Hap Parnaby was my very first boss ever in radio, having landed a job at CKEY in Toronto straight out of college. I handled the audio room at Newsradio, a would-be competitor to Broadcast News in those days. Everyone was afraid of him, because he was intense and sometimes could get crazy. But no one doubted his talent.
I have a very strong memory of one afternoon, when there was an explosion at the Robin Hood flour factory in Montreal. We got word of it about 10 minutes before the top of the hour news and Parnaby came rushing in like a charging bull, calling our affiliate CFCF in Montreal and demanding they do a voicer in time for the newscast. He also wanted it fed to the rest of the country. All this, with just minutes to get it all done.
An aggravated Jon McComb, later of CKNW fame, did a quick report and fed it down the line. I carted it and was preparing to send it out to the network, with the seconds ticking by.
In those pre-computer days, we used a kind of word processor to fashion a lead and send it to the teletype machines at each subscribing station. The format was the same - the dateline, then a quick one line intro. I started to type in "MONTREAL."
At that second, Parnaby rushes in, and starts demanding I "hurry up." He wanted the story for EY's top of the hour news. He starts yelling in my ear M! O! N! T! R! E! A! L! I kept typing but nervously said "Hap, I can't concentrate if you keep screaming in my ear."
We did get the story out with about four minutes to spare, at which point he grabbed the recued cart, ran like a madman out of the area and took it over to the control room to get it on air for EY's 5 PM news.
He was not the easiest guy to work for in those days with that kind of manic energy, but there was no doubt he was a great writer and storyteller as well as a fierce competitor. He hated to be beaten to a story. And despite incidents like the one above, he really was a nice man.
I'm sorry to hear of his passing.