One of the most distinctive voices on radio has been silenced:
CHICAGO (AP) — Paul Harvey, the news commentator and talk-radio pioneer whose staccato style made him one of the nation’s most familiar voices, died Saturday in Arizona, according to ABC Radio Networks. He was 90.
Harvey died surrounded by family at a hospital in Phoenix, where he had a winter home, said Louis Adams, a spokesman for ABC Radio Networks, where Harvey worked for more than 50 years. No cause of death was immediately available.
Harvey had been forced off the air for several months in 2001 because of a virus that weakened a vocal cord. But he returned to work in Chicago and was still active as he passed his 90th birthday. His death comes less than a year after that of his wife and longtime producer, Lynne.
”My father and mother created from thin air what one day became radio and television news,” Paul Harvey Jr. said in a statement. ”So in the past year, an industry has lost its godparents and today millions have lost a friend.”
Known for his resonant voice and trademark delivery of ”The Rest of the Story,” Harvey had been heard nationally since 1951, when he began his ”News and Comment” for ABC Radio Networks.
If you listened to AM Radio for any significant period of time, it was hard to miss Paul Harvey’s voice. He was on at least twice a day with his “News and Comment” segments and, usually in the evening, with “The Rest of the Story,” which sometimes conveyed little known, and interesting, facts about historical figures and celebrities.
He’ll be missed simply because they don’t make guys like that anymore.

