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Renck: Mark McIntosh needs a kidney, but his focus is on recruiting donors

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Mark McIntosh is dying.

“And I have never felt more alive,” he says as we walk through his Denver-area home with jazz music humming in the background.

McIntosh, 65, needs a kidney transplant. Forever healthy and active, his life turned upside down in 2022. He lacked energy, wasn’t sleeping and lost weight. McIntosh visited the doctor and was diagnosed with amyloidosis, a rare disorder caused by an abnormality of plasma cells in the bone marrow.

Last April, McIntosh began dialysis and chemotherapy.

“I am in remission,” he says with a smile. “It has opened the door for a transplant.”

We know Mark well around these parts. He worked at CBS News Colorado from 1988 to 2006, entertaining and informing viewers as a top sportscaster and reporter. I first met Mark when covering the University of Colorado football team in college in 1990. His personality was infectious. His current basement showcases a life lived in snapshots and artwork from memorable sporting events.

“That is me on the sideline pointing to the Notre Dame players and the flag thrown for clipping on Rocket Ismail’s punt return for a touchdown,” says McIntosh of CU’s Orange Bowl win that led to a national championship. “I will never forget that.”

Thrust into this world of survival, McIntosh knows more about kidneys than he ever wanted to. The waiting juxtaposed by the sense of urgency can be agonizing. But McIntosh offers no glimpse of anguish. His perspective on his situation is shaped by faith and friendships.

“I have been going to Friday morning bible study for about 20 years. It’s a bunch of old jocks. We talk about sports and then ask for prayer. I was always praying my kidneys would wake up. Once they didn’t, I prayed for a new kidney,” recalls McIntosh, a married father of two. “My buddy then said, ‘McIntosh, given your communication skills and social media following, go find 5,000 kidneys.’^”

That is where the idea for Drive for Five was born, a quest to make a difference when it comes to live kidney donations. McIntosh is spreading the word in Denver, his hometown of Kansas City and St. Louis, where many of his college buddies reside, with designs on going nationwide.

His message is simple: “Why not share your spare?”

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