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He made 504 commercials as Mr. Whipple, earning U.S. $300,000 annually while working only 12–16 days a year. [ 2 ] [ 5 ] In an interview with ABC News on April 22, 1983, he mentioned that the first series of commercials for Charmin he appeared in were filmed in, appropriately enough, Flushing, New York City . [ 6 ]
The 32nd Directors Guild of America Awards, honoring the outstanding directorial achievements in film and television in 1979, were presented on March 15, 1980 at the Beverly Hilton. [1] The award honoring commercial directors was given out for the first time at this ceremony.
Mr. Horn is a 1979 American Western miniseries [1] based on Tom Horn's writings, starring David Carradine. It was directed by Jack Starrett from a screenplay by William Goldman . This version came out just prior to the 1980 feature film Tom Horn , which starred Steve McQueen .
3. Kool-Aid 'Oh, Yeah!' Commercial (1976) There you were, comfortably perched on your living room carpet, cartoons on the TV, and suddenly that iconic Kool-Aid Man bursts through a wall shouting ...
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He popped up in various movies and TV shows, and he voiced a character named after him on animated TV series Futurama in 1999. Popeil sold his company, Ronco, for about $56 million in 2005 ...
In the episode, Bart receives a microphone that transmits sound to nearby AM radios. To play a prank on the citizens of Springfield, he lowers a radio down a well and uses the microphone to trick the town into thinking a little boy is trapped there. The prank succeeds, but Bart remembers labelling the radio with his name, tries to retrieve it ...
In the 2007 film Funny Games, one of the characters is channel surfing and briefly flicks past an infomercial for Ron Popeil's Vegetable Dehydrator. In the 1996 horror film Scream , the catchphrase is said ("But wait, there's more!"), itself in the tradition of a horror film's saying of a famous TV catchphrase, in the 1980s horror film The ...