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Non-Road Boards => Off-Topic => Topic started by: roadman65 on February 14, 2015, 02:16:02 PM

Title: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: roadman65 on February 14, 2015, 02:16:02 PM
Warner Wolf WCBS New York TV.  His famous catch phrase "Lets go to the video tape."

Lloyd Lindsay Young WWOR Secaucus, NJ Weatherman- Hellooooooooooooo.

Gene Clavin Radio Personality on WNEW AM Radio- His humor and his own created       Trevor the traffic reporter which he characterized as well as many other characters on his morning drive show.

Dave Herman, DJ on the now defunct WNEW FM, where rock lived.  Nothing humorous, but he had a good show not being a shock jock, but able to balance music with talk really well.  Good for listening in the car on the way to work in the morning.

Scott Muni-  With his deep raspy voice, was an icon on WNEW FM and had a great career not only as a DJ, but as a reporter for interviewing many rock artists in his tenor who is now gone forever.


How about some out there you remember that have passed away, or retired completely.
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: slorydn1 on February 14, 2015, 02:27:24 PM
Stuart "BOO-yow" Scott for sure.

Growing up in Chicago in the 80's, we had 3 of the greatest local sports announcers of all time:

Jack Brickhouse ("HEY HEY!!!"), Harry Carry ("HOLY COW"), and Jim Durham ("The only sure things in life are death, taxes, and a John Paxson 18 foot jump shot").
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: DeaconG on February 14, 2015, 02:53:58 PM
John Facenda of WCAU in Philly, the voice of NFL Films.

Also Georgie Woods and Butterball on WDAS-AM.
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: 1995hoo on February 14, 2015, 03:17:22 PM
Glenn Brenner of WUSA-9 in DC. Longtime sports anchor collapsed after running the 1991 Marine Corps Marathon and died of a brain tumor about two months later. He was succeeded by Warner Wolf, the same guy Brenner had replaced in 1977.



(Parts 2 and 3 linked on the video page if you open YouTube.)
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: SidS1045 on February 14, 2015, 06:13:03 PM
We lost one yesterday...Gary Owens, who coined the phrase "beautiful downtown Burbank."
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: US81 on February 14, 2015, 06:39:32 PM
My parents were fans of Paul Harvey "Stand by for News!" and "The Rest of the Story" so I heard it often as a child. Even back then, his oratory seemed a bit old-fashioned. As an adult, I listened sporadically until he went off the air shortly before his death in 2009. Always made me feel nostalgic.
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: bandit957 on February 14, 2015, 07:32:52 PM
Casey Kasem comes immediately to mind.

Anyone know what happened to Carmine Guzman? He had a great talk show on Cincinnati radio in the mid-'90s, then he dropped from sight. Nobody knows what ever happened to him.
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: bing101 on February 14, 2015, 08:20:58 PM
Stan Chambers KTLA Los Angeles is gone he was the last person who worked in the Los Angeles TV market from the days when TV was considered a start up operation to the app age.

Jerry Dunphy of KCAL 9 News died in 2002 for from the Desert to the sea phrase.

Pete Wilson Talk Show Host of KGO-Am San Francisco, KGO ABC 7 news, KRON 4 News in the Bay area and KTXL 40 News Sacramento died in 2007. But he was known for putting the Hayward fault to national attention and for broadcasting the Loma Prieta quake in 1989.
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: DTComposer on February 14, 2015, 08:35:41 PM
I'll agree with Paul Harvey as mentioned above...he was kind of the Reader's Digest of radio news, but hearing him always took me back to childhood, riding in my mom's car.

Quote from: bing101 on February 14, 2015, 08:20:58 PM
Stan Chambers KTLA Los Angeles is gone he was the last person who worked in the Los Angeles TV market from the days when TV was considered a start up operation to the app age.

Jerry Dunphy of KCAL 9 News died in 2002 for from the Desert to the sea phrase.

Pete Wilson Talk Show Host of KGO-Am San Francisco, KGO ABC 7 news, KRON 4 News in the Bay area and KTXL 40 News Sacramento died in 2007. But he was known for putting the Hayward fault to national attention and for broadcasting the Loma Prieta quake in 1989.

KGO-AM had a slew of great personalities when it was one of the few (perhaps the only) talk radio stations with entirely local hosts. Owen Spann was a talk radio pioneer who passed on around 2002(?).

Many of the other hosts are sill with us, but were dispersed when Cumulus bought out KGO, trashed the format and fired most of the hosts. Unsurprisingly, the switch to all-news sunk their ratings (there is already an all-news station in town) and they've been changing back to more talk the last few months.
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: bing101 on February 14, 2015, 10:53:00 PM
Al Hart of KCBS-AM San Francisco Is out of the spotlight


Hal Fishman and Larry McCormick of KTLA 5 News has been deceased for close to a decade.

Lloyd Lindsay Young is not in NYC but does segments for Iheart News was recently at KGO-AM until the last decade

http://ktla.com/2015/02/13/jaime-chambers-remembers-grandfather-stan-chambers-he-was-the-real-deal/ (http://ktla.com/2015/02/13/jaime-chambers-remembers-grandfather-stan-chambers-he-was-the-real-deal/)

http://ktla.com/2015/02/13/photos-stan-chambers-through-the-years/ (http://ktla.com/2015/02/13/photos-stan-chambers-through-the-years/)

http://ktla.com/2015/02/13/journalists-colleagues-friends-remember-legendary-newsman-stan-chambers/ (http://ktla.com/2015/02/13/journalists-colleagues-friends-remember-legendary-newsman-stan-chambers/)

Stan Chambers of KTLA dead at 91

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=spnd5K9efSM
Bob Simon of CBS News Dead at 71
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: bing101 on February 14, 2015, 10:59:32 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/02/13/gary-owens-dead_n_6681204.html


Gary Owens Dead at age 80
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: Pete from Boston on February 14, 2015, 11:32:06 PM

Quote from: SidS1045 on February 14, 2015, 06:13:03 PM
We lost one yesterday...Gary Owens, who coined the phrase "beautiful downtown Burbank."

No!  Not Space Ghost!
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: cjk374 on February 15, 2015, 11:17:33 AM
I too enjoyed Paul Harvey news, and it was because I would listen to him with my mom in the car. 

In the 80s, CBS's morning news show uses Warner Wolf on Friday mornings (IIRC) for a sports blooper/amazing play spot.  That was the best part of the whole news show for me.

We listened to Casey Kasem every Sunday morning for American Top 40, ;and we watched Scooby Doo everyday after school seeing if his voice would appear in another character other than Shaggy...RIP Mr. Kasem.

Kid Kraddic died in 2013 of a heart attack at a very young age.  I only heard his show when in the NOLA area, but I enjoyed listening.

Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: bing101 on February 15, 2015, 03:56:29 PM
VanAmburg of KGO ABC 7 News he was removed in 1986 but unknown if he is even alive.

Dr. Don Rose KFRC 610 dead back in 2005
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: vdeane on February 15, 2015, 06:12:27 PM
I'm surprised nobody has mentioned Peter Jennings yet.
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: US71 on February 15, 2015, 09:53:04 PM
Wally Phillips, Roy Leonard, Bob Collins  WGN Radio

Gary Owens

David Brinkley

Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: cjk374 on February 15, 2015, 10:12:06 PM
I can't believe I forgot Charles Kuralt.  I watched him host "Sunday Morning", but never got to see his "On the Road" series.
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: Takumi on February 15, 2015, 10:51:07 PM
Serious Jeremy Clarkson

I'll let myself out
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: golden eagle on February 15, 2015, 11:57:12 PM
Around here, Woodie Assad, who was the longtime weatherman at WLBT-TV. He supposedly has done more weather broadcasts than any other person on TV.
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: Pete from Boston on February 16, 2015, 12:30:36 PM
Here we had David Brudnoy on the radio.  Brudnoy was sharp, intellectually honest, and held more conservative views than I do, but he took all callers with deeply respectful scrutiny of their ideas.  He was a much better political talk radio host than almost any of them around now, but sadly dignity like his hasn't appeared much since he died ten or so years ago.
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: cpzilliacus on February 16, 2015, 12:35:20 PM
Quote from: roadman65 on February 14, 2015, 02:16:02 PM
Warner Wolf WCBS New York TV.  His famous catch phrase "Lets go to the video tape."

Before that on WTOP-TV (CBS), now WUSA-TV.
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: Roadrunner75 on February 16, 2015, 12:54:33 PM
In the Philadelphia area:

Gary Papa, the sports anchor on Action News (Channel 6), who died a few years ago of cancer at a relatively young age.

Before him and also on Action News, in the 80s, Jim O'Brien was a popular weatherman who died in a skydiving accident.

I most miss Dave Roberts, a weatherman at Action News who retired about five years ago (still with us though).  The 6pm newscast wasn't complete without Dave standing on the studio lawn next to City Line Avenue acknowledging the "honkers" as they passed by.  Final broadcast:


Not looking forward to Jim Gardner going, when that day comes...



Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: kurumi on February 16, 2015, 01:47:03 PM
From the SF Bay Area:

Thuy Vu (https://twitter.com/thuy), with the coolest name in the news business and a very smooth NPR delivery. (I think she's still around; I just stopped getting news from TV and radio many years ago).

Not loved but notorious from the past: helmet-haired Terilyn Joe (https://duckduckgo.com/?q=%22terilyn+joe%22&iax=1&ia=images), who had many admirers and detractors (http://richliebermanreport.blogspot.com/2014/02/sf-tvs-retro-black-widow-terilyn-joe.html).

Also: Alex Bennett, Mark Hamilton, Steve Masters and Big Rick Stuart at Live 105 (alternative rock back in the day; sadly they have decayed into pretty much a clone of Mix 106)
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: roadman65 on February 16, 2015, 04:52:06 PM
In the New York area we used to have a man name Roger Grimsby, who I did not know that well growing up because my parents liked Chuck Scarborough and Rolland Smith. So Channel 7, where he anchored the 6 o clock news, we never watched.

I heard some interesting stories about him and I wish I could have seen them in action.  I cannot say what I heard about him as I have no proof of what he did, if he did them, etc.  Just miss him because he sounded very interesting and he seemed very opinionated at a lot of things that is what made him the talk of the town as it did appear that he had a mouth that got him into trouble at times.

Also I would like to know who the drunk TV news anchor was that got fired in NYC for showing up on the air shit faced and said the wrong thing during the broadcast not allowing him to complete the news for that particular evening.  The person who told me said that his name was at the tip of her tongue, but could not remember. She also said this anchor was also as opinionated as Grimsby was when even sober.
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: admtrap on February 16, 2015, 04:54:38 PM
Jim Healy.  Been gone 20 years now, but still miss his entertaining sports radio show during rush hour in LA.   
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: roadman65 on February 16, 2015, 05:21:57 PM
I miss the duo of Al Michaels and John Maddin on SNF.  Now with Madden retired and living the life he deserves Sunday Night Football is not the same.

Also Ralph Kiner, former Cubs, Pirates, and Met's TV announcer is well missed.  At least he got his wish as years ago long before the Tampa Bay Rays, he always wanted St. Pete to have a MLB franchise because many baseball greats came from St. Pete and never understood why it never got a team.  The Tampa Bay Devil Rays at the time got commissioned into the MLB when he was alive, so at least that wish for him came true.
Title: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: Pete from Boston on February 16, 2015, 06:04:54 PM
(https://waybackandgone.files.wordpress.com/2009/02/philrizzuto.jpg)

There is a void in my life that will never quite be filled, left behind by Phil Rizzuto. 

Much like baseball was a much different, more relaxed, more pedestrian affair in those days, so were the broadcasts done by him and Bill White. You got the feeling that if you sat down to watch the game with Phil Rizzuto, he would sound exactly the same way as he did delivering his stream of consciousness to millions of people on TV, and it would still be just about 40% about the game you were watching. 

He was like our uncle that lived on channel 11.
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: OCGuy81 on February 17, 2015, 10:56:44 AM
I really miss the Mark and Brian show which aired for over 20 years on KLOS.  I used to listen to the show when my dad would drive me to school, and I continued listening to them when I was driving to work when I got older.  They became synonymous with my weekday mornings.

Last show was in 2012, and the show they brought in to replace it after was garbage, so I tuned out.  Luckily, by then, I had a car with an ipod jack so I could listen to what I wanted. Still, I do miss that show.
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: SidS1045 on February 17, 2015, 02:13:02 PM
Quote from: roadman65 on February 16, 2015, 04:52:06 PM
In the New York area we used to have a man name Roger Grimsby, who I did not know that well growing up because my parents liked Chuck Scarborough and Rolland Smith. So Channel 7, where he anchored the 6 o clock news, we never watched.

I heard some interesting stories about him and I wish I could have seen them in action.  I cannot say what I heard about him as I have no proof of what he did, if he did them, etc.  Just miss him because he sounded very interesting and he seemed very opinionated at a lot of things that is what made him the talk of the town as it did appear that he had a mouth that got him into trouble at times.

Also I would like to know who the drunk TV news anchor was that got fired in NYC for showing up on the air shit faced and said the wrong thing during the broadcast not allowing him to complete the news for that particular evening.  The person who told me said that his name was at the tip of her tongue, but could not remember. She also said this anchor was also as opinionated as Grimsby was when even sober.

I worked for ABC on the radio side in the 1970's and got to know Roger...well, as much as anyone could.  Roger was not exactly the warmest person on the face of the earth, but what I heard from others at ABC was that if he liked you, professionally and/or personally, there was no better friend one could have.

There is a series of YouTube videos (four, I believe) which are comprised of the various tributes to Roger which aired on NYC TV stations when he died in 1995.  One of them was a tribute done by WCBS-TV in which a former co-worker, Lou Young, related a now famous story about how Roger, with an ad-libbed one-liner, single-handedly saved what could have been a nasty situation.  RoseAnn Scamardella was introducing a report by Mara Wolinsky, and during RoseAnn's intro Mara was on-camera, making gestures at the floor director, and apparently forgetting she was on camera, gave him the middle finger just as RoseAnn was done.  They immediately cut her off and went to the anchors, Roger and Bill Beutel.  Roger, with no prep time whatsoever, said:  "Well, as Mara Wolinsky would say, we're number one."  The entire cast and crew broke up, and it took the edge off what had just happened.  The YouTube clips contain a lot of Roger's memorable moments, but none so memorable to me as when he was asked what was his worst on-air mistake:  "I mispronounced 'count.'"

The drunk person you are probably referring to was WABC-TV's long-time weatherman Tex Antoine.  Unfortunately he was an alky and had this bad habit of coming to work "in the bag."  What got Tex fired was his reaction to a story Roger Grimsby had just read on the 6PM Eyewitness News about the particularly vicious rape of an eight-year-old girl.  Roger then intro'd Tex, and Tex's first words were:  "Well, with rape so predominant in the news lately, it's well to remember the words of Confucius:  'If rape is inevitable, lie back and enjoy it.'"  The ABC switchboard lit up like a Christmas tree, Roger aired an apology at the end of the 11PM newscast and Tex was "sentenced" to answering all the complaints.  Five days later, Roger introduced Antoine's replacement, Storm Field (son of long-time NYC weatherman Dr. Frank Field), with the line "Lie back, relax and enjoy the weather with Storm Field."
Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: bing101 on February 17, 2015, 02:45:49 PM
Quote from: kurumi on February 16, 2015, 01:47:03 PM
From the SF Bay Area:

Thuy Vu (https://twitter.com/thuy), with the coolest name in the news business and a very smooth NPR delivery. (I think she's still around; I just stopped getting news from TV and radio many years ago).

Not loved but notorious from the past: helmet-haired Terilyn Joe (https://duckduckgo.com/?q=%22terilyn+joe%22&iax=1&ia=images), who had many admirers and detractors (http://richliebermanreport.blogspot.com/2014/02/sf-tvs-retro-black-widow-terilyn-joe.html).

Also: Alex Bennett, Mark Hamilton, Steve Masters and Big Rick Stuart at Live 105 (alternative rock back in the day; sadly they have decayed into pretty much a clone of Mix 106)

Thuy Vu is now on KQED 9 and 88.5 FM in the San Francisco area and does KQED Newsroom since 2013. Also Thuy Vu May also do reports for PBS Newshour as the West Coast Correspondent.

http://www.kqed.org/tv/programs/newsroom/

Title: Re: TV and Radio Personalities you once loved that are no more
Post by: bing101 on February 17, 2015, 02:47:34 PM
Quote from: roadman65 on February 16, 2015, 04:52:06 PM
In the New York area we used to have a man name Roger Grimsby, who I did not know that well growing up because my parents liked Chuck Scarborough and Rolland Smith. So Channel 7, where he anchored the 6 o clock news, we never watched.

I heard some interesting stories about him and I wish I could have seen them in action.  I cannot say what I heard about him as I have no proof of what he did, if he did them, etc.  Just miss him because he sounded very interesting and he seemed very opinionated at a lot of things that is what made him the talk of the town as it did appear that he had a mouth that got him into trouble at times.

Also I would like to know who the drunk TV news anchor was that got fired in NYC for showing up on the air shit faced and said the wrong thing during the broadcast not allowing him to complete the news for that particular evening.  The person who told me said that his name was at the tip of her tongue, but could not remember. She also said this anchor was also as opinionated as Grimsby was when even sober.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lVpX5y381sI

Before ABC Moved Roger Grimsby to New York. Roger Grimsby did the KGO 7 News in San Francisco in the 1960's.
Roger Grimsby's San Francisco Replacement was VanAmburg.