Open in App
  • Local
  • U.S.
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
  • Real Estate
  • Newsletter
  • New York Post

    Beloved NY1 anchor Ruschell Boone dead at 48 after brave cancer battle

    By Shannon Thaler,

    2023-09-05

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0sffup_0oKUVt3n00

    Beloved NY1 journalist Ruschell Boone — who bravely came back to the anchor chair this year after a brutal battle with pancreatic cancer — died Sunday evening. She was 48.

    NY1, where Boone worked as a reporter and news anchor for over two decades, confirmed her death in an internal email shared with The Post.

    “She was a dedicated and principled journalist to the very end,” the memo said.

    “In her last week with us, she was still working on ideas for her show and sharing thoughts for making NY1 a continued beacon of truth for New Yorkers.”

    She is survived by her two sons, Jackson, 12, and Carter, 9, and her husband, Todd.

    “Ruschell recently shared that every day we spend with our loved ones is a victory,” the internal memo said. “Ruschell made every moment feel victorious and every day feel special. We’re heartbroken we won’t get to have more days with her.”

    Boone was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2021, when nagging, vague stomach discomfort evolved into horrible pains and a trip to the emergency room.

    A CT scan revealed the devastating news.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1fJ6LE_0oKUVt3n00
    Beloved NY1 anchor Ruschell Boone died Sunday evening after her years-long battle with cancer. She was 48.
    Tamara Beckwith/NY POST

    “I just started wailing, crying and looking at my husband, thinking I heard it incorrectly,” she had told The Post after the diagnosis.

    see also https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1rAmDS_0oKUVt3n00 NY1 anchor Ruschell Boone reveals cancer has taken turn for the worse

    “I thought, ‘Oh my God, I’m dead … My kids are going to grow up without a mother,'” she added.

    From June 2022 through March of this year, Boone stepped away from her responsibilities at the anchor desk to receive chemotherapy.

    In March, she returned to the anchor chair for the Charter Communications-owned network, and told devoted viewers of her noon newscast that the chemo was “so brutal,” but she was back to “feeling great.”

    Her first interview back on NY1 was with New York City Mayor Eric Adams, who tweeted that “our city is so lucky to have @RuschellBoone back where she belongs — behind the anchor desk and holding all of us in positions of power to account.”

    However, just four months after being declared cancer-free, Boone revealed on social media that her battle with cancer had taken a turn for the worse .

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3oC3As_0oKUVt3n00
    Boone was first diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in June 2022, and spent the following nine months receiving chemotherapy.
    @ruschellboone/Instagram

    “I’m very touched by all who reached out to see how I’m doing. Unfortunately, my cancer has metastasized in my liver and I’m back in treatment. It’s rough, but the chemo is working,” Boone shared to her Instagram and X accounts in late July.

    “Prayers have carried me through the difficult moments. Thank u for rooting for me.”

    Since being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, the newswoman became a strong advocate in the battle against the disease, the type of cancer with the lowest survival rate.

    She recently posted on Instagram sharing that she was emceeing and participating in the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network’s Purple Stride walk to end the disease, which happened in April.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0Wy7aO_0oKUVt3n00
    Boone is survived by her husband, Todd. The two would have celebrated their 18th wedding anniversary later this month.
    Ruschell Boone / Instagram
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2vu8Dj_0oKUVt3n00
    Boone has two sons: 9-year-old Carter (right) and Jackson, 12.
    Ruschell Boone / Instagram

    An earlier post shows that she also attended Memorial Sloan Kettering’s Comedy vs. Cancer fundraiser event.

    “Ruschell’s legacy will be defined by that outstanding journalism and, more than anything, her remarkable ability to connect,” the memo to staff said.

    “Ruschell was effervescent in every sense of the word. She was, simply put, a joy to be around. It was those traits that allowed her to deeply engage with New Yorkers, as well as behind the scenes with her colleagues.

    “Ruschell will always be remembered for her service to the people of New York, especially her beloved boroughs of Queens and the Bronx. We will not be the same without her.”

    Expand All
    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
    Local New York City, NY newsLocal New York City, NY
    Most Popular newsMost Popular
    Comments / 0
    Add a Comment

    Comments / 0