Sunday, November 6, 2011

Andrew Aitken "Andy" Rooney (January 14, 1919 – November 4, 2011)


Andy Rooney at his desk in 1978, his first year as a commentator on "60 Minutes"

By Bob Schieffer - CBS News

By now you have heard Andy Rooney died. When he retired last month, I talked about the thousands of things he said on television.

But for me, his lasting achievement is his book, "My War," a memoir of his days as a combat correspondent during World War II.

"My War" by Andy Rooney (Public Affairs Books)

It is at once a coming-of-age story, an adventure, and most of all, a book of wisdom.

"Most of us," he wrote, "use only a portion of our brains as we live our lives at half-speed and on schedule - sleeping when we are not tired, eating when we are not hungry." But war, he wrote, changes all that, "causing people to do things they didn't know they could do."

Yet, he didn't go to war movies, he wrote, because he didn't consider war entertainment.

He described war for those who survive as an experience like no other, but he said, "I've tried to empty my brain of those memories by writing them down."

For all his eccentricities, Andy was a wise man whose work in the age of texting and thoughtless instant discourse reminds us that the English language is among our most precious assets, and properly used, one of the most powerful weapons in the American arsenal.

Andy, you were one of a kind.

Cedar's Take: Andy Rooney, like Mike Royko and Paul Harvey was indeed one of a kind. They don't make these kind of guys any more. I'm not sure why. I'll leave that for another day. But they as well as so many other great commentators are gone. The last of the breed. Television, Newspaper, and Radio will never be the same.

Cedar's Bonus: New York Times - Andy Rooney, a Cranky Voice of CBS, Dies at 92 is here.

Cedar's Extra Credit: The Wall Street Journal's take on Andy Rooney's retirement is
here.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Sad Andy Rooney died. Interesting the cause of death has been shrouded in secrecy.

Rea Road Neighborhood Coalition said...

I don't think Mr. Rooney liked being a public figure. But go figure, he lived in New York, he was outspoken, liked by many and was rather short frumpy and old.

To say he stood out in a crowd would be an understatement.

Even after 92 years I really expected he'd still be around just to poke us in the eye every once and a while.

Thanks Andy!

Anonymous said...

saw somewhere else, sorry can't remember writer:
"Andy Rooney died today after a long battle with kids today"

RIP