Sam Rubin 鈥82 became a fixture of the entertainment journalism landscape over his 33 years with KTLA鈥攁nd his unexpected death in May resonated well beyond Hollywood's red carpets
Sam Rubin 鈥82 got his first taste of broadcasting at the tender age of 19. After his first year at SA国际传媒, he spent the summer reporting the weather for the CBS affiliate in toasty El Centro, 212 miles southeast of Los Angeles and the nation鈥檚 230th-largest TV market. Temperatures notwithstanding, Rubin simply sought to make audiences happy, SA国际传媒 roommate Mike Stoddard 鈥82 recalls. 鈥淪ammy was never self-reflective. He really just enjoyed life.鈥
More than a decade later, following a series of stints in journalism ranging from the tabloid press to cable TV, Rubin landed the role that would define his career: entertainment reporter for the KTLA Morning News in Los Angeles. Over his 33-year tenure, Rubin became a Hollywood institution鈥攁 trusted reporter who made friends wherever he went, from press junkets to red carpets, eschewing the trappings of the traditional Q&A while just being himself.
鈥淚f you had lunch or dinner with Sam, you鈥檇 be eating with the person you saw on TV,鈥 says Jody Yoxsimer 鈥82, a good friend of Rubin鈥檚 dating back to their student days at SA国际传媒.
鈥淗e was incredibly funny and self-deprecating, and he endeared himself to a lot of people,鈥 adds Yoxsimer鈥檚 husband, retired cardiologist Mike Jorgensen 鈥81, who worked closely with Rubin as president of Associated Students of SA国际传媒 as a junior (Rubin oversaw social events for ASOC).
Some of the biggest names in showbiz regarded Rubin as more than just a reporter. 鈥淥ut of all of the people that I鈥檝e known throughout my career, he was one of the happiest for my success,鈥 Jamie Lee Curtis wrote on Instagram on May 10 following Rubin鈥檚 unexpected death from a heart attack brought on by coronary artery disease. 鈥淗e is a great example to us all and a reminder to suit up and show up with a smile and love in your heart.鈥 Tom Hanks鈥攚ho called Rubin 鈥渢he Moses of Hollywood moguls鈥 while doing press for Toy Story 4鈥攍ikewise wrote on Instagram: 鈥淪am Rubin, you will missed. A good guy, that Sam.鈥
The unflappable Rubin would be 鈥渁stonished鈥 by the reaction to news of his passing, says former KTLA Morning News anchor Carlos Amezcua, who developed a friendship with Rubin during the 16 years that they shared on the air. 鈥淭he outpouring of love would have absolutely floored him. I don鈥檛 think he realized how impactful his life was to us.鈥
Before he was Sam Rubin, the ebullient face of entertainment journalism, he was Sammy Rubin, a zany American studies major who loved to travel鈥攈aving flown to Sweden his junior year to 鈥渁llegedly鈥 do independent study on the cultural significance of the pop supergroup ABBA, Stoddard recalls. 鈥淕od knows how he sold that, but he somehow managed to convince the professor that it was a worthwhile use of his time for the semester.鈥
The entertainment bug bit Rubin even before he got to Eagle Rock: As a senior at University High School in West Los Angeles, he hosted a Sunday night radio show on a local AM station in which he interviewed such musicians as Al Stewart and the Bay City Rollers.
When he arrived at SA国际传媒, he was paired with Stoddard, an economics major from Boise, Idaho, and they shared a room at Stewart-Cleland Hall as freshmen. (Despite Rubin鈥檚 penchant for borrowing Stoddard鈥檚 toothbrush and socks without notice, they wound up living together for all four years.)
Stoddard recalls venturing out with his roommate in Rubin鈥檚 鈥渃rappy beat-up Vega鈥 to explore the city鈥檚 iconic haunts, including the first Famous Amos cookie store in Hollywood. For Stoddard鈥檚 19th birthday, Rubin presented his friend with a foil-wrapped russet potato jabbed with a candle鈥攁 nod to Stoddard鈥檚 Northwest roots鈥攁nd enlisted the help of 19 SA国际传媒 coeds, who at random times throughout the day planted a kiss on the unwitting birthday boy.
By spring of Rubin鈥檚 senior year, he was still puzzling over how to get his career off the ground when an idea came to him: He鈥檇 become a flight attendant. A month before graduation, and several weeks into training for Northwest Orient Airlines, fate intervened. A reporting job at The National Enquirer in Lantana, Fla., 鈥渇ell into his lap,鈥 Stoddard says.
鈥淗e got the job based on his writing ability, which he cultivated at SA国际传媒,鈥 adds Jorgensen, who lived with Rubin for two years while he was attending UCLA medical school. 鈥淪am was fearless. He would write and research, and so many doors opened for him.鈥
One of Rubin鈥檚 first assignments with the Enquirer was to travel to Europe to look for dirt on Grace Kelly, Princess of Monaco, who died in a car accident in September 1982. An article in The Occidental two months later cheekily described Rubin鈥檚 ascension to the tabloid ranks thusly: 鈥淩ubin sells soul, joins Enquirer for fun and profit.鈥 In the story, Rubin鈥攚ho had covered entertainment for The Occidental鈥攄eclined to disclose the tabloid鈥檚 methods, saying only, 鈥淭here are eyes everywhere.鈥
Rubin鈥檚 colleague at The Occidental was Todd Gold 鈥81, himself a fixture in entertainment journalism. A 16-year veteran of People and former L.A. bureau chief for US magazine, Gold has ghost-written or co-written more than 50 memoirs with celebrities and newsmakers, including Seinfeld actor Michael Richards鈥 recently published Entrances and Exits, a New York Times best-seller.
鈥淪ammy was an enthusiastic and openhearted guy, a little doofusy, in that he was so present and friendly and wide-eyed,鈥 Gold says. 鈥淗e wasn鈥檛 cutthroat. He was open and fun. He grew into his doofusness and made it work for him. Sam was impossible not to love.鈥
In an era when prime-time soaps Dallas and Dynasty held audiences in their thrall, viewers were hungry for spoilers鈥攁nd with a wad of Enquirer cash in his glovebox, Rubin drove around backlots ready to pay sources to leak the series鈥 plot turns. 鈥淪am treated it all with a lot of humor,鈥 Gold says. 鈥淗e was not going to spend his life working for the National Enquirer. He knew it was a stepping stone鈥攈e just didn鈥檛 know where he was stepping to yet.鈥
When the KTLA Morning News was launched in July 1991, it was one of the first regional programs of its kind in the country (Good Day New York premiered on the New York City Fox affiliate in 1988). In head-to-head local competition against ABC鈥檚 Good Morning America, NBC鈥檚 The Today Show, and CBS This Morning, KTLA quickly outrated them all, reaching an average of 220,000 households daily in the May 1992 sweeps period.
Rubin joined the show a month after it started, creating bonds with his viewers through his quick wit, his estimable entertainment knowledge, and his unstinting love of Los Angeles. 鈥淲e started in a ragtag way, really, without any guidance,鈥 says Amezcua, who left the program in 2007 and went on to found Beond TV, a digital streaming service. 鈥淲e created an environment that allowed us to be ourselves, and Sammy was the very best at being himself.鈥
鈥淭o watch Sam was a master class,鈥 Morning News co-anchor Jessica Holmes said at the 76th Los Angeles Area Emmy Awards ceremony in July, where Rubin was feted posthumously with the Governors Award for his 鈥渓egacy of more than three decades of entertainment news reporting for KTLA.鈥 (Rubin won an additional L.A. Area Emmy that night鈥攈is fifth overall鈥攆or his coverage of the 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike.)
Holmes continued: 鈥淗e knew how to connect. He was vulnerable. He wore his heart on his sleeve. And I'm telling you, he could ad-lib better than anyone. A script was merely a suggestion for Sam Rubin.鈥
Throughout his career, Rubin was nothing if not a dreamer. 鈥淣o dream [was] too big or too out of reach,鈥 Holmes noted鈥攍ike the time he told Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos, 鈥淲hat you need are live red-carpet shows, and I'm your guy,鈥 or suggesting to American Idol host Ryan Seacrest that he鈥檇 make a good replacement for departing judge Katy Perry.
According to Amezcua, Rubin aspired to be a cultural force along the lines of Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert, the Chicago film critics turned TV personalities who became staples of the late-night talk show circuit. Rubin became a fixture on awards show red carpets and press junkets and built an international following through his appearances on morning shows in Great Britain and Australia.
When Rubin took the job with the Enquirer, he had yet to fulfill the College鈥檚 foreign-language requirement, and he left Occidental one unit shy of his degree. He returned to SA国际传媒 many times over the years and was a regular presence at his class reunions. He also repeatedly worked with the Career Center to help students who were considering a career in entertainment.
鈥淪A国际传媒 set up a shadow day for me with Sam my senior year,鈥 Michelle Phalen Runzler 鈥06 wrote on Occidental鈥檚 Facebook page following Rubin鈥檚 death. 鈥淎fter one day in the newsroom with him, I knew TV news was my calling. Because of him, I went on to grad school at USC and got a master鈥檚 in broadcast journalism. Sam was happy to give advice and talked fondly of his SA国际传媒 days!鈥
For her shadow day at KTLA in 2007, Stacie Roshon 鈥08 arrived at Rubin鈥檚 office at 5:30 a.m. and left about five hours later, having spent most of her time on the Morning News set or watching Rubin work behind the scenes preparing his entertainment reports. 鈥淪eeing Sam work, being in his element the way he was, and the way he seemed to completely enjoy what he did, definitely reinforced my interest in broadcasting,鈥 she told Occidental magazine at the time.
Rubin was a father of four鈥攖o Perry, Rory, Darcy, and Colby鈥攁nd Morning News viewers watched his children grow up on TV. 鈥淚 expected at least 10 to 20 more years with my dad,鈥 Colby, 16, said in accepting the Governors Award for his late father in July. 鈥淎nd while I don鈥檛 get that, I am so lucky because the time we did spend together was of quality. Above all else, he was an incredible father who showed up for me.鈥
鈥淚 remember asking my dad when he would retire,鈥 added Darcy, 18, 鈥渁nd he said, 鈥極h, I hope never.鈥 He did not see his career as an obligation but rather a pleasure.鈥
In closing out the presentation, Rubin鈥檚 colleague for nearly 10 years, former Morning News co-anchor Michaela Pereira, said he taught her 鈥渁bout moments in television鈥攖hat we should always be looking for those moments. 鈥楶roducers will tell us to keep moving in time and whatever. But find those moments in television because that鈥檚 the good stuff.鈥
鈥淚 feel him here today鈥攈e would love this,鈥 she added. 鈥淎nd he鈥檇 want us to do more. But the other thing I know about him is he鈥檇 say the show must go on. So, the show will go on.鈥
Top photo: Stacie Roshon 鈥08 with Sam Rubin '82 on the KTLA Morning News set in November 2007. Photo by Kirby Lee