• January 9 –
Jack Snow, 62, former
National Football League player and radio announcer (complications from a
staph infection) • February 1 •
Dick Bass, 68, American pro
football player and radio analyst. •
Dick Brooks, 63, American
NASCAR race car driver and radio broadcaster (heart attack) •
Ernest Dudley, 97, British novelist, journalist, screenwriter, actor, radio broadcaster. • February 3 •
Al Lewis, 82, American actor (Grandpa Munster on
The Munsters),
Green Party political candidate, restaurateur, and radio host. • February 27 –
Linda Smith, 48, English comedian. • March 1 –
Harry Browne, 72, American
libertarian writer, politician, U.S. Presidential
candidate and radio talk show host. • June 26 –
Stan Torgerson, 82, radio announcer for
Ole Miss football and basketball games. • July 4 –
John Hinde, 92, Australian film reviewer and journalist. • July 31 –
Paul Eells, 70, voice of the
Arkansas Razorbacks football and basketball for radio and television, car accident. • August 2 –
Robert Eric Wone, 32, American general counsel to
Radio Free Asia (stabbing). • August 25 –
Ross Warneke, 54, Australian television commentator and radio broadcaster (cancer). • September 6 –
Sir John Drummond, 71, former controller of
BBC Radio 3 and
The Proms. • September 26 •
Ralph Story, 86, American radio broadcaster and television show host (
The $64,000 Challenge),
emphysema. •
Iva Toguri D'Aquino, 90, Japanese American broadcaster • September 28 –
George Balzer, 91, wrote for
Jack Benny's radio and TV shows, natural causes. • October 3 –
Gwen Meredith, 98, Australian writer of all 5,795 episodes of the long-running radio serial
Blue Hills, after heart trouble. • October 5 –
Robert Dentith, 29, British radio presenter of "The Unsigned Show" on
Kerrang! Radio. • October 13 –
Bob Lassiter, 61, American
talk radio personality. • October 16 –
Lister Sinclair, 85, Canadian playwright and
CBC broadcaster (
pulmonary embolism) • October 17 –
Christopher Glenn, 68, American
CBS News radio and television news anchor,
liver cancer. • October 20 –
Mary Gay Taylor, 71, radio journalist for
WCBS-AM. • October 21 •
Pye Chamberlayne, 68, American radio journalist (heart attack). •
Paul Walters, 59,
BBC radio and TV producer. • November 23 –
Nick Clarke, 58,
BBC Radio 4 presenter and journalist (cancer). • November 27 •
Casey Coleman, 55,
Cleveland sports broadcaster who won 4 Emmy Awards (
pancreatic cancer). •
Alan "Fluff" Freeman, 79, former
BBC Radio DJ,
natural causes. •
Larry Henderson, 89, first regular broadcaster on
CBC's The National,
natural causes. • December 17 -
Scott Mateer, 46, American
Grammy-nominated songwriter and DJ (complications of
diabetes and
high blood pressure). • December 18 •
Mike Dickin, 63, British
Talksport radio presenter (car accident). •
Mavor Moore, 87, Canadian writer, actor, radio & TV producer and founder of theatrical institutions. •
date unknown •
Steve Crosno, 66, longtime
El Paso radio DJ whose career spanned nearly 50 years (kidney failure). •
Jaye Michael Davis, 62, veteran U.S. radio
deejay (motorcycle accident). •
George Edwards, 87, American radio host for
WQXR. •
Len "Boom" Goldberg, 74, longtime station voice and DJ for
WMMS in
Cleveland, Ohio, and the first station voice for New York City's
WHTZ "Z100" upon their 1983 launch, heart attack. •
Dick Johnson, 69, veteran
Maine radio broadcaster and news reporter, complications of a heart attack. •
Don Lunn, 72, Australian breakfast radio DJ. •
Michael Vestey, 61, former
BBC correspondent and radio critic on
The Spectator magazine. •
Neville Willoughby, 69, Jamaican radio broadcaster (car accident). ==References==