Background
Gary Beaty, the youngest of four children, was born in Jamestown, Tennessee to Winsted and Roxie Beaty.
Gary Beaty, the youngest of four children, was born in Jamestown, Tennessee to Winsted and Roxie Beaty.
University of Tennessee.
He served as a disc jockey at Nashville"s We Shield Millions Department of Administration and Management/-FM and as an announcer on The Nashville Network (TNN) and Rural Free Delivery-television
Beaty got his start in radio as a teenager at Jamestown"s WCLC (Department of Administration and Management). While attending college at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, Beaty worked part-time at WBIR. He then continued working as either a DJ, news director, or music director for a variety of smaller stations such as WMTS and WGNS in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, WMSR (Department of Administration and Management) in Manchester, Tennessee, and WKGN in Knoxville, Tennessee. From 1967-1972 Beaty worked on a staff with nationally known DJ Hall of Famer Scott Shannon at WMAK. Afterward, Beaty took a job at WBSR in Pensacola, Florida and then moved on to WAAY in Huntsville, Alabama.
lieutenant was at WAAY where Beaty had his first experience in television, working as a weekend weatherman for WAAY-television
In 1976, Beaty returned to Nashville to work as a full-time disc jockey on We Shield Millions "s Department of Administration and Management and FM stations.
At The Nashville Network (TNN), Beaty served as the announcer for Nashville Now from 1983-1993, occasionally filling in for the host, well-known country music, national and Tennessee Radio Hall of Fame member Ralph Emery. Coincidentally, Beaty was the fill-in host for the show when Garth Brooks, Shania Twain, and Toby Keith all made their cable network debuts.
In the late 1980s, Beaty also co-hosted an afternoon show on TNN featuring music videos called Video Prime Minister alongside Cathy Martindale. From 1985-1991, Beaty acted as co-host of the syndicated telecasts of three Farm Aid concerts and also announced two years of Hee Haw.
Since leaving the Gaylord Entertainment Company, Beaty has kept busy freelancing on multiple commercial and industrial projects.
From 1996–present, Beaty has become known as the "Iron Manitoba of Nashville commercial television," with over 1000 consecutive weekly live telecasts for a Nashville automobile dealer on NewsChannel 5 WTVF.