While he served in several capacities with the station, he is best remembered for
The Tom York Morning Show, which was the station's primary morning show for 32 years. During the early 1960s,
Fannie Flagg served as his co-host. The show was so popular that when WBRC's parent network,
ABC, premiered its own morning show,
Good Morning America, WBRC refused to carry it since it would have required moving York's show to another timeslot or canceling it altogether. WBRC began airing the second hour of
GMA in the early 1980s and only began airing the entire show in 1989 after York retired. After retiring from broadcast television, York was a weekly columnist for his hometown newspaper,
The Hoover Gazette, from 2006 until shortly before the newspaper's demise in 2007. York won a regional
Emmy Award in 1995. He was the
master of ceremonies for the induction ceremonies for the
Alabama Sports Hall of Fame for more than a quarter century and was himself inducted into ASHOF in 1996. He wrote a book about the ASHOF in 2001. He was the father of American author and conservative columnist
Byron York. == Death ==