From CBS News:
Andy Rooney, the "60 Minutes" commentator known to generations for
his wry, humorous and contentious television essays - a unique genre he
is credited with inventing - died Friday night in a hospital in New York
City of complications following minor surgery. He was 92, and had homes
in New York City, Rensselaerville, N.Y. and Rowayton, Conn.
"It's
a sad day at '60 Minutes' and for everybody here at CBS News," said
Jeff Fager, chairman of CBS News and the executive producer of "60
Minutes." "It's hard to imagine not having Andy around. He loved his
life and he lived it on his own terms. We will miss him very much."
Rooney had announced on Oct. 2, 2011 in his 1097th essay for "60 Minutes" that he would no longer appear regularly.
Rooney
wrote for television since its birth, spending more than 60 years at
CBS, 30 of them behind the camera as a writer and producer, first for
entertainment and then news programming, before becoming a television
personality - a role he said he was never comfortable in. He preferred
to be known as a writer and was the author of best-selling books and a
national newspaper column, in addition to his "60 Minutes" essays.
Rooney resided in Manhattan; he also kept a family vacation home in
Rensselaerville, N.Y, and the first home he ever purchased, in Rowayton,
Conn. He was pre-deceased by his wife of 62 years, Marguerite, in 2004.
He is survived by his four children Ellen, Brian, the former longtime
ABC News correspondent, Emily, longtime host of "Greater Boston," a
local public affairs television program on PBS, and Martha Fishel; five
grandchildren and two great grandchildren. He was also was pre-deceased
by his sister, Nancy.
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