Vale Street Remley, master of radio advertising

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STREET-REMLEY-AWARD.jpgThe Australian ad industry will be saddened to hear of the passing of the great Street Remley, the master of radio advertising, who has died aged 79 in Utah, where he was living with his daughter Erin and family.

Born in the US in 1937 Remley dropped out of medical school to go into the advertising business, strongly influenced by Stan Freberg. He worked at Young and Rubicam in the US for five years before transferring to Y&R Adelaide as the founding creative director.

In the early 70s Remley established Street Noise in Adelaide, which went on to receive international recognition for radio writing and production, winning more than 400 awards, including Clios, Hollywood Radio & TV, International Broadcasting, AWARD and Golden Stylus.

In 1980, Remley founded an annual radio writing workshop which has since become a template for radio courses in several countries. He sold Street Noise in 2001 to branch out into directing for TV and film.

Lionel Hunt, co-founder of The Campaign Palace, told CB tonight: ”He was my best man, a best mate and the best radio commercial writer and producer this country is ever likely to see. To use his favourite expression: goddammit!”

Adds creative legend Jack Vaughan, who started his career at Y&R Adelaide before joining The Campaign Palace: “There are many things I should be grateful to Street for ~ but the main one is that he hired me.”

Says another ad legend Scott Whybin: “Street Remley was the master of radio. He knew how people really spoke and got that audio syntax. Radio advertising was at its best when he was producing (and writing it). And God knows how many bad scripts he saved. At his best, he was the best in the world at what he did. God will laugh when he hears what Street does. Rest my friend.”