From 1971 to 1982, he was a publicist for
NBC-TV in
Burbank, California. Bronson handled publicity for a number of TV series, including
Sanford and Son,
Buck Rogers in the 25th Century,
B. J. and the Bear,
Man from Atlantis,
The Bionic Woman,
Police Story,
Police Woman,
Bonanza,
Quark,
Joe & Valerie,
Voyagers!,
The Powers of Matthew Star,
Hollywood Squares,
The Tomorrow Show with Tom Snyder, and the
Bob Hope specials. Bronson's regular
Chart Beat column appeared weekly in
Billboard magazine from January 1993, when he took over from Paul Grein who originated the column in March 1981, until April 2005, when it was transferred completely to Billboard.com. The online
Chart Beat Chat column appeared at Billboard.com from April 1996 until March 5, 2009. Both dealt with notable activity on the
Billboard charts including the
Billboard Hot 100 for songs and
Billboard 200 for albums. His new Billboard column,
This Week In Billboard History, launched on the www.billboard.biz website on December 6, 2011. Bronson also co-created the syndicated
comic strip ''
Dick Clark's Rock, Roll & Remember'' in 1995 with
Dick Clark and art work by
Don Sherwood. Bronson has written for numerous award shows including both the
World Music Awards and
American Music Awards. He has also appeared as a repertoire expert four times on
American Idol, during Seasons 2, 4, 7 and 9. He was seen on March 11, 2008, discussing the oeuvre of
Lennon–McCartney and on March 23, 2010, talking about the history of
Billboard and the Hot 100. He was identified as "Author, Billboard Books." As in episodes from seasons two and four, his
Number One Hits book was the exclusive basis of repertoire selection. His book also served as source material for the first episode of
CMT's series, ''CMT's Next Superstar''. Bronson appeared on the first episode as a guest judge, along with
Kristin Chenoweth and permanent judge
Matt Serletic. The series premiered on April 8, 2011, the eighth anniversary of Bronson's first appearance on
American Idol. Bronson's musical preferences were heard on his own radio program
Pop Goes the World and the online radio station
Radio Fred Bronson. For seven years, he wrote
The Billboard Radio Countdown, a weekly webcast hosted by
Billboard magazine's writer and editor
Chuck Taylor. Bronson wrote one episode of the
Star Trek: The Animated Series, "
The Counter-Clock Incident", under the name John Culver. He is also the co-writer on two episodes of
Star Trek: The Next Generation: "
The Game" and "
Ménage à Troi". Other writing credits for television include two-hour tributes to
Brooks & Dunn,
George Strait, and the superstar women of country music (including Carrie Underwood, Miranda Lambert, Martina McBride, Reba, the Judds, Loretta Lynn and Jennifer Nettles of Sugarland) on "Girls' Night Out" for CBS, a
Lionel Richie special that aired in April 2012, a
Motown 45th anniversary special, the original
Live Aid, and a
disco music special for ABC as well as the annual ''Dick Clark's
New Year's Rockin' Eve With
Ryan Seacrest'', also for ABC. Bronson was head writer on NBC's January 2005 telethon to raise funds for victims of the
2004 tsunami in southeast Asia. For 20 consecutive years, Bronson wrote
The American Music Awards. On March 5, 2009, Bronson announced in his weekly
Chart Beat column that it was to be his last. In August 2009, he wrote his first articles for the
Los Angeles Times. The latimes.com website posted his interviews with
American Idol finalists
Adam Lambert,
Kris Allen and
Allison Iraheta. In 2011, Bronson began writing for
Billboard again on a regular basis. His articles appear on the Billboard.biz website. He also writes for
The Hollywood Reporter. Bronson has also conducted interviews for
Sirius XM including
Paul McCartney,
Benny Andersson and
Björn Ulvaeus and
Ulf Ekberg from
Ace of Base. Bronson also announced that he would be a guest on
Jon Peter Lewis' internet TV series
American Nobody (episode 4 in March 2009). Bronson was a member of the international jury of
Melodifestivalen 2009, national preselection event to choose the Swedish representative in the
Eurovision Song Contest 2009. In August 2012, Bronson began writing a weekly column for
The Hollywood Reporter:
American Idol on the Charts. ==Notes==