Another great one left us the other day.
Ted Turner took his father's billboard business and morphed it into one of the world's most well known and famous media conglomerates, headlined by CNN, TBS, TNT and several other acronyms.
Turner said that he came up with the idea for CNN because after working a long day at the billboard business, he would come home at all hours, wanted to find out the latest happenings in the news, and couldn't find any news programs to watch to fill that need.
He initially bought a low-fi UHF station, but that station turned into TBS, "America's Channel" for a while.
Like him or hate him, Turner was a broadcast pioneer, became a billionaire from it, and his ideas helped to spread the popularity of cable TV across the nation.
And like I normally do when writing about prominent people who have passed, I am now going to talk about another side of Turner, something that you probably won't read anywhere else but here.
Sports was one way he made TBS popular, and before I get to the gist of his sports offerings, let me tell you about the influence he had on America's view of professional wrestling.
Again, you can like him or hate him, but Turner saw a great opportunity to expand TBS's reach in the heartland--and elsewhere--by incorporating pro wrestling into the superstation's programming, and it clicked on all cylinders.
Like what Vince McMahon did with WWWF/WWF/WWE, Turner went national with his pro wrestling show, making household names of Ric Flair, Sting, the Freebirds, Missy Hyatt, Dusty Rhodes, and many others, pretty much at the same time that McMahon was expanding his organization's reach across the nation and the world.
Pro wrestling would not be the phenomenon it is today without Turner and McMahon, and Turner's legacy was pointed out on the Wednesday night AEW broadcast, when Sting came back to the ring to say a few words about Turner.
Like I said, Turner had his detractors, and CNN became a flashpoint.
Many said it didn't provide the full news story, only the part of the news story that they wanted to be told.
They leaned firmly left, still do, and Turner was probably the first TV or radio broadcaster to put out a list of words that his talent could not say on the air, leaning towards the politically correct way of thinking.
But funny, the baseball team he owned, the Atlanta Braves--a team that he actually managed for one day amidst a managerial firing--has a name that is thought to be politically incorrect by so many of the PC Police's woke squad--
But he never changed their name, so yes, he was pretty inconsistent in his thinking.
But his wokeness spread far beyond that list that he drew up.
My local Newsday newspaper, in the Turner obituary that they ran yesterday, refused to mention the Braves by name, referring to them only as the team that Turner owned.
In fact, in relating the baseball scores in its sports section, it listed the names of all the teams that played--except the Braves.
Newsday referred to them as "Atlanta," not by their name.
Go figure.
So again, you could either love him or hate him--this love/hate relationship reached its peak when Turner married the ultra-controversial Jane Fonda--but you had to acknowledge that he was a true broadcast pioneer.
And here is something else that you won't read anywhere else related to Turner.
The late John Sterling--who we spoke about just the other day--is tied to Turner, because Sterling was the Atlanta Braves' ... err ... Atlanta team's announcer during the early 1980s, or right before he became the New York Yankees' radio voice.
So say what you want about Turner, but he knew what he was doing, at least most of the time.
R.I.P. Ted Turner, you made something out of next to nothing, and your legacy will live on forever.
As for myself, I have my horror show week coming up, and it begins with me seeing two doctors on Monday--
And it ends with a major procedure i have to go through on Friday.
So for the coming week, I might be in and out of the Blog the entire time, but I will try to be here as much as I can.
Have a great weekend, and I will next speak to you when I can.
I will just have to put a "brave face" on it all.
And notice, I used the word "brave."
There is nothing PC or woke about me--
So why not?






