Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Larry King dies

CNN talk-show legend dies at age 87 after being hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 in Los Angeles.

- Andrew Dalton

LOS ANGELES – Larry King, the suspenders-sporting everyman whose broadcast interviews with world leaders, movie stars and ordinary Joes helped define American conversati­on for a half-century, died Saturday. He was 87.

King died at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, his production company, Ora Media, tweeted. No cause of death was given, but a spokespers­on said Jan. 4 that King had COVID-19, had received supplement­al oxygen and had been moved out of intensive care. His son Chance Armstrong also confirmed King’s death, CNN reported.

A longtime nationally syndicated radio host, from 1985 through 2010 he was a nightly fixture on CNN, where he won many honors, including two Peabody awards.

With his celebrity interviews, political debates and topical discussion­s, King wasn’t just an enduring on-air personalit­y. He also set himself apart with the curiosity he brought to every interview, whether questionin­g the assault victim known as the Central Park jogger or billionair­e industrial­ist Ross Perot, who in 1992 rocked the presidenti­al contest by announcing his candidacy on King’s show.

King conducted some 50,000 on-air interviews. In 1995 he presided over a Middle East peace summit with PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat, King Hussein of Jordan and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. He welcomed everyone from the Dalai Lama to Elizabeth Taylor, from Mikhail Gorbachev to Barack Obama, Bill Gates to Lady Gaga.

Especially after he relocated from Washington to Los Angeles, his shows were frequently in the thick of breaking celebrity news, including Paris Hilton talking about her stint in jail in 2007 and Michael Jackson’s friends and family members talking about his death in 2009.

King boasted of never overprepar­ing for an interview. His nonconfron­tational style relaxed his guests and made him readily relatable to his audience.

“I don’t pretend to know it all,” he said in a 1995 Associated Press interview. “Not, ‘What about Geneva or Cuba?’ I ask, ‘Mr. President, what don’t you like about this job?’ Or ‘What’s the biggest mistake you made?’ That’s fascinatin­g.”

And he was known for getting guests who were notoriousl­y elusive. Frank Sinatra, who rarely gave interviews and often lashed out at reporters, spoke to King in 1988 in what would be the singer’s last major TV appearance. Sinatra was an old friend of King’s and acted accordingl­y.

“Why are you here?” King asks. Sinatra responds, “Because you asked me to come and I hadn’t seen you in a long time to begin with, I thought we ought to get together and chat, just talk about a lot of things.”

King accumulate­d debts and was married eight times to seven women. He gambled, borrowed wildly and failed to pay his taxes.

But “The Larry King Show” spread to more than 300 stations and made him a radio phenomenon. After he retired from his CNN TV show in 2010, he continued to work into his 80s, taking on online talk shows and infomercia­ls.

“Work,” King once said. “It’s the easiest thing I do.”

 ?? SHAYNA BRENNAN/AP FILE ?? Oliver North talks to Larry King in 1994. King, who interviewe­d presidents and ordinary Joes, has died at age 87.
SHAYNA BRENNAN/AP FILE Oliver North talks to Larry King in 1994. King, who interviewe­d presidents and ordinary Joes, has died at age 87.

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