TOUR HOSTS

RADIODAYS EUROPE 2026

 

CURT ANDERSON

For Curt Anderson, flights across an ocean are as standard as trips to the post office. He’s frequented over sixty countries, quietly becoming one of the most travelled musicians in the world, going through passports like they’re packs of gum.

He carved a path of his own as an independent musician, performing more than 100 concerts a year across six continents and saw radio interviews turn into repeated guest-host spots as he quickly became a friend to radio stations and their listeners. Grassroots followings in Australia, Hong Kong, Brazil, United Kingdom, Switzerland, Senegal, Kenya, Thailand, the Philippines, and others helped all of his radio singles easily climb into the Top 5 on airplay charts.

He’s the founder of Arrivals Club—a company built on encouraging and empowering the good in humanity through travel—living out the mission as host & producer of The Adventure: Lifechanging Travel. But whether he’s on screen, on stage, on an airplane, or home with his wife and kids, Curt would tell you he wants to be known for the way he cares about others.

JARROD GRÄETZ

Jarrod Gräetz, founder of The Äudience Company and partner in Arrivals Club, has spent three decades shaping the radio industry’s digital future. From engaging audiences as an on-air host to leading teams as CEO of PositiveMedia in Melbourne and Vice President of Streaming & International Growth for K-LOVE & Air1, the world’s largest Christian radio networks, he’s made a real impact across radio markets in the USA, Australia, and the Middle East — helping stations grow audiences, innovate digitally, and connect with listeners in meaningful ways.

Along the way, Jarrod has lived on three continents and spent countless hours traveling — yet he still can’t decide which airport lounge feels most like home. A Virgin Australia fan, Star Alliance loyalist, and Hilton Honors regular, he believes travel isn’t about chasing points or miles — it’s about bringing out the best in humanity, one flight, one smile, and one connection at a time. When not working hard on the ground or at 40,000 feet, you’ll probably find him on a beach, pretending his sunscreen is part of the carry-on allowance and plotting his next adventure.