Actually, I DO have something to add:
I don't care who you are or why you're here--I'm assuming you have some kind of interest in Atlanta/Georgia radio, and any interest is appreciated. Really, thanks, so please indulge me. It's about old stuff, kinda historical, but at the same time important.
So, can I get you to take a deep breath and reflect for a second on people like Gary Corry, and the influence they've had on people you currently hear on the air?
Please understand that Gary Corry is IMPORTANT to Georgia Radio for so many reasons. Important so much that this particular Atlanta board wouldn't exist without him. He was a mentor to so MANY people who are commented about on this board. He was a supporter to those people. And, he came from a generation likely NOT to be repeated, which is: a talent-oriented manager who really cared about developing his people in terms of their on-air presentation. That's a unique thing, not so easy to replicate today.
Quick story: I remember my first meeting with my on-air talent team at KABL in San Francisco in 1993, where I'd just been named PD. This is market #4. No one on the staff had received ANY kind of feedback, EVER, from ANY PD they'd ever worked with: so much so that the poor midday guy showed up for his first aircheck session in a SUIT!! He was terrified. Now, understand, this guy had done a great job for the station, sounded great, and had done national Safeway supermarket radio ads for 20+ years. In other words, a talent. But, he was terrified that the new PD would tear him apart...the poor guy had NEVER had any feedback, at all, for years!
How this relates to Gary: there's no way in hell that anyone who worked for him wouldn't know how they were doing. And, they all LOVED HIM. He'd tell them how/what/why and they'd buy it, and get better. No better talent evaluator/motivator ever lived.
This, plus he was simply a first-class man. He was married to his wife for 50+ years, a devoted family man, an artist (as in, painting and writing) and all in all a marvelous man. And, in his latter years, he'd send me humorous, thoughtful, and supportive messages on Facebook.
What further can I tell you? He was the best.