Hamblin had a long-running local talk program on powerful
KOA radio in Denver, a
clear-channel station heard across the western and central United States. Hamblin hosted the early evening shift, which he worked the evening of June 18, 1984, when
Alan Berg, one of the station's biggest and most controversial hosts, was gunned down. He gained national attention when his show, then carried on another Denver radio station, was broadcast on
C-SPAN during the early 1990s. He was heard on
KNUS and
KXKL radio in Denver, as well as across the nation. After his show was syndicated, he was heard across the United States on about 200 radio stations. In 1999, Hamblin was named one of Colorado's Top 100 most influential media personalities. Hamblin's show had several unique features: playing various versions of the "
Star Spangled Banner" at the beginning of the show; playing "
Taps" for fallen law enforcement officers; announcing the execution of convicts on
death row, often with a clip from the movie
Unforgiven, saying "It's a hell of a thing killin' a man; you take away all he's got, and all he's ever gonna have." The execution segment was notable for having "
Another One Bites the Dust", sung by
Queen. Hamblin frequently referred to
liberals as "Egg-sucking dogs", and sometimes challenged listeners to call in to, "Name one major American city that improved morally, socially, and economically after the city elected a liberal
black mayor ('You can't do it')". He has also been an outspoken critic of
Louis Farrakan and the
Nation of Islam, challenging those unhappy with the United States to "pick a better country" and go live there. ==Life after leaving public life==