Don Pardo-related stories
Posted May 18th 2009 2:02PM by Danny Gallagher
Filed under: Saturday Night Live, Reality-Free

Fox may have lost
Mad TV last Saturday, but
Saturday Night Live lost something worth much, much more to the world of television than
Mad TV. And no, I don't mean that the
SNL writing staff lost their snack machine.
Announcer Don Pardo, 91, announced in his induction speech to the
Rhode Island Radio Hall of Fame that last Saturday's show will be his last.
Pardo has been the voice of the show since it hit the airwaves in 1975, minus the 7th season in '81 and '82. He has also been an announcer in a number of game shows, movies, commercials and news shows, and holds the distinction of being the first person on television to
announce the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
Continue reading Don Pardo says "It's Saturday Night Live" for the last time
Posted Aug 21st 2008 10:02AM by Allison Waldman
Filed under: Game Show, TV Squad Lists, Reality-Free

When I read
AOL's Top 20 Best Game Shows of All Time, I pretty much agreed with all the choices. I might have moved
Password up a bit, and dropped
Who Wants to Be A Millionaire to a lower slot, but the one selection that really made me glower was
The Price Is Right as number one.
No, no, not to me. For me, the only choice for numero uno is
Jeopardy. It's not a game of chance or luck or random spins of a wheel. It's all about brains and thinking on your feet. And maybe having really fast thumbs. Merv Grifffin's creation remains the best gameshow ever in my book.
As I was thinking about
Jeopardy, I realized that for me, the best
Jeopardy is not today's Alex Trebek version. I mean, it's great -- don't misunderstand me. It's the one I still prefer to watch today, but my favorite
Jeopardy remains the pre-syndication edition, the one that played on NBC daytime from 1964-1975. No, I'm not nuts. I have five very good reasons why I prefer the original, classic
Jeopardy.
Continue reading Five reasons I prefer classic Jeopardy - VIDEO
Posted Mar 13th 2006 5:33PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: OpEd, The Five, Celebrities
Okay, kids, for this addition of "The Five" we're going to talk about
those voices we love so much. I'm going to focus entirely on television announcers, but I'm expanding the topic to
include anyone whose job in television is (or was) centered around their vocal cords. That's why you won't see Mel
Blanc or Daws Butler on my list, though they most certainly would have been on it otherwise. Everyone on board? Okay,
let's do it:
Continue reading The Five: Voices