Dees began his radio career in
1966 at WGBG, a Greensboro
radio station while still in high school. He worked in various radio stations throughout the southeastern United States, including WSGN in
Birmingham, Alabama. Along with his 'Cast Of Idiots', Dees recorded "Disco Duck" in
1976 while working at WMPS-AM in
Memphis, Tennessee, but he was expressly forbidden from playing the song on the air by station management (rival stations refused to play it for fear of promoting their competition). He was later fired on-the-spot simply for talking about the song on the air one morning - the station manager claimed conflict of interest. After a short hiatus, he went on to
WHBQ-AM, also in Memphis.
The single "Disco Duck" sold over two million copies and reached number 1 on
Billboard magazine's
Hot 100 chart on
October 16,
1976. The song can be heard in the movie
Saturday Night Fever, in a brief scene in which a group of older people were learning to "move their feet to the disco beat", but the song was not included in that movie's enormously popular
soundtrack album, thus depriving him of a
Grammy award that the artists on the record received (for 1978's
Album of the Year).
In
1979, Dees moved to
Los Angeles and did mornings on
KHJ (which was at the time WHBQ's sister station) during its final years as a
Top 40 station. When KHJ flipped to a
country format, Dees left the station. Then in
1981, Rick moved to crosstown Top 40 outlet
KIIS-FM, where he served as host of
Rick Dees in the Morning and was named
Billboard's "Number One Radio Personality in America" for eleven consecutive years. The memorable "Did you hear what Rick Dees said this morning" advertising campaign helped propel him to number-one in the market. He was replaced on KIIS in
2004 by
Ryan Seacrest.
He began his weekly
Top 40 show, still currently in
syndication, in
1983.
Rick Dees' Weekly Top 40 is currently heard on over 350 radio stations in the United States, as well as in 37 other countries. The chart show is available in three different versions,
Hit Radio (for
contemporary hit radio stations),
Hot Adult (
adult contemporary radio stations) and
Rhythmic (
Rhythmic Contemporary/
Rhythmic Adult Contemporary radio), all of which are accessible for online streaming and
podcasting on his
official website. Previously, there was a version for
Latin music radio,
Con Sabor (
Spanish for "with flavor"), which was canceled after a few months streamed online.
Rick was inducted into the
Radio Hall of Fame in
1999, and the
National Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame in 2007. He has also received the
People's Choice Award and a star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame.