Kim Clarke ChampnissKim Clarke Champniss is a Canadian television personality and musician, best known as a VJ for MuchMusic during the 1980s.[1] BackgroundKim was born in Bahrain and raised in London, England.[2] He was a child actor in his youth, including appearances in the 1960 film Village of the Damned[2] and a television commercial for Quaker Oats. He moved to Canada at age 19, briefly taking a job with the Hudson's Bay Company in Arviat before moving to Vancouver to study at the University of British Columbia.[2] He became a DJ at the city's new wave club Luvafair in 1980,[2] before becoming manager for local band Images in Vogue.[3] Broadcasting careerHe later joined MuchMusic as the host of a daily entertainment news show Rockflash[2] and the alternative rock program City Limits.[4] In addition, he produced music documentaries for the channel, including a tribute special to mark the tenth anniversary of Bob Marley's death,[5] and became a cohost of The New Music in 1993.[6] In this role, Marianne Faithfull, John Lydon and The Bee Gees all walked out of interviews with Champniss because they objected to his interview questions.[7] After leaving The New Music in 1996, Champniss moved into production roles with MuchMusic and its sister stations within the CHUM Limited media conglomerate, including as a contributing producer for Bravo! and as head of programming for MuchUSA.[8] In 1997, he released the album A Sound Mind, which was credited to KCC & Dancespeak.[9] His collaborators on the album included Joe Vizvary of Images in Vogue and Dave Rout of Rational Youth and Digital Poodle.[9] Post-Much careerHe left CHUM in 2000 to form his own company, Invisible Republic,[10] which provided music management for artists including Serial Joe and the revived The Grapes of Wrath.[4] In 2005, Champniss returned to an on-air role, hosting the series The Word This Week on BookTelevision and A-Channel.[11] He has also appeared as a radio host on Toronto radio stations Edge 102 and Boom 97.3.[12] In 2013, he published the book The Republic of Rock ānā Roll: The Roaring ā80s from Curtis to Cobain.[13] In 2018, he received a Canadian Screen Award nomination for Best Writing in a Lifestyle or Reality Show for his work on the Juno Awards of 2017. References
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