Paul Harvey was born Sept. 4, 1918, and died Feb. 28, 2009. For more than 50 years, he captivated the American people with his radio broadcast of news and comment and storytelling. Every morning and ...
Guest host Robert Smith shares some parting words from Paul Harvey, spoken Nov. 22, 1963, the day John F. Kennedy was assassinated: "It is for us that one must grieve tonight — for a generation which ...
Today, fans of radio are mourning the loss of a legend. Paul Harvey died yesterday at age 90 at his home in Phoenix, Arizona. For more than 75 years, he told stories on the radio, 50 years as a ...
Podcaster and former Dirty Jobs host Mike Rowe stars in Something to Stand For, a patriotic documentary film in which he tells unknown stories about legendary figures in American history. Reason's ...
Now, your letters. On the February 15th installment of our month-long series to mark the 200th birthday of Charles Darwin, we went to the University of Kansas to explore the struggles devout ...
Rush Limbaugh single handedly revived AM radio. In 1988, his syndicated talk show brought people back to a place they had left for the FM dial. AM radio once was all we had. The advantage of the AM ...
The New York Times Audio app is home to journalism and storytelling and provides news, depth and serendipity. It is available to Times news subscribers on iOS. If you haven’t already, download the app ...
In 1964, radio personality Paul Harvey introduced America to his essay “If I Were the Devil.” While framed as a “what would” the devil do, Harvey’s words were written in the reality of “what was” and ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results