Well, not so fast.
Because I never really knew Currie in that mode. I knew Currie primarily as a sports talk show host, with Alan Cutler, Bob Pompiani, Bill DiFabio (I think), Howard Elsin, and Froggy Morris (and I may be forgetting someone) on KDKA's "Sports Huddle" during the mid-to-late '80s.
If you were a Pittsburgh sports fan who lived outside of the area and relied on things like nighttime radio broadcasts of Pirates games for your information before Mark Cuban made that obsolete, the show was a godsend.
It was more sports talk for entertainment than for information, mind you. Currie would play the southern bumpkin more often than not, but also had some funny lines, such as complaining about a professor at Georgia Tech who died in mid-semester when Currie was a student there.
Evidently, the professor who replaced the deceased was much tougher and flunked the entire class.
"That was a dirty trick that guy played on us. Can you imagine- to DIE on us like that?"
He actually made it seem as if a professor would take his own life in order to spite his students!
However, in those years he didn't do much research. You could tell he was commenting off the sports page. And as hockey was growing in popularity in Pittsburgh with Mario Lemieux and the Pens moved to KDKA as their flagship, the former Voice of the North Carolina Tar Heels with a thick southern accent wasn't the guy you were going to embrace for the lastest Penguins news.
To his credit, he was enough of a professional that he could still ask the right questions of his co-host. "Do the Penguins need a scorer for Lemieux or a goon more?" for instance.
At the end, however, you could tell he was winging it. The last gig I knew him to have was pinch-hitting occassionally on WJAS for Bruce Keidan's sports talk show.
A friend of mine complained to me about Currie commenting on "Ki-WAN-a" Carter.
Still, there is a lesson to be learned from Currie. He was cornspun, for sure, but still could be an engaging personality.
And frankly, there aren't that many engaging personalities left in local sports media. With a few exceptions- the TV anchors tend to be androids. The sports talk show hosts and sportswriters appearing on such programs tend to be combative and smart allecky.
While Currie liked to pick fights with his co-hosts, there was an element of fun and teasing to the barbs he'd share with Cutler- similar to the spirit of the ESPN spot where Peyton and Eli Manning are tussling with each other in the hallway behind their family's back.
It's easy to get angry at today's Pittsburgh sports media.
It's hard to get angry at a man who touted the virtues of "Goofer Dust."