Charlotte Broadcasting Legend Dies
Charlotte broadcasting legend Doug Mayes died early Sunday morning after a battle with health issues, including a stroke that he suffered in March.
He was 93 years old.
Mayes told the Lincoln Times-News in an August interview prior to his induction into the Charlotte Broadcast Hall of Fame that he planned to attend the event, despite his illness.
“I always tell people that I have worn out 35 doctors in the area since I moved here,” he said with a laugh.
Mayes began his broadcasting career reading the news in his home state of Tennessee at a small station in Nashville and later gained experience reading the news of World War II when serving in the U.S. Navy. He made the successful transition to television 1952 and became one of only six “Esso Reporters” in the country, sharing the honor with Walter Cronkite. He was the first full-time news anchor in the Charlotte market.
Mayes was known for his generosity, his warm smile, appreciation of a good joke and, perhaps most of all, one of the most recognized voices in the business.
For more than 30 years, Mayes made his living behind the news desk of WBTV and, later in his career, WSOC-TV, where he retired in 1988.
When he joined WSOC it was the last place station, he took them to first in the ratings.