Proud FM nails down afternoon format

Mike Chalut is your happiest servant


“I don’t know if you’ll think this is cheesy or not,” says 32-year-old VIP host Mike Chalut, “but I do kind of want to be like Ryan Seacrest.”

Having worked as host at upscale restaurants like Brassaii, MoRoCo and the Ultra Supper Club, he is curiously pleased with having once been described as “the number one servant in Canada.” After all, he’s taken care of celebs like Paris Hilton, Drake, Justin Bieber and David Beckham.

But with his new role at Proud FM as host of the Mike Chalut Show, he might now sincerely be the happiest man in Toronto.

In person, Chalut is infectiously upbeat. The gay and lesbian–themed radio station is no doubt hoping that quality in the afternoon will ease the fan backlash it suffered after May 5, when disagreements between management and the on-air talent led to the abrupt firing of all four live, on-air hosts — including Shaun Proulx and Deb Pearce.

“I’m not replacing Shaun, not at all!” Chalut says. “They are two different shows.”

Indeed, while Proulx would mix discussions of crystal meth or HIV issues into the daily chatter, Chalut admits to proceeding with caution.

Take his interview with Tracey Sandilands, in which he thanked the Pride Toronto executive director “for bringing the community together” after it rescinded the ban on political messaging it had put in place to begin with.

“I was way too new!” he says. “It was an intense, intense situation, and for me to take a political stance after I’d only been there a week? I couldn’t do that.”

Chalut insisted on making the interview “positive for all sides” because, he says, “Pride is the happiest time in this city, and after the G20 nightmare, we needed a good time.”

Making no apologies, Chalut asks, “Am I a positive, upbeat person? Absolutely! It’s what I’ve been able to brand myself as, and it’s what I believe in. It stems from my father and how I was raised, and as cheesy as it sounds, it’s who I am.”

A former editor of the late, lamented fab magazine, Scott has been writing for Xtra since 2007 on a variety of topics in news pieces, interviews, blogs, reviews and humour pieces. He lives on the Danforth with his boyfriend of 12 years, a manic Jack Russell Terrier, a well-stocked mini-bar and a shelf of toy Daleks.

Read More About:
Activism, Culture, Power, News, Toronto, Media, Pride, Arts

Keep Reading

An image of the cover of 'No God but Us' against a zoomed portion of the cover featuring a lit candle and butterflies with eyes on their wings against a black background

‘No God but Us’ delves into the parallel universes created by war and displacement

Bobuq Sayed’s debut novel considers borders and ethics through the eyes of two queer Afghan lovers
Bentley Robles

Bentley Robles wants a brotherhood of gay pop stars

The yellow-haired singer talks rising stardom, Zara Larsson and dating while gay-famous
Vivek Shraya being kissed by a man

Vivek Shraya is hot, blond and hitting the dance floor

The Toronto multi-hyphenate’s new album, “VIVICA,” shirks respectability politics for a sensual, high-gloss exploration of queer and trans desire
Morphine Love Dion, Dawn and Morgan McMichaels

‘RuPaul’s Drag Race All Stars 11’ plays it safe for the first bracket—until the very last minute

Already, we see the consequences of only two queens moving forward from each bracket to the semifinals
Advertisement