ED FUNG, one of TT's most recognisable voices in local radio and faces of local television news, has died at the age of 97.
Newsday understands Fung died peacefully at his home in D'abadie, on Monday morning.
Fung was a founding member of the now-defunct Radio Guardian (later renamed Radio 610 AM), set up in 1957, and became the station's first news editor.
He established himself at Radio Guardian as one of the country's most prominent broadcasting talents, a number of his friends and former co-workers have said.
Fung also went on to become a coach and mentor to some of the most well-known figures in the industry, including former Trinidad and Tobago Television (TTT) head of news Neil Giuseppi.
Giuseppi told Newsday, "His professionalism as a broadcaster and as a newsperson made him stand out, as well as his being a trainer of young people. You could not have passed under Ed Fung and not learn a hell of a lot about media. He was a wealth of knowledge and willing to impart it to all who passed under him."
After leaving Radio Guardian, Fung joined TTT and then returned to Radio 610 as programme director in 1975 for another short stint.
He subsequently joined his long-time colleague Dale Kolasingh at Audio Visual Media (AVM) Caribbean Ltd, a video production house that later transitioned to AVM Television in 1990.
Fung was responsible for training reporters and archiving programmes, skills Giuseppi said he always excelled at.
"He trained so many people in broadcasting," said Giuseppi, who was himself one of them.
"Literally plenty, plenty people trained under him. He and Yusuf Ali were two of my mentors. They taught me everything I know about news.
"He was also an excellent news reader. He was also an excellent cook," Giuseppi said, noting that Fung hosted television and even radio programmes centred on cuisine.
Former Newsday editor in chief Jones P Madeira, who worked alongside Fung at various points of their careers, said his ex-colleague was formidable in all aspects of electronic media.
"(Fung) took broadcast programming to heart and soul," Madeira said.
Fung, he added, had particularly prominent phases during his career. The first, he said, was "in the early days of 610 (Radio), which produced the cream of the crop of broadcasting in the Caribbean," which he credited largely to Fung's knack for training up-and-coming broadcasters.
The second phase was the "semi-retired Fung," who "did a lot of programmes on 610 Radio and Radio Trinidad."
Madeira said there were many competition-type programmes in those days, in which there were quizzes and sponsors who provided the prizes.
"(It's the kind of programme) if you're not a seasoned broadcaster, what can happen to you is that you become very entrenched in the competitive environment that the sponsors were pushing, and you lose the value of the production eye on a programme.
"In other words, the listener must know why he or she is listening to the programme, and what he gets out of it besides a box of Tide."
Madeira said Fung nev