“Anybody who wanted to be anybody in politics, or in business, had to talk to Mary, and she would make or break people,” Brady said. “Nine times out of ten, she was right.”
“It took a long time to win her over, but once I did, she was 100 percent loyal, and she was my buddy,” Brady added.
Mason died on Thursday at the age of 94 after living with Alzheimer’s for years.
Since her passing, reactions have been pouring in from across the city of Philadelphia, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and the region.
Congressman Dwight Evans posted to X on Friday, calling Mason “a pioneer for African American women in Philadelphia radio. It’s impossible to overstate her impact and influence! May she Rest in Power.”
“There would be no Black radio, as I know it, as we know it. There would be no Black radio without Mary Mason,” Brady told Action News.
He added, “There will never be another Mary Mason. There just won’t be another Mary Mason. Whether it be on the radio, whether it be in TV, politics.”
When she wasn’t making a name for herself in the political sphere, her friends said she was doing charitable work.
Martin said, “She had the ability to galvanize people. To organize people to do radiothons in an instant, and make them big successes, and come out with a hundred thousand dollar fundraiser in a day and a half.”