Australian radio broadcaster John Laws has announced he is retiring from
broadcasting and will leave the nation's airwaves by November.
Laws, 71, has announced his decision live on-air during his morning
radio program on Sydney's 2UE which is syndicated nationally to more
than 2 million people on the Southern Cross Broadcasting network.
Word of Laws's imminent announcement spread shortly after 9am, forcing
the man nicknamed "Golden Tonsils" - who is famous for his "Keep the
dream alive" slogan - to break the news during his program.
"We have certainly been able to keep the dream alive. Sadly we haven't
been able to keep the secret alive.
"But given there are television crews all over the place and
newspapers on the telephone and prime ministers ringing and all sorts
of extraordinary things happening I assumed that the secret was out."
He has said he has loved every minute of his long career. "I've known
nothing else. It's been the second great love of my life, apart from
my family.
[EDIT]
http://www.news.com.au/adelaidenow/story/0,22606,21962276-5005962,00.html
Laws' views may not have been to everyone's taste, but he always seemed sincere,
which was not something you could always say about his rivals in Australian radio.
[EDIT-post truncated because originating material is copy-protected. Unauthorized use of copyrighted content is in violation of Radio-Info's TOS. URL provided by Radio-Info as a courtesy to other users.]
broadcasting and will leave the nation's airwaves by November.
Laws, 71, has announced his decision live on-air during his morning
radio program on Sydney's 2UE which is syndicated nationally to more
than 2 million people on the Southern Cross Broadcasting network.
Word of Laws's imminent announcement spread shortly after 9am, forcing
the man nicknamed "Golden Tonsils" - who is famous for his "Keep the
dream alive" slogan - to break the news during his program.
"We have certainly been able to keep the dream alive. Sadly we haven't
been able to keep the secret alive.
"But given there are television crews all over the place and
newspapers on the telephone and prime ministers ringing and all sorts
of extraordinary things happening I assumed that the secret was out."
He has said he has loved every minute of his long career. "I've known
nothing else. It's been the second great love of my life, apart from
my family.
[EDIT]
http://www.news.com.au/adelaidenow/story/0,22606,21962276-5005962,00.html
Laws' views may not have been to everyone's taste, but he always seemed sincere,
which was not something you could always say about his rivals in Australian radio.
[EDIT-post truncated because originating material is copy-protected. Unauthorized use of copyrighted content is in violation of Radio-Info's TOS. URL provided by Radio-Info as a courtesy to other users.]