
Bob Law served as vice president of programming at New York's WWRL for three years. Prior to that, he was the host of Night Talk, the nation's first nationally broadcasted daily black talk radio show for twenty years. Prior to that he served as public affairs director and became program director at WWRL in the 70's and 80's during the glory days of Black radio.
In 2007 Bob hosted a midday talk show on WURD AM in Philadelphia, where he was also a national programming consultant.
He is the founder of the National Respect Yourself Youth Organization, which established a national network of Respect Yourself Saturday Academies, as well as the renowned forty-voice Respect Yourself Youth Choir. The Respect Yourself Youth Organization has operated a baseball little league, a summer entrepreneurship program helping youngsters start their own summer businesses, and a film project in conjunction with New York's Black Spectrum Theatre which introduces youngsters to the art of filmmaking.
The Respect Yourself Organization was a lead organization in the anti- violence, Increase the Peace Campaign in New York City. Bob is currently one of the lead organizers of the national Save Our Sons Campaign, an anti-violence movement that addresses gang violence in the Black community.
Bob founded the Namaskar Capital Assistance Program which developed and managed a loan program for Black-owned small businesses. Throughout the 1990's his Agenda 2000 Health, Business and Personal Development Seminars were sold out events. Bob is the author of Voices for the Future , published by African American Images in Chicago. Mr. Law is also an entrepreneur. He is the owner of Namaskar, Bob Law's Health and Wellness Shop, and the recently opened Bob Law's Seafood Café, both in Brooklyn, New York.
Bob remains a community activist. In 1995 he served as the New York State Chair of the Million Man March and was host during the historic event. He also spearheaded the class action lawsuit against the New York City Board of Education for the mis-education of African American youth. Mr. Law remains active as one of the principle PowerNomics organizers, a campaign for economic development for Black America.
Bob Law is currently chairman of the board of The Black Spectrum Theatre, and has begun a new career in filmmaking. Disappearing Voices – a joint venture with Black Waxx Multimedia – is his first film project.