Mick Foley
Mick Foley is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of several acclaimed memoirs and children’s books, a WWE Hall-of-Famer, and a lifelong lover of Christmas. Follow him at @RealMickFoley.
I keep reading all the beautiful condolences that people are writing about how much a part of their lives were effected by listening to him over the years.
The Imus Ranch Foundation was formed to donate 100% of all donations previously devoted to The Imus Ranch for Kids with Cancer to various other charities whose work and missions compliment those of the ranch. The initial donation from The Imus Ranch Foundation was awarded to Tackle Kids Cancer, a program of The HackensackUMC Foundation and the New York Giants.
Please send donations to The Imus Ranch Foundation here:
Imus Ranch
PO Box 1709
Brenham, Texas 77833
Children’s Health Defense joins parents of vaccine-injured children and advocates for health freedom in remembering the life of Don Imus, a media maverick in taking on uncomfortable topics that most in the mainstream press avoid or shut down altogether. His commitment to airing all sides of controversial issues became apparent to the autism community in 2005 and 2006 as the Combating Autism Act (CAA) was being discussed in Congress. The Act, which was ultimately signed into law by George W. Bush in December of 2006, created unprecedented friction among parents of vaccine-injured children and members of Congress; parents insisted that part of the bill’s billion-dollar funding be directed towards environmental causes of autism including vaccines, while most U.S. Senators and Representatives tried to sweep any such connections under the rug.
Don Imus, Divisive Radio Shock Jock Pioneer, Dead at 79 - Imus in the Morning host earned legions of fans with boundary-pushing humor, though multiple accusations of racism and sexism followed him throughout his career By Kory Grow RollingStone
Don Imus Leaves a Trail of Way More Than Dust
By Michael Riedel - The one and only time I had a twinge of nerves before appearing on television was when I made my debut in 2011 on “Imus in the Morning” on the Fox Business Channel. I’d been listening to Don Imus, who died Friday at 79, since the 1990s as an antidote the serious (bordering on the pompous) hosts on National Public Radio. I always thought it would be fun to join Imus and his gang — news anchor Charles McCord, producer Bernard McGuirk, comedian Rob Bartlett — in the studio, flinging insults back and forth at one another. And now I had my chance. I was invited on to discuss to discuss “Spider-Man, Turn Off the Dark,” the catastrophic Broadway musical that injured cast members daily.
Mick Foley is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of several acclaimed memoirs and children’s books, a WWE Hall-of-Famer, and a lifelong lover of Christmas. Follow him at @RealMickFoley.
Anthony Mason, 59, is host of CBS This Morning: Saturday and CBS News’ Senior National Correspondent. He is also a frequent contributor of cultural stories to the CBS News Sunday Morning broadcast. Mason has spent more than 35 years as a television journalist. In three decades as a correspondent for CBS News, he has reported from more than 30 countries and won nine Emmy Awards.
Born in New York City, Mason moved to Tulsa, Oklahoma after graduating from Georgetown University in 1980 to take a job at KJRH-TV. That led to stints at WCAU in Philadelphia and WCBS in New York, He joined CBS News in 1986.
Assigned to the London Bureau from 1987-1990, Mason traveled extensively for the next four years. He went into Afghanistan with the Mujahedeen guerillas to cover the Soviet pullout; reported from Pakistan on the assassination of General Zia ul Haq and the rise of Benazir Bhutto; and went to the front in the Iran-Iraq war to witness Saddam Hussein’s use of chemical weapons on the Kurds. He also covered the bombing of Pan Am flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland.
In 1989, he was the first journalist to report on the exodus of East German refugees through Hungary as the Iron Curtain began to crack. He followed the story to Czechoslovakia and Poland as their communist governments collapsed. His work earned Mason the prestigious DuPont Columbia Award.
From 1991 to 1993, Mason was CBS News’ chief Moscow correspondent, where he reported on the coup attempt against Mikhail Gorbachev in August 1991, the rise of Boris Yeltsin and the demise of the Soviet Union, coverage which won him an Emmy Award.
Mason was named Business Correspondent in 1998. His series, “Life and Debt in America,” which aired on the CBS Evening News in early 2008, underscored some of the problems that ultimately led to the financial crisis and won him and another Emmy. At the end of 2008, the business website Marketwatch.com named him the “Broadcast journalist of the year.” Marketwatch.com’s media critic wrote that Mason “personified a dying art in the media today: explanatory journalism. Night after night, Mason took pains to help his viewers understand what was unfolding on Wall Street and in Washington – and, most important, why they should care.”
As a regular contributor to CBS News Sunday Morning, Mason hosts the program’s annual Money show. He has also profiled politicians (Bill Clinton), business leaders (Henry Paulson), and musicians (Bruce Springsteen, Paul McCartney, Keith Richards.) His series on crime writers (he profiled more than 40 of them over a decade) won the Raven award from the Mystery Writers of America.
For the past decade, Mason has also been involved in election coverage for CBS providing exit poll analysis during the primaries and on election night. Anthony Mason is a graduate of St. George’s School and Georgetown University (B.A. 1980) He and his wife, Christina have 3 children and live in New York City.
Bernard J. McGuirk is the executive producer of the Imus in the Morning radio program. He was born and raised in the South Bronx, New York, where he worked in his younger years as a taxi driver.