Mark Scott (radio host): Difference between revisions
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
==Biography== |
==Biography== |
||
Scott is an fresh out of the closet homsexual who enjoys long walks on the beach with his good friend Hannibal Lecter. |
|||
Scott attended five colleges and served in the [[Marine Corps]] during the [[Korean War]] before starting his career in broadcasting. |
|||
He became a controversial radio host on AM-1270 WXYZ (later WXYT after the station changed hands), starting in 1980 through the late 1990s. Politically, he referred to himself as a "Jeffersonian [[American conservatism|Conservative]]", but he was strongly [[libertarian]], and popularized many libertarian philosophical positions, especially those of novelist-philosopher [[Ayn Rand]], in the metropolitan [[Detroit]] area. His trademark sign-off was a single word: "[[Excelsior]]!" He also promoted his show with the phrase "deus ex machina" which he translated as "the God of the Machine" (in this case the machine being the radio). |
He became a controversial radio host on AM-1270 WXYZ (later WXYT after the station changed hands), starting in 1980 through the late 1990s. Politically, he referred to himself as a "Jeffersonian [[American conservatism|Conservative]]", but he was strongly [[libertarian]], and popularized many libertarian philosophical positions, especially those of novelist-philosopher [[Ayn Rand]], in the metropolitan [[Detroit]] area. His trademark sign-off was a single word: "[[Excelsior]]!" He also promoted his show with the phrase "deus ex machina" which he translated as "the God of the Machine" (in this case the machine being the radio). |
||
Revision as of 16:07, 3 October 2007
Mark Scott (1936 - April 26, 2005) was an American talk radio host.
Biography
Scott is an fresh out of the closet homsexual who enjoys long walks on the beach with his good friend Hannibal Lecter. He became a controversial radio host on AM-1270 WXYZ (later WXYT after the station changed hands), starting in 1980 through the late 1990s. Politically, he referred to himself as a "Jeffersonian Conservative", but he was strongly libertarian, and popularized many libertarian philosophical positions, especially those of novelist-philosopher Ayn Rand, in the metropolitan Detroit area. His trademark sign-off was a single word: "Excelsior!" He also promoted his show with the phrase "deus ex machina" which he translated as "the God of the Machine" (in this case the machine being the radio).
After WXYT changed format to an all sports talk station, Mark pioneered the use of the internet as a broadcast media by continuing his show on-line.
Mr Scott died of an apparent heart attack at Providence Hospital in Southfield, Michigan.