John Garabedian

He is currently the President of Jamchannel, a syndication company that produces Liveline hosted by Mason Kelter, a live national weeknight show for Top 40 stations.

[5] Four years after MTV's 1981 debut, Garabedian and fellow WMEX alumnus Arnie Ginsburg started a Boston-area 24-hour music video station, WVJV-TV (now WUTF-TV).

In 1987, Garabedian restarted the Open House Party show as a Saturday and Sunday evening, all-request program on Boston station WXKS-FM.

Superadio was created in 1988 as a distributor for Open House Party; it handled affiliate relations, sales and syndication, while Radiocraft owned and produced the show.

In 2003, while still running Superadio and hosting Open House Party Saturday, 18 years after the start of V66, Garabedian founded his second television station, XY.tv, with music and youth-oriented programming.

[2] On April 16, 2016, Garabedian announced live on Open House Party that his memoir titled The Harmony of Parts would be released on October 3, 2016.

The documentary is directed by Darren Rockwell who was a frequent visitor to the OHP studio throughout the late 1990s – early 2000s, when the show was peaking in popularity.

On December 17, 2016, Garabedian announced on air that United Stations had not found anyone to replace him yet and asked him to stay until the end of January 2017, which he agreed to do.

On May 14, 2018, he was nominated for the National Radio Hall of Fame in the category "Longstanding Network/Syndicated Personality (20+ years)" for his 29-year run on Open House Party.

In February 2020, Garabedian began working on a national Top 40 weeknight show called Liveline hosted by Mason Kelter.

The show is completely live and debuted on April 18, 2020, on Garabedian's Cape Cod CHR station Y101, replacing Open House Party with Kannon, which had been on Y101 since its launch in 2013.

Garabedian hosted a weekend version of the show from May 23, 2020, until July 31, 2021, which marked the first time he had been on FM radio since the final Open House Party in January 2017, aside from one fill-in shift he did on his Cape Cod rock station Pixy 103 in February 2019.