Current:Home > reviewsTom Watson, longtime Associated Press broadcast editor in Kentucky, has died at age 85 -FinTechWorld
Tom Watson, longtime Associated Press broadcast editor in Kentucky, has died at age 85
View
Date:2025-04-22 19:55:15
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Tom Watson, a hall of fame broadcast reporter whose long career of covering breaking news included decades as a broadcast editor for The Associated Press in Kentucky, has died. He was 85.
Watson’s baritone voice and sharp wit were fixtures in the AP’s Louisville bureau, where he wrote broadcast reports and cultivated strong connections with reporters at radio and TV stations spanning the state. His coverage ranged from compiling lists of weather-related school closings to filing urgent reports on big, breaking stories in his home state, maintaining a calm, steady demeanor regardless of the story.
Watson died Saturday at Baptist Health in Louisville, according to Hall-Taylor Funeral Home in his hometown of Taylorsville, 34 miles (55 kilometers) southeast of Louisville. No cause of death was given.
Thomas Shelby Watson was inducted into the Kentucky Journalism Hall of Fame in 2009. His 50-year journalism career began at WBKY at the University of Kentucky, according to his hall of fame biography.
Watson led news departments at WAKY in Louisville and at a radio station in St. Louis before starting his decades-long AP career. Under his leadership, a special national AP award went to WAKY for contributing 1,000 stories used on the wire in one year, his hall of fame biography said. Watson and his WAKY team also received a National Headliner Award for coverage of a chemical plant explosion, it said.
At the AP, Watson started as state broadcast editor in late 1973 and retired in mid-2009. Known affectionately as “Wattie” to his colleagues, he staffed the early shift in the Louisville bureau, writing and filing broadcast and print stories while fielding calls from AP members.
“Tom was an old-school state broadcast editor who produced a comprehensive state broadcast report that members wanted,” said Adam Yeomans, regional director-South for the AP, who as a bureau chief worked with Watson from 2006 to 2009. “He kept AP ahead on many breaking stories.”
Watson also wrote several non-fiction books as well as numerous magazine and newspaper articles. From 1988 through 1993, he operated “The Salt River Arcadian,” a monthly newspaper in Taylorsville.
Genealogy and local history were favorite topics for his writing and publishing. Watson was an avid University of Kentucky basketball fan and had a seemingly encyclopedic memory of the school’s many great teams from the past.
His survivors include his wife, Susan Scholl Watson of Taylorsville; his daughters, Sharon Elizabeth Staudenheimer and her husband, Thomas; Wendy Lynn Casas; and Kelly Thomas Watson, all of Louisville; his two sons, Chandler Scholl Watson and his wife, Nicole, of Taylorsville; and Ellery Scholl Watson of Lexington; his sister, Barbara King and her husband, Gordon, of Louisville; and his nine grandchildren.
Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Hall-Taylor Funeral Home of Taylorsville.
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- The tragic cost of e-waste and new efforts to recycle
- Jenna Lyons’ Holiday Gift Ideas Include an Affordable Lipstick She Used on Real Housewives
- Where to watch 'How the Grinch Stole Christmas' this holiday
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Rescuers begin pulling out 41 workers trapped in a collapsed tunnel in India for 17 days
- What to expect from Mike Elko after Texas A&M hired Duke coach to replace Jimbo Fisher
- Antisemitic incidents in Germany rose by 320% after Hamas attacked Israel, a monitoring group says
- 'Most Whopper
- Beware, NFL coaches: Panthers' job vacancy deserves a major warning label
Ranking
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Relatives and a friend of Israelis kidnapped and killed by Hamas visit Australia’s Parliament House
- 127 Malaysians, suspected to be victims of job scams, rescued from Myanmar fighting
- Indonesia opens the campaign for its presidential election in February
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- Latvia’s chief diplomat pursues NATO’s top job, saying a clear vision on Russia is needed
- Frank Reich lasted 11 games as Panthers coach. It's not even close to shortest NFL tenure
- Man who wounded 14 in Pennsylvania elementary school with machete dies in prison 22 years later
Recommendation
Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
As Dubai prepares for COP28, some world leaders signal they won’t attend climate talks
South Korea delays its own spy satellite liftoff, days after North’s satellite launch
Numerous horses killed in Franktown, Colorado barn fire, 1 person hospitalized
Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
Bears outlast Vikings 12-10 on 4th field goal by Santos after 4 interceptions of Dobbs
US tells Israel any ground campaign in southern Gaza must limit further civilian displacement
Google will delete inactive accounts within days. Here's how to save your data.