Lyons began his professional career working on the city desk of
The Jersey Journal, writing sports and obituaries. After publishing a story as an intern on the Metropolitan desk of
The New York Times, he covered the two national political conventions of 1968 for
WINS. From 1970 to 1991, Lyons was the
film critic for
WPIX. Following the departure of
Roger Ebert and
Gene Siskel, he co-hosted the
PBS movie review show
Sneak Previews from 1982 to 1996. He also appeared on
MSNBC's
At the Movies from 2004 to 2006 with his son, fellow critic and television personality
Ben Lyons. On American AM radio, he hosted a show, "The Lyons Den," on
WCBS (AM) from 1975 to 1993; the title is taken from the
New York Post column that his father wrote for 40 years. He joined
WNBC in 1996 as the station's
film and
theatre critic. His last report on WNBC was on June 26, 2009. He reported during
Live at Five and
NewsChannel 4 newscasts. Lyons created and co-hosted the NBC syndicated movie review TV show
Lyons & Bailes Reel Talk from 2005-09. He currently hosts a syndicated radio program called "LYONS DEN RADIO" and appears on several national TV shows talking movies. In addition to his work as a critic, he has appeared as himself in
Deathtrap, and the TV series
Wiseguy. Lyons is the author or co-author of eight books, including ''Jeffrey Lyons' 101 Great Movies for Kids
. He and his brother Douglas have written several baseball trivia books, Out of Left Field
, Curveballs and Screwballs
, and Short Hops and Foul Tips.
In addition, he has two other books published, Stories My Father Told Me: Notes From 'The Lyons Den''', about his father's iconic Broadway column, and
Catching Heat, co-authored with his brother Douglas and former
Yankee Jim Leyritz, whose biography it is. Jeffrey and Douglas Lyons have lectured at the
Smithsonian Institution and at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in
Cooperstown, New York. Lyons has been a guest announcer, both as play-by-play and analyst, for the
Boston Red Sox radio network and Red Sox games in Spanish. In January 2012, he returned to WCBS radio and national syndication with another iteration of "LYONS DEN RADIO", reviewing five movies a week. In April 2013, he hosted "The Lineup: Best Sports Movies" on Madison Square Garden TV, choosing the five best movies in eight sports over eight programs on a panel with
Spike Lee, actors
Robert Wuhl and
Chazz Palminteri, hosted by former Yankee
Fran Healy. In March 2014, he hosted another series of shows on the best movies about New York entitled
The Lineup: Best New York Movies again with Spike Lee, and actors
John Leguziamo and
Ed Burns, followed by another series of shows about boxing entitled ''The Lineup: Boxing's Greatest'' in 2016. In February 2014, he signed a contract with Abbeville Press to write a sequel to "Stories My Father Told Me, Notes From The Lyons Den," called "What A Time It Was! More Notes From The Lyons Den," also about his father's era as a New York Broadway columnist. The book was published in September 2015. In May 2021, Lyons published a book on
Ernest Hemingway entitled
Hemingway and Me: Letters, Anecdotes, and Memories of a Life-Changing Friendship. Since 2015, Lyons has hosted, co-hosted or keynoted international film festivals in
San Diego;
Sedona, Arizona;
Vero Beach, Florida;
Aiken, South Carolina and
The Bahamas. ==Preferences==