More Reads On The Late Jack Whitaker
/My original post was here but some wonderful tributes have rolled in to celebrate the life, work and times of Jack Whitaker.
Frank Fitzpatrick of Whitaker’s home town Philadelphia Inquirer with a sensational remembrance, including this:
As one of sports broadcasting’s first and best essayists, Whitaker, who died Sunday at 95, introduced elegance and erudition into the genre. His work was infused by a broad vocabulary, a tweedy wardrobe, and a thoughtful demeanor.
But while he added a professorial air to decades’ worth of telecasts from Super Bowls, Masters, Olympics and Kentucky Derbys, the Germantown native never forgot that he once stood before a camera dressed like a gunslinger.
“It wasn’t my finest hour,” Whitaker told the Inquirer in 2007, “but you did what you had to do and you hoped it made you better.”
Richard Goldstein filed another superb New York Times obituary, writes:
But he was perhaps best known for his essays about sports, inspired by writers he admired like Alistair Cooke and Heywood Hale Broun. He received an Emmy in 1979 as “outstanding sports personality” and a Lifetime Achievement Award at the Sports Emmy Awards in 2012. “I know that I’m regarded as The Talking Head,” he told Sports Illustrated in 1977. “I’d like to be exactly that and say something that people will remember or get excited about. I’d like to bring sports into the thinking process.”
Bill Goodykoontz of the Arizona Republic respected Whitaker’s talent as a writer, but he said the combination of that talent with his voice prompted him to wonder if we’ve lost one of the last broadcasting icons:
But, like with most broadcasters, it was his voice that mattered most, in tone and in authority.
Dick Enberg had one, too. So did Vin Scully, who’s still alive but stopped calling baseball games in 2016.
Who are the voices who will take their place? Not as announcers, whether calling a came or providing analysis.
Who will replace them as icons? Anyone?
We discussed Whitaker this morning on Morning Drive.