cjwest said:I believe he also did an evening news wrap up show. It used sound effects which was very strange for the time.
There is a blooper Mutual tape that I believe I remember having Tony on the air three sheets to the wind.
FredLeonard said:Bill Stern, who served as the model for Paul Harvey's broadcast style and for "The Rest of the Story," did sports reports.
Goat Rodeo Cowboy said:FredLeonard said:Bill Stern, who served as the model for Paul Harvey's broadcast style and for "The Rest of the Story," did sports reports.
Now you have my curiosity up. I must track down some Bill Stern stuff. I remember the name, but I can't place his style, his delivery.
I always thought of the old "country cliche" that might apply to Paul Harvey: "After God made him, God threw away the mold." Then there was that recovering alcoholic department manager I once worked with who tried to apply that saying to himself, and we always corrected him: "When God made you, it BROKE the mold!"
So you're trying to tell me that Paul Harvey didn't just sift that speech style out of the sage brush, tumble weeds and sand burrs of Oklahoma? ;D
FredLeonard said:Goat Rodeo Cowboy said:FredLeonard said:Bill Stern, who served as the model for Paul Harvey's broadcast style and for "The Rest of the Story," did sports reports.
Now you have my curiosity up. I must track down some Bill Stern stuff. I remember the name, but I can't place his style, his delivery.
I always thought of the old "country cliche" that might apply to Paul Harvey: "After God made him, God threw away the mold." Then there was that recovering alcoholic department manager I once worked with who tried to apply that saying to himself, and we always corrected him: "When God made you, it BROKE the mold!"
So you're trying to tell me that Paul Harvey didn't just sift that speech style out of the sage brush, tumble weeds and sand burrs of Oklahoma? ;D
No, he didn't. Much of it came from Bill Stern. Some came from Walter Winchell and the Harvey "slant" came from the Chicago Tribune. Stern did a weekly program called "The Colgate Sports Newsreel." Stern would cue the commercial saying "reel two," or "reel three." And he did sports personality features ("that little Italian boy who got a baseball bat for Christmas is now the Pope"). Stern appears in "Pride of the Yankees" (as the sportscaster) and his program is caricatured in Woody Allen's "Radio Days."
Both Mutual and ABC had stables of commentators representing a range of political opinion. Mutual's leading conservative commentator was Fulton Lewis, Jr. (later his son, Fulton Lewis III, took over). Paul Harvey was the last of the radio commentators but what they had in common was each had their own "take" on the news, both in slant and in selection.
HHH said:Yes, Bill Stern was notorious for these ridiculous stories that were complete B.S!
The scuttlebutt was that the network got so many complaints, that Stern changed the intro to something like "Some may be true, some not, but all are fascinating" or something like that.
After that disclaimer, that meant anything goes!
I believe that he once had Abraham Lincoln playing baseball with Abner Doubleday.
Red Barber supposedly was not a fan and considered him a joke.
Actually it's called Bill Stern's Sports Newsreels which was SPONSORED by Colgate. GET IT RIGHT PEOPLES (Some of us are passionate about Old Time Radio) !!!Mike_Rafone said:Bill Stern's early show was called "The Bill Stern Colgate Palmolive Sports Newsreel of the Air"
Tony Marvin
He was also the original Tony the Tiger for Kelloggs's Frosted Flakes. He died in 1998.