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Author Topic: RIP KOMO's Ray Ramsey  (Read 4427 times)

Offline Elkaholic daWg

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RIP KOMO's Ray Ramsey
« on: May 27, 2011, 09:17:53 AM »
  Those of you that are native to the Seattle/Spokane area will remember him as Steve Pool's predecessor, and his earlier job at KREM. Another Northwest icon gone. Hang on JP!
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http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20110526/NEWS03/705269840

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Published: Thursday, May 26, 2011

Ray Ramsey, former longtime weatherman on Channel 4, dies at 87
Associated Press
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SEATTLE — Longtime KOMO weatherman Ray Ramsey has died at age 87.

The fast-talking, wisecracking, plaid-jacket-wearing Ramsey was a fixture in Seattle-area homes from 1965 to 1985. He died Sunday, according to KOMO-TV. The cause of death wasn't released.

Ramsey sprinkled invented words and jokes into his broadcast, and sometimes people could hear the camera crew laughing in the background.

"Dad used to say it was all about personality, personality, personality — that's what people are drawn to," his daughter Jodi Lien told The Seattle Times.

"No one, NO ONE, could talk faster than Ray, not even those people they use for disclaimers at the end of car commercials," KOMO-TV reporter Bryan Johnson wrote in an email. "The amazing thing was that although nobody can understand the car commercials, everyone could understand Ray."

Ramsey was born in Spokane, an only child raised by a single mother, Lien said. His first broadcasting job was on Spokane's KREM radio.

In 1964, he and his wife, Jo, moved to Seattle. He worked as a rock 'n' roll deejay at KOL before moving on to do the weather for KOMO's TV and radio broadcasts.

Sometimes, Ramsey started the day on the radio from home at 6 a.m., then taught at the Bellevue junior high before heading to KOMO in Seattle in the late afternoon, where he would stay at the station until after the 11 p.m. news, said video editor Joe Wren.

Steve Pool, who succeeded Ramsey at KOMO, called him "Dad." He said Ramsey was one of the most supportive — and genuine — people he's known in broadcasting. "There was no difference in his personality on-air and off. If there's anything I learned from him, it's that: Just be yourself," Pool said.

Ramsey slipped comfortably into low-key retirement.

"When he walked off the set he was done. He didn't have any desire to stay in the spotlight at all; he was happy to be out of it," Jodi Lien said.

He enjoyed gardening, crossword puzzles and spending time with his wife, particularly in one of their favorite places, Reno, Nev. Ramsey liked to gamble, his daughter said, and loved to play the ponies at Longacres, now Emerald Downs. He even had a race named after him, said his daughter, the "Ray Ramsey Purse."

___

Information from: The Seattle Times, http://www.seattletimes.com
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Offline Alchase

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Re: RIP KOMO's Ray Ramsey
« Reply #1 on: May 27, 2011, 11:57:31 AM »
Sometimes, Ramsey started the day on the radio from home at 6 a.m., then taught at the Bellevue junior high before heading to KOMO in Seattle in the late afternoon, where he would stay at the station until after the 11 p.m. news, said video editor Joe Wren.

Ray was my 7Th grade Language Arts/Social Studies teacher at Odle Jr High in Bellevue. He took our class on a Field trip to watch how they shoot a news program. He would do the morning news on KOMO, than teach, then go back for the 6:00 and 11:00 news on KOMO TV.
He was a great teacher, he went out of his way to make LA/SS classes interesting. And he really cared about his kids.
Sorry to see him go.
 
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Offline MikeWalking

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Re: RIP KOMO's Ray Ramsey
« Reply #2 on: May 27, 2011, 12:17:03 PM »
R.I.P.   KOMO was the default favorite in our home.  When we moved into the Wedgewood neighborhod of Seattle we found ourselves 3 doors over from Howard Ramaley  KOMO cameraman/photographer occasional tour guide..

 


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