On a very different, and very special, edition of the “The Rush Limbaugh Show,” Kathryn Limbaugh announced that the millions of Americans who welcomed the late conservative icon into their homes and lives will have a chance to bid him farewell.
Rush Limbaugh died on Wednesday of cancer at the age of 70. Last February, the legendary broadcaster told his supporters he had advanced lung cancer but remained on the radio as he battled the disease, with his appearances growing fewer as the disease progressed.
His widow, Kathryn, made an appearance on the show Monday, speaking to callers and revealing a virtual memorial service for her husband will be held at a later date.
“It’s been a very difficult time, as it probably has been for everyone who’s listened all these years. But we know that Rush is in a good place. He’s in Heaven. He’s looking down on us, and that gives us some element of comfort.
“But it has been a very difficult time,” she said.
“Unfortunately due to COVID we can’t do as many things in person as we would like, but we are in the initial stages of planning a celebration of life that will be able to be viewed by all of the audience and friends and extended family at some point in the near future. We don’t have an exact date just yet. We’re working on some of the logistics. But, yes, that is something that we will have in the upcoming weeks to month,” she said.
During the call, she shared how she met the broadcaster who revolutionized talk radio.
She said she was working for former PGA legend Gary Player and was organizing a golf tournament in Florida.
“Rush was one of the guests that was introduced to me as a possibility to make the list of possible A-Listers,” she said.
“And, believe it or not, I put him down on maybe B or C,” she said, laughing at the recollection.
“I was raised overseas, so we were not as familiar with some of Rush’s politics and stature and all of that at the time. So at the time I thought, ‘OK. Well, I’ve heard a lot about him, but I will give it a shot anyway,'” she said.
Then, as always, the broadcasting icon did not fit into preconceptions.
“He walked in, he was extraordinarily humble and kind. And I thought to myself, ‘This isn’t quite the person that I thought was going to be arriving,'” she said.
During Monday’s show, one caller who gave his name as Dan and said he lived in Carson City, Nevada, gave an emotional tribute to the former broadcaster, saying that his uncle had told him that listening to “The Rush Limbaugh Show” could help him turn his life around.
“I turned him on and in the first five minutes, Kathryn, I didn’t know him physically, but I felt him emotionally. And it was the first time I ever had a real father figure in my life,” he said.
“God bless my mom. She did the best she could. But we had somebody that we could relate to, we had somebody that could help us feel the words he was saying, and then we could put that to our everyday life. He wasn’t a politician. He wasn’t this person that — he was us! He made us feel like he was us. And now, now we’re lost, now we don’t have that voice anymore.”
“We love him. His words were heard, and they were felt, and they’re gonna be felt forever,” he said.
“And we’re never, ever gonna forget our Rush Limbaugh. I’m just so sad that I only got seven years with him. I feel like I’m gonna miss out on a lifetime of knowledge. But I just wanted to let you know that we love him dearly,” Dan said.
“But I just wanted to say that I didn’t know him, but I felt him every time he spoke. So thank you, Rush. I hope you’re listening, and we love you.”
Kathryn Limbaugh said in reply that “the other day when I came on to let you know of his passing, I very much felt that I was sharing that news with family.”
“I do believe that Rush is looking down, and he’s listening. And while he’s very, very, very sad that we are suffering, I believe that he is also happy because he knows that we will carry on and all of us will find a way to honor Rush and everything that he stood for,” she said.
This article appeared originally on The Western Journal.