Photo: Deborah Feingold/Getty Images

Don Imus, who hosted the popular and long-runningImus in the Morningradio show, died at the age of 79, multiple outlets have reported.
The broadcasting veteran, known for his blunt personality and cowboy hat, was hospitalized on Christmas Eve and passed away Friday morning at Baylor Scott and White Medical Center in College Station, Texas, according toThe Hollywood Reporter. His cause of death was not immediately announced.
“Don loved and adored Deirdre, who unconditionally loved him back,” the family said in a statement toThe Hollywood Reporter. “[He] loved spending his time watching Wyatt become a highly-skilled, champion rodeo rider and calf roper, and loved and supported Zachary, who first met the Imus family at age 10 when he participated in the Imus Ranch program for kids with cancer, having battled and overcome leukemia, eventually becoming a member of the Imus family and Don and Deirdre’s second son.”
Don Imus.George Rizer/Getty Images

Imus apologized for the comment, and during an appearance on the Rev. Al Sharpton’s radio show, he called the remark a joke that “went way too far.”
Despite the controversy, Imus continued in radio until he retired in March of last year.
InFox and Friendsmeteorologist Janice Dean’s 2019 memoir,Mostly Sunny: How I Learned To Keep Smiling Through the Rainiest Days, sheaccused Imus of harassment while working on his radio show in 2002.
Don Imus.Moises Saman/Getty Images

Dean claimed Imus regularly called her “an idiot, stupid, useless,” and a “moron,” and repeatedly told her to lose weight. She also alleged that Imus carried a gun and once “pointed his gun a few feet away from the back of the traffic reporter’s head.”
Imus spoke toCBS Newslast year of his career as a shock jock, which saw him be fired at least four times over 50 years.
“I wasn’t trying to be outrageous,” he said. “It’s just the way I thought. My feeling was then, and is now, that if they didn’t like what I did, get somebody else to do it.”
When asked if he had any regrets, Imus told the network, “A few, the Rutgers thing I regret … ‘Cause I knew better.”
source: people.com