Colorado Media Newsroom
November 10th, 2016, 05:18 PM
From The Denver Post (http://www.denverpost.com/2016/11/10/paul-macgregor-mr-fix-it-denver-radio-dies/):
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Paul MacGregor, a longtime broadcaster known on Denver radio as Mr. Fix-It for three decades, died Nov. 4 in Denver in his sleep. He was 75.
MacGregor’s long-running radio show — Mr. Fix-It — aired in the Denver market and was syndicated to more than 75 radio stations around the country. Premiering as “Fix Up/Paint Up/Call Up” on KOA radio in 1982, the show later took on the Mr. Fix-It name and also aired locally on KCKK and KEZW.
MacGregor also wrote a weekly Mr. Fix-It column for the Rocky Mountain News from 1992 until 1997.
Through his radio show and column, MacGregor counseled thousands in home repair endeavors of plumbing, painting, flooring and heating.
Long before the upsurge of televised “fixer-upper” shows, MacGregor had tapped into the burgeoning home-repair market.
“People have become more attuned to it as one of the biggest segments of the economy, about $200 billion to $300 billion a year,” MacGregor told The Denver Post in 2005.
As Mr. Fix-It, MacGregor remained humble and stayed true to his roots, while keeping a dry wit.
“I’m a broadcaster,” he said in the 2005 interview. “I know how to do a lot of this stuff, but I don’t have to do it.”
Born Sept. 28, 1941, on a farm in Haleyville, Ala., MacGregor began his career in broadcasting as a disc jockey at WLAY in Muscle Shoals. He went on to work in television and radio news, as anchor and reporter, in several markets, including WOR radio in New York City.
MacGregor moved to Denver in 1982 to accept a position with KOA radio, where he also worked as a news reporter.
“My dad taught me radio. He taught me home improvement,” said his daughter, Erin Tidwell, a musician who resides in Los Angeles.
MacGregor’s work as a disc jockey and his love for radio and music were huge influences on Tidwell, she said.
“I remember him turning on the radio. He used to do the disc jockey stuff,” Tidwell recalled.
MacGregor introduced his daughter to zydeco, as well as the music of Chuck Berry and Electric Light Orchestra, among other bands.
“He definitely drove me to pursue my dream,” she said.
MacGregor is survived by wife Joan, five children and five grandchildren.
Memorial arrangements are pending.
891
Paul MacGregor, a longtime broadcaster known on Denver radio as Mr. Fix-It for three decades, died Nov. 4 in Denver in his sleep. He was 75.
MacGregor’s long-running radio show — Mr. Fix-It — aired in the Denver market and was syndicated to more than 75 radio stations around the country. Premiering as “Fix Up/Paint Up/Call Up” on KOA radio in 1982, the show later took on the Mr. Fix-It name and also aired locally on KCKK and KEZW.
MacGregor also wrote a weekly Mr. Fix-It column for the Rocky Mountain News from 1992 until 1997.
Through his radio show and column, MacGregor counseled thousands in home repair endeavors of plumbing, painting, flooring and heating.
Long before the upsurge of televised “fixer-upper” shows, MacGregor had tapped into the burgeoning home-repair market.
“People have become more attuned to it as one of the biggest segments of the economy, about $200 billion to $300 billion a year,” MacGregor told The Denver Post in 2005.
As Mr. Fix-It, MacGregor remained humble and stayed true to his roots, while keeping a dry wit.
“I’m a broadcaster,” he said in the 2005 interview. “I know how to do a lot of this stuff, but I don’t have to do it.”
Born Sept. 28, 1941, on a farm in Haleyville, Ala., MacGregor began his career in broadcasting as a disc jockey at WLAY in Muscle Shoals. He went on to work in television and radio news, as anchor and reporter, in several markets, including WOR radio in New York City.
MacGregor moved to Denver in 1982 to accept a position with KOA radio, where he also worked as a news reporter.
“My dad taught me radio. He taught me home improvement,” said his daughter, Erin Tidwell, a musician who resides in Los Angeles.
MacGregor’s work as a disc jockey and his love for radio and music were huge influences on Tidwell, she said.
“I remember him turning on the radio. He used to do the disc jockey stuff,” Tidwell recalled.
MacGregor introduced his daughter to zydeco, as well as the music of Chuck Berry and Electric Light Orchestra, among other bands.
“He definitely drove me to pursue my dream,” she said.
MacGregor is survived by wife Joan, five children and five grandchildren.
Memorial arrangements are pending.