Profile Springer recently taped in Detroit. On Both Sides %LICE BURDICK SCHWEIGER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS Jerry Springer has switched from Cincinnati politician to national talk show host. e has been a lawyer, a mayor, a gubernatorial can- didate, and a tele- vision news anchor. This fall he has become one of the new additions in the highly competitive national talk show arena. His name is Jerry Springer and he never thought that his political background would have been a springboard into TV land. "It was a pure fluke that I became a talk show host," says Mr. Springer, who visited Detroit recently to help publicize the "Jerry Springer Show," which airs weekdays at 10 a.m. on Channel 4. "It isn't what I aspired to be." What he did aspire to be, and did become, was an attorney and a politi- cian. As an activist in the H 1960s at both Tulane and University Law Northwestern School, he spoke out for civil rights and against the war in Vietnam, and made a name for himself when he became Senator Robert F. Kennedy's presidential campaign aide. "I met Bobby Kennedy through a law professor of mine in 1967," recalls Mr. Springer, who says that Mr. Kennedy had a great influence on his life. "At that time the Democrats were trying to get Bobby to run against Lyndon Johnson in the '68 primaries. My profes- sor was good friends with the senator, and Bobby was in town spending the night at his house. "The professor invited me over so the senator could hear what I had to say about the war. We really hit it off and I wound up going through college campuses in the Midwest campaigning for him." When Senator Kennedy was assassinated, Mr. Springer moved to Cincinnati to practice law. However, it did not take long before his taste for politics returned, and he served five successive terms in the city council and was elected mayor of Cincinnati. His political career came to a halt in 1982 after losing the Ohio gubernatorial race, and Mr. Springer laughs that his entree into broadcast- ing came as a consolation prize for losing the elec- tion. "I ran against Dick Celeste, and Channel 5, a local station, offered an anchor job to whoever lost," he chuckles. "The voters decided that I could anchor the news!" For 10 years he did the nightly news along with commentaries, and last year another opportunity came knocking at his door. "Multimedia, the com- pany that owns Channel 5, also owns the Phil Donahue and Sally Jessy Raphael shows, and wanted to start another talk show," he says. "And they asked me to host it." Last year, the program debuted from Cincinnati and was shown in six cities. Within the year it became syndicated in 24 markets, and this fall the show moved to Chicago and jumped to 95 mar- kets, including Detroit. Although he has only been on the national air-