Brudnoy began a career in broadcast commentary in 1971 on Boston's local
PBS television station,
WGBH-TV. In 1976, he took over as host of his friend
Avi Nelson's radio show on
WHDH, in the midst of the city's unrest over
forced busing and
desegregation in schools. He took to the job with ease, and increasingly gained popularity. From 1981 to 1986, he appeared on former
Top 40 station
WRKO, which was now news and talk, before moving to local stalwart
WBZ. The top-rated talk radio host in New England, he appeared in a regular weekday evening slot until his retirement. At the end of his career, Brudnoy was, according to WBZ Radio's promotional materials, derived from
Arbitron ratings, among the most-listened-to evening talk hosts in the United States. Over the years, Brudnoy also appeared as a news commentator and host on local TV stations besides WGBH, including
WCVB-TV (
ABC),
WNAC-TV, and
WBZ-TV (
CBS). He also appeared nationally on the
CBS Morning News. He wrote movie reviews for
Boston magazine and local community newspapers. During the 1970s he wrote articles for the
National Review, and befriended its editor
William F. Buckley Jr. He also wrote for
The Alternative (later known as
The American Spectator) in the early 1970s, but quit because of the editor's unwillingness to adopt a more liberal position on gay rights. His articles have appeared in
The New York Times,
The New Republic, and
The Saturday Evening Post. In 1990, his WBZ show was canceled in favor of a less expensive
syndicated show hosted by
Tom Snyder, but a mass public response, including support from
The Boston Globe and the
Boston Herald, helped lead to his quick return to the station's lineup. Brudnoy's popularity escalated him into the Boston media elite, and he was the host of numerous social gatherings at his upscale
Back Bay apartment, mixing students, media personalities, and politicians. After his bout with AIDS, Brudnoy began broadcasting from his apartment four nights out of five, welcoming his radio guests into his home and eagerly offering them cocktails. When he returned to the air in early January 1995, after his first battle with HIV/AIDS kept him off the air for ten weeks,
Boston Mayor Thomas Menino formally declared January 5 as "David Brudnoy Day" due to his popularity. In 1997, Brudnoy was awarded the Freedom of Speech Award from the National Association of Radio Talk Show Hosts, and was nominated for the major market "Personality of the Year"
Marconi Radio Award by the
National Association of Broadcasters. In 2001, he celebrated his 25th anniversary on the air. He was inducted to the Massachusetts Broadcasters Hall of Fame, posthumously, in 2008. ==Politics and sensibilities==