and replaced the program with nationally syndicated Ron Barr. The uproar was loud enough that Weingarten's show was back in a few months. However, he was eventually let go, along with Kiley and the Coach, Ira Mellman, Mitch Levy and others as part of a massive budget cut a few years later.
In 1995, he accepted the Program Director's position at WZTM in Tampa, Florida. He also co-hosted the afternoon drive talk show with former Tampa Bay Buccaneer Scot Brantley. The station performed well until being sold off as part of the Clear Channel/Jacor merger in 1998.
In 2002, Rob moved to Atlanta as Program Director for . In 2004, the owners of that station acquired KFNS AM-FM in St. Louis and asked him to head up programming there.
He is also an accomplished play-by-play announcer. Weingarten served for five seasons as the radio and television voice of the MLS Tampa Bay Mutiny. He was also the play-by-play announcer for the Atlanta Beat of the Women's United Soccer Association. His radio work with the fast pitch softball Tampa Bay Smokers was featured in the award-winning documentary film "Fast Pitch".
Weingarten was also a long time editor for SportsPages.com.
There is currently a Nocturnal Warrior program on Blog Talk Radio. It is associated with the political blog www.noquarterusa.net and is live on Tuesday nights at 9:00 PM EDT. The Blog Talk show bio states that the host was a "major talk host in Washington D.C. during the 1990s." The host is often referred to during the program as "Warrior" and as Rob. The host blogs on the website under the moniker Rob Warrior. Although the last name of the host has not been confirmed, if you listen to the program and have listened to the Nocturnal Warrior in the past (along with further hints in the show bio), it is apparent that this is the same guy.
 
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