South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Beloved warm and sunny ‘Today’ show weatherman

- Associated Press The New York Times contribute­d.

NEW YORK — Willard Scott, the beloved weatherman who charmed viewers of NBC’s “Today” show with his self-deprecatin­g humor and cheerful personalit­y, has died. He was 87.

His successor on the morning news show, Al Roker, announced that Scott died peacefully Saturday morning surrounded by family. An NBC Universal spokeswoma­n confirmed the news.

“He was truly my second dad and I am where I am today because of his generous spirit,” Roker wrote on Instagram. “Willard was a man of his times, the ultimate broadcaste­r. There will never be anyone quite like him.”

“He played such an outsized role in my life and was as warm and loving and generous off-camera as he was on,” Katie Couric tweeted.

Scott was among the first of a generation of television weather forecaster­s who stressed showmanshi­p over science. Throughout the late 20th century, he was also a ubiquitous television pitchman.

A garrulous, gaptoothed, b o u t o n n i è re -we a r i n g, funny-hatted, sometimes toupee-clad, larger-thanlife American Everyman, Scott was hired in 1980 to help NBC’s “Today” compete with ABC’s “Good Morning America.”

Scott began his 65-year career at NBC as an entrylevel page at WRC-TV, an NBC affiliate station in Washington, D.C., and rose to become the weather forecaster on the network’s flagship morning show for more than three decades. His trademark was giving on-air birthday greetings to viewers who turned 100 years old by putting their faces on Smucker’s jelly jars and delivering weather updates in zany costumes.

Scott, who got a start in radio before becoming a weatherman at WRC-TV, had no background in meteorolog­y or any allied science. But as he readily acknowledg­ed, the weatherman’s job as reconstruc­ted for the postmodern age did not require any.

“A trained gorilla could do it,” Scott said in 1975, while he was at WRC.

The only scientific asset one actually needed, he pointed out, was the telephone number of the National Weather Service.

According to NBC, he once took up a viewer’s dare to appear in drag to win a $1,000 donation to the USO, the charity for military families, by dressing up as the Brazilian singer Carmen Miranda.

The stunt wasn’t new for the genial Scott: He played Bozo the Clown when he hosted a children’s TV show in the 1960s and Ronald McDonald in commercial­s in the Washington area.

He often dressed as Santa Claus at the National Tree Lighting ceremony throughout the 1980s and co-anchored NBC’s coverage of the Macy’s Thanksgivi­ng Day Parade between 1987 to 1997.

In one memorable moment on live television, first lady Barbara Bush gave him a kiss during the 1989 inaugurati­on parade of her husband, President George H.W. Bush.

“(The president) said, ‘I didn’t know you knew Willard Scott.’ I said, ‘I don’t know Willard Scott. I just love that face,’ ” the first lady recalled.

Scott handed the reins to Roker in 1996, occasional­ly filling in for him for the next decade before fully retiring in 2015.

He is survived by his wife, Paris Keena, whom he married in 2014, and two daughters with Mary Dwyer Scott, his wife of 43 years until she died in 2002.

 ?? DIANE BONDAREFF/AP ?? Willard Scott, right, hugs“Today” colleague Katie Couric in 2000 after a ceremony inducting Scott into NBC’s“Walk of Fame”in New York. He died at 87.
DIANE BONDAREFF/AP Willard Scott, right, hugs“Today” colleague Katie Couric in 2000 after a ceremony inducting Scott into NBC’s“Walk of Fame”in New York. He died at 87.

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