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Don
Imus
MORE IMUS STUFF: Listen
to recent Imus interviews
Lets meet radio personality, Don Imus.
Don Imus and his brother Fred both claim to have had parents, a
mother and a father. I have never seen them. Have you? Parental
absence coupled to the Imus brothers pathological behavior
fetishes, have led to a thesis that both spawned spontaneously in
dust clots accumulated behind the laundromat dryers where Don would
spend many of his formative years.
As nearly as the date can be fixed, Dons birth however
it occurred took place in the late 18-hundreds making him
a contemporary of such noted Americans as Ulysses S. Grant, Rutherford
B. Hayes, Chester A. Arthur and Grover Cleveland
all U.S. Presidents.
Don spent the normal twelve years in public school and emerged
with no formal education
a product of automatic social promotion.
His secondary school experience was limited to carrying a cracked,
faded rubber in his wallet and binding a female classmate to a tree
with electricians tape. He graduated with no honors and no
skills.
Requiring neither, a broadcasting career seemed a natural for the
young Imus and advancements came quickly.
Now widely acclaimed, Imus has been featured on NBCs Today
show, the ABC programs Prime Time Live and 20/20,
and on CBS 48 Hours and 60 Minutes.
He has been a guest of Charlie Rose, David Letterman, and of particular
note, Larry King, in shameless, mutual ass-kissing marathons. In
addition, Don has been, and continues to be, a subject of countless,
pointless print articles. Time magazine once named Don one of the
25 most influential people in America. More recently, Don appeared
on the cover of Newsweek magazine in a feature article titled, The
Importance of Being Imus. Dons loyal radio staff hopes
they will soon see him similarly featured on milk cartons.
In a now celebrated episode dating back to the spring of 1996,
Don shared a stage with President Clinton and first lady Hillary
Rodham Clinton at Washingtons annual Radio and Television
Correspondents Associations dinner. While at the podium, Don
made some observations about Mr. Clinton that some felt were rude
and upsetting to the President, and that tended to leave egg on
Dons face. Little did we know then, that Mr. Clinton was already
well into the business of leaving substances splattered on individuals
with whom he might come into contact; that his discomfort that evening
had its roots in his own wayward DNA, and that Don was &%##$*
Nostradamus. But, thats another story best left to another
biography.
Imus is also a best-selling author and an accomplished amateur
photographer. His novel, Gods Other Son, spent
three months on the New York Times best-seller list driven there
by listeners to his program who bought the @#$#%&# thing to
get him to shut up about it. His most recent book, Two Guys,
Four Corners, a collection of photographs of desert rocks
accompanied by wrenchingly inane captions, rose to number 13 on
the New York Times best-seller list
driven by the same people
who bought Gods Other Son, and for the same reasons.
In September of 1996, the Imus radio program began being simulcast
live on cable network MSNBC for reasons never made clear. The Imus
program, broadcast and televised, features recurring, prominent
guests ranging from Katherine Graham of the Washington Post to bluesman
B.B. King. It also features guests few have heard of and fewer still
could give a rats ass about; Tim Russert of NBCs Meet
the Press, CNNs Jeff Greenfield, Time magazines Margaret
Carlson, all come to mind as examples.
Since 1990, Imus has headlined a radiothon with New York radio
station WFAN that has raised over 50-million dollars to benefit
the Tomorrows Childrens Fund, the CJ Foundation for SIDS,
and the Imus Ranch for kids with cancer. The money, donated for
exactly that same reason and by the same people who bought the stupid
books, funded the completion of the Don Imus/WFAN Pediatric Center
for Tomorrows Children and the David Jurist Cancer Research
facility, both located at New Jerseys Hackensack University
Medical Center.
Imus has received too many plaques, trophies and pieces of walnut
with crystal @#$@ stuck on them to mention. We wont. He is
a member of the Emerson Radio Hall of Fame, the National Broadcasters
Hall of Fame, the Stolichnaya and Marlboro Halls of Fame, and, if
there is a God, will soon be a permanent exhibit at the Duke University
School of Medicines Hall of Cadavers where his lungs will
be featured in a display designed to permanently traumatize children.
MORE IMUS STUFF: Listen
to recent Imus interviews
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