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"Scenic Roots" offers conversations that matter in the heart of Chattanooga and the Tennessee Valley.From the mountains to the river, our conversations are rooted deep within every corner of our community - reflecting who we are, who we were and who we can become.We engage with the news that affects our community, behind and beyond the headlines. We build bridges that span from creators and innovators to storytellers and the outdoors. We focus on our challenges as many communities in one - as we celebrate what inspires us. We resonate with countless voices - in words and spaces, sounds and songs.We are "Scenic Roots."Ray Bassett hosts and produces "Scenic Roots" at WUTC.

For Charlie: WUTC’s Ray Bassett Remembers Charles Osgood

Charles Osgood - on the set of CBS News Sunday Morning.
CBS News
Charles Osgood - on the set of CBS News Sunday Morning.

I am here because of a storyteller.

Year after year, millions of people across the country would tune in to hear him - and see him.

Charles Osgood was the host of CBS News Sunday Morning for more than 22 years - but his first love in broadcasting was radio.

I know it well.

I worked for Charlie as his final producer in New York for The Osgood File, his drive-time feature that aired nationwide for decades on CBS Radio, syndicated in my time by Westwood One.

The other day, we learned Charlie died - he was 91.

Countless memories I have of him compete in my mind now, wrapped in the bowties he wore in the cadence of the rhymes he crafted - all je ne sais Charlie - including this poem he wrote about his TV signoff: “See you on the radio.”
_____

"See you on the radio" - I say that every week.
A peculiar phrase, some people think, for anyone to speak.
I've got a piece of mail or two up on my office shelf,
complaining that this sentence seems to contradict itself.
 
"Dear Mr. Osgood," someone wrote, "That sentence is absurd.
Radio is for the ear, the song or spoken word.
The medium for seeing is without a doubt TV.
That's why we call it 'video' - which is Latin for 'I see.'
So, please don't say that anymore - you really should know better."
That's a gentle paraphrase of what was in this viewer's letter.

"Dear Sir," I then wrote back to him - and this was my reply,
"I do believe that you are wrong, and let me tell you why.
I've worked some years in radio - and television, too.
And though it's paradoxical, it nonetheless is true
that radio is visual - much more so than TV.
And there's plenty of good reason why that paradox should be.

No television set that's made, no screen that you can find
can compare with that of radio, the theater of the mind,
where the pictures are more subtle - yet more powerful, somehow.
One-on-one is how it's done - and that is still true now.
TV screens have gotten bigger, but they still cannot compare.
We can whisper in the listeners' ear - and take you anywhere.

I'm there inside the radio, the one beside the bed,
and it's me you hear when it goes off - 'Come on now, sleepyhead!'
You may think you are alone, but I can see you coast-to-coast
as you sip your glass of orange juice and bite into your toast.
I'm with you as you drive to work - right there inside your car -
to keep you company and tell you how I think things are.

You and I have known each other for a good long time,
and you're willing to put up with me when I resort to rhyme.
A true friend will stick with you, though your poems may not scan.
I'll see you on a radio - I can, you see, I can."
_____

Thank you, Charlie - I’ll always see you on the radio.

Thank you to Phil Chin - his longtime producer before me, who brought us together.

Thank you to everyone behind the scenes - and everyone who tuned in.

And thank you to so many here in Chattanooga and the Tennessee Valley who listen to this show - and WUTC.

I'm Ray Bassett. Join us again next time for Scenic Roots.

Charles Osgood - at the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville in 2010.
Grand Ole Opry
Charles Osgood - at the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville in 2010.

Ray is the host and producer of Scenic Roots, Mondays - Thursdays at 3 PM on WUTC.
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  • A Chattanooga story: the documentary “How to Sue the Klan.” Sunday Showcase for the Performing Arts League at UTC. For Charlie: remembering broadcast legend Charles Osgood. These voices - and more - on this edition of “Scenic Roots.”
  • Chattanooga 1980. Ku Klux Klansmen in a car fire shotgun blasts at four Black women waiting for a cab on Ninth St. - now Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd. The four women - and another Black woman - are wounded. What happened next is told in a new documentary, "How to Sue the Klan."
  • This weekend, the Sunday Showcase returns to our campus, the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. Young performers will display their talents to support the Performing Arts League - starting at 3 PM on Sunday in the Fine Arts Center here at UTC.