The former UTV political editor Ken Reid has died.
Mr Reid, 69, reported on key moments in the peace process during almost three decades on screen.
In 2017, he revealed he had been diagnosed with a form of leukaemia. He was also diabetic but continued to work until his retirement from UTV in 2021.
A well-known figure in Northern Ireland, he was honoured by Queen’s University earlier this year for his contribution to journalism.
He regularly interviewed Prime Minister Tony Blair before and after the 1998 Good Friday Agreement.
Among his political scoops was breaking the news in 2008 that the then DUP leader Ian Paisley was to step down as first minister and party leader.
His coverage of politics for UTV began in 1994, the year of the IRA and loyalist ceasefires.
After the 1998 agreement, he reported on the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to David Trimble and John Hume.
He then reported on the start of power-sharing at Stormont.
As devolution rose and fell, he was a permanent fixture on the UTV evening news programme.
He reported every year from the St Patrick’s Day receptions at the White House in Washington, and was a frequent visitor to Brussels, especially before and after the Brexit vote in 2016.
His long career in journalism began in newspapers, at the News Letter in the late 1970s and then as sports editor of the now-defunct Sunday News in the mid-1980s. He later became the overall editor of the paper.
He was an avid supporter of Everton, his local football club Cliftonville and Ballymena rugby club.
Despite his early stint in sports journalism, he once said: "Sport is my hobby and keeps me sane. I didn't want it to be my job. I always wanted sport to just be sport."
In 1987, Mr Reid moved south of the border to the Cork Examiner, where he built up good contacts with Irish politicians.
This stood him in good stead when he moved to UTV to front its political coverage at a crucial stage in the peace process in the mid-1990s.
Mr Reid was born in 1955 and was brought up in north Belfast.
He went to school at Methodist College, and then studied at the University of Hull.
Even as he lay gravely ill in hospital in recent days, Ken Reid was listening to the news on the radio.
He once described himself as a “politics junkie” and even in retirement he kept a close eye on Stormont, Westminster and the Dáil.
When I last visited Ken in hospital, he had just tuned into a political debate on BBC Radio Five Live - he kept it on in the background as we chatted. Political discussions were, in a sense, the soundtrack to his career.
Standing at more than 6ft tall, many people referred to him as ‘Big Ken’ but he did not speak down the audience, he spoke in their language and was respected for that.
He faced his illnesses with formidable courage. He was extremely thankful for the support and love he received from his wife, children and grandchildren.
Ken Reid will be remembered as a towering figure in broadcasting.
Right to the end, he was surrounded by news. Ken loved the airwaves and the airwaves loved Ken.