Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Tea 'V' Guide?? Truth Or Truth?? Chutes & Ladders?? KFRC?? Owe Weight It Must Have Been Channel For Tee For!!



So Alan Colmes, Armstrong & Getty, George Noory, Glenn Beck, Howard Stern and the Internet at-large,
how does the Voice of the Customs know the Air Port is Truly Live,
Bill O'Reilly yelped loud enough Once,
the message boards go,
pictures say but have no eyes,
recorded earlier never shows,
the East Coast lies,
as the West Coast only plays CBS, NBC and ABC National Media previously recorded.

Talk T.V. is Not Live,
now ask yourself this Question,
why would My Big Brother Ed say simply Dialing for Dollars??



Pat McCormick (television personality)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Pat McCormick
    Actor
    Pat McCormick was an American actor and comedy writer known for playing Big Enos Burdette in Smokey and the Bandit and its two sequels.Wikipedia
    BornJune 30, 1927, Lakewood, OH
    DiedJuly 29, 2005, Woodland Hills, CA
    Height6′ 7″
http://www.ktvu.com/news/50671397-story
Pat McCormick (born c. 1933)[1] is a retired local television personality in San Francisco, California.
KGO-TV, and Oakland'sKTVU channel 2 in the San Francisco Bay Area, where among many jobs he was the nightly news' weatherman, hosted the midday movie Dialing for Dollars program, and co-hosted the local edition of the Jerry Lewis Labor Day Telethon.[2]

"Charley and Humphrey"[edit]

McCormick was raised in the southern Oregon town of Myrtle Creek.[1] While working at ABC-TV in Los Angeles, McCormick pitched a children's program to a CBS affiliate inFresno, California, and went on the air there in Spring, 1959 with Charley (inspired by Dennis Weaver's character Chester on Gunsmoke) and his sidekick Humphrey. Charley was a horse who wore a sea captain's hat, and Humphrey Hambone was a bulldog. In time, he'd added additional characters, "Sneezer," "Shagnasty Bear," and "Pussyfoot", the grand piano playing cat wearing sunglasses. The characters followed McCormick when he signed with San Francisco's KGO-TV in 1961, and finally to KTVU where they starred in "The Charley and Humphrey Show" from 1972-1976 and they became a staple in afternoon PSAs. Humphrey eventually wore a trademark Oakland Raiders sweater sent to McCormick by Sonny Barger of the Oakland Hells Angels.[3]
In a 2008 interview, McCormick admitted that the "Charley and Humphrey" skits were his favorite aspect of working on television: "All the other things I did on television were just jobs. It was my work. By contrast Charley and Humphrey were my passion. They were me. I miss working with them more than I can describe."[3]

Some "Charley and Humphrey" episodes[edit]

  • Bees
  • Boating Safety
  • Borrowing Without Asking
  • Think For Yourself
  • Park
  • Exercise
  • Interruption
  • Hostility
  • Kitten
  • Library

Dialing for Dollars[edit]

McCormick also hosted a show in the 1970s called Dialing for Dollars where random Bay Area people were called and asked to guess the "Count and the Amount". The "count" was used to determine which person would be called. The host would pick a slip of paper from a drum containing pages from local phone books sliced into convenient sizes. At the beginning of the show, the count was determined by spinning two wheels, one of which resulted in a number and the other in "top" or "bottom". If the count was, for instance, 3/top, the host would start at the top of the slip of phone book and count three numbers down from the top and call the resulting number. The "amount" was the amount of money to be won. It would start at $100 and increase by a fixed amount with every unsuccessful call. The calls were made during commercial breaks while the afternoon movie was being screened.

Personal life[edit]

After his retirement, McCormick settled in Gold Beach, Oregon.[1][3]