Don Imus, Legendary 'Imus in the Morning' Host, Dies at 79
He was not on the list.
The controversial radio personality passed away on Friday
morning at Baylor Scott and White Medical Center in College Station, Texas.
Don Imus, the radio personality whose insult humor and
savage comedy catapulted him to a long-lasting and controversial career, has
died at 79. His three-hour radio program, Imus in the Morning, was widely
popular, especially with the over 25-male demographic.
Imus died Friday morning at Baylor Scott and White Medical
Center in College Station, Texas, after being hospitalized on Christmas Eve, a
representative said. The cause of death was not disclosed.
Mike and the Mad Dog host Mike Francesca tweeted Friday,
"Shocking news on the passing of my friend, Don Imus. He will long be
remembered as one of the true giants in the history of radio."
Morning Joe host Joe Scarborough added, "Morning Joe
obviously owes its format to Don Imus. No one else could have gotten away with
that much talk on cable news. Thanks for everything, Don." Morning Joe
started as a fill-in for Imus in the Morning after Imus was fired from MSNBC in
2007.
Imus in the Morning, which debuted on WNBC-AM in New York in
1971, most recently reached radio listeners via Citadel Media and was simulcast
on the Fox Business Network.
Imus was loved or hated for his caustic loudmouth. Outspoken
in an age of political correctness, his often coarse satire offended
sensibilities. Yet his listeners included those whom he often ridiculed. His
call-in guests included President Clinton, Dan Rather, Tim Russert, Bill
Bradley, David Dinkins, Rudy Giuliani and political analyst Jeff Greenfield,
who once remarked, “He's out there talking the way most of us talk when we're
not in public.”
He sparked national outcry in 2007 when he made derogatory,
racist remarks about the Rutgers women's basketball team. CBS Radio and MSNBC
then dropped his show.
He rebounded by signing a multiyear contract with the Fox
Business Network in 2009 to simulcast Imus in the Morning from 6-9 a.m., with
Fox anchors appearing during the program.
Imus battled a lifelong addiction to drugs and alcohol. In
2009, he was diagnosed with prostate cancer.
Imus was often compared to syndicated shock jock Howard
Stern, who also had a stint on WNBC radio early in his career, and they
frequently appeared on each other's shows. Although Imus could not match
Stern's audience in terms of numbers, advertisers were well aware of Imus'
better-educated and richer demographic, often preferring him.
Imus in the Morning sandwiched music around his in-your-face
commentary in which he mocked authority figures and ridiculed social and
political problems. His no-holds-barred humor, including gags and pranks,
spurred the onset of “shock jocks” like Stern. A mix of rock ’n’ roll, raunchy
humor, call-ins and hard barbs, Imus in the Morning was a huge hit.
He also performed stand-up for a time, garnering favorable
reviews from such unlikely reviewers as The New York Times.
An active philanthropist, Imus and his wife, Deirdre,
founded the Imus Ranch in 1999, where each summer children with cancer could
enjoy the outdoors.
John Donald Imus Jr., was born on July 23, 1940, in
Riverside, California. He was raised in Prescott, Arizona, where his family
owned a large ranch. He dropped out of high school to join the U.S. Marines and
after basic training won a chair in the band.
Following discharge, he worked at an array of odd jobs:
window dresser (he was fired for staging mannequin striptease shows), uranium
miner and railroad brakeman, where he suffered a serious neck injury and won a
large cash settlement.
While recovering, he set his sights on becoming a disc jockey,
ostensibly to play his own music on the airwaves. He moved to Los Angeles,
enrolled in a Hollywood broadcasting school and landed his first deejay job at
KUTY, a station in Palmdale, California.
During an eight-month stint there, he developed a skill for
comic patter and moved to KJOY in Stockton, California, where he staged
satirical social and political gags, including an Eldridge Cleaver look-alike
contest when the Black Panther was on the lam. His station manager did not see
the humor, and he was fired.
He moved to KXOA in Sacramento, where his satirical hijinks
were appreciated by the station manager who counseled him that his humor would
be more lethal and less likely to attract legal action. Intent on becoming more
lethal, Imus created a slew of satirical characters, including the huckster
Rev. Billy Sol Hargus.
His on-air antics infuriated authorities, including the FCC,
which was not amused when he phoned a fast-food outlet and ordered 1,200
hamburgers and requested a bizarre array of toppings. The gag resulted in a
ruling that deejays must identify themselves when making on-air calls. The
clash with government authority, not surprisingly, boosted his ratings, and
KXOA was No. 1 in Sacramento while he was there.
Imus is survived by his wife, Deirdre; sons Wyatt and Lt.
Zachary Don Cates; and daughters Nadine, Ashley, Elizabeth and Toni.
"Don loved and adored Deirdre, who unconditionally
loved him back, loved spending his time watching Wyatt become a highly skilled,
champion rodeo rider and calf roper and loved and supported Zachary, who first
met the Imus family at age 10 when he participated in the Imus Ranch program
for kids with cancer, having battled and overcome leukemia, eventually becoming
a member of the Imus family and Don and Deirdre’s second son," his family
said in a statement.
The family will hold a private service in the coming days
and asks for donations to be made to the Imus Ranch Foundation.
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