Current:Home > ScamsRayner Pike, beloved Associated Press journalist known for his wit and way with words, dies at 90 -Wealth Legacy Solutions
Rayner Pike, beloved Associated Press journalist known for his wit and way with words, dies at 90
View
Date:2025-04-18 08:12:11
ARLINGTON, Mass. (AP) — Rayner Pike, a retired reporter for The Associated Press who contributed his encyclopedic knowledge of news and crafty writing skills to some of New York City’s biggest stories for over four decades, has died. He was 90.
Surrounded by family at the end, his Dec. 26 death at home in Arlington, Massachusetts, set off a wave of tributes from former co-workers.
For a 1986 story challenging city-provided crowd estimates, he paced out a parade route on foot — “literally shoe-leather journalism,” New York City bureau colleague Kiley Armstrong recalled.
The memorable lead that followed: “Only a grinch cavils when, in a burst of hometown boosterism, the mayor of New York says with a straight face that 3.5 million people turned out for the Yankees’ ticker-tape parade.”
Pike worked at the AP for 44 years, from 1954 to 1998, mostly in New York City — yet he was famously reluctant to take a byline, colleagues said. He also taught journalism at Rutgers University for years.
“He was smart and wry,” former colleague Beth Harpaz said. “He seemed crusty on the outside but was really quite sweet, a super-fast and trustworthy writer who just had the whole 20th century history of New York City in his head (or so it seemed — we didn’t have Google in those days — we just asked Ray).”
Pike was on duty in the New York City bureau when word came that notorious mobster John Gotti had been acquitted for a second time. It was then, colleagues said, that he coined the nickname “Teflon Don.”
“He chuckled and it just tumbled out of his mouth, ‘He’s the Teflon Don!’” Harpaz said.
Pat Milton, a senior producer at CBS News, said Pike was unflappable whenever a chaotic news story broke and he was the person that reporters in the field hoped would answer the phone when they needed to deliver notes.
“He was a real intellectual,” Milton said. “He knew what he was doing. He got it right. He was very meticulous. He was excellent, but he wasn’t a rah, rah-type person. He wasn’t somebody who promoted himself.”
Pike’s wife of 59 years, Nancy, recalled that he wrote “perfect notes to people” and could bring to life a greeting card with his command of the language.
Daughter Leah Pike recounted a $1 bet he made — and won — with then-Gov. Mario Cuomo over the grammatical difference between a simile and metaphor.
“The chance to be playful with a governor may be as rare as hens’ teeth (simile) in some parts, but not so in New York, where the governor is a brick (metaphor),” Pike wrote to Cuomo afterward.
Rick Hampson, another former AP colleague in the New York bureau, said he found it interesting that Pike’s father was a firefighter because Pike “always seemed like a journalistic firefighter in the New York bureau — ready for the alarm.”
He added in a Facebook thread: “While some artistes among us might sometimes have regretted the intrusions of the breaking news that paid our salaries, Ray had an enormous capacity not only to write quickly but to think quickly under enormous pressure on such occasions. And, as others have said, just the salt of the earth.”
veryGood! (91)
Related
- Paris Olympics live updates: Quincy Hall wins 400m thriller; USA women's hoops in action
- Scene of a 'massacre': Inside Israeli kibbutz decimated by Hamas fighters
- How Israel's geography, size put it in the center of decades of conflict
- Ukraine President Zelenskyy at NATO defense ministers meeting seeking more support to fight Russia
- The GOP and Kansas’ Democratic governor ousted targeted lawmakers in the state’s primary
- Democratic challenger raises more campaign cash than GOP incumbent in Mississippi governor’s race
- Prosecutors name 3rd suspect in Holyoke shooting blamed in baby’s death, say he’s armed and hiding
- Henry Golding and Wife Liv Lo Welcome Baby No. 2
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Billy Ray Cyrus Marries Firerose in Beautiful, Joyous Ceremony
Ranking
- Olympic women's basketball bracket: Schedule, results, Team USA's path to gold
- Sophie Turner, Joe Jonas reach temporary custody agreement for daughters amid divorce
- St. Louis launches program to pay $500 a month to lower-income residents
- Ex-convict convicted in fatal shootings of 2 California women in 2016 near Las Vegas Strip
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Israel strikes neighborhood after neighborhood in Gaza as war appears set to escalate
- Gunmen kill a member of an anti-India group and a worshipper at a mosque in eastern Pakistan
- Voting begins in Ohio in the only election this fall to decide abortion rights
Recommendation
'Most Whopper
Machine Gun Kelly Responds on Bad Look After Man Rushes Stage
Could a beer shortage be looming? Changing weather could hit hops needed in brews
Sketch released of person of interest in fatal shooting on Vermont trail
Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
Prominent patrol leader in NYC Orthodox Jewish community sentenced to 17 years for raping teenager
2 women found alive after plane crashes in Georgia
Jada Pinkett Smith says she and Will Smith were separated for 6 years before Oscars slap