Posted on 02/01/2005 7:05:59 AM PST by Rightliner.com
This is no mathematical formula, but I did consider their lasting value, longevity on the air (including re-runs), and just a general feeling for them.
Without furhter "adue" here they are....
10. Regis Philbin
9. Michael Jordan
8. Bob Barker
7. Andy Griffith
6. Oprah
5. Lucille Ball
4. Jerry Seinfield
3. David Letterman
2. JohnnyCarson
1. Bob Hope
There ya have it.... I think I'm right, but did I miss anybody?
compliments of Rightliner.com
Too young (and too few reruns) to fully appreciate Steve Allen or Jack Webb, but I can't really argue with the other 8. Also on my short list would be Ed Sullivan (again, too little experience to fully appreciate him).
Agreed; he slipped my mind as I made the list.
You are correct about that. But I think the criteria here is ranking entertainers whose primary medium was television. (Which is the same reason Michael Jordan shouldn't be on such a list.)
I'd put Bob just below that 10, most likely at about 12 or 13.
Too many great entertainers, too few spots on the list :-)
I would pick Jack Benny over Dick Van Dyke any day of the week... *g
Yeah!
Carol Burnett!
Also she and her sweater also seem to do the weather or at least the tempeture as well
I meant to put up
a link in case younger folks
never heard of him:
Ernie Kovacs, a creative and iconoclastic comedian, pioneered the use of special effects photography in television comedy. On the 50th anniversary of the beginning of television in 1989, People Weekly recognized him as one of television's top 25 stars of all time. During the 1950s, Kovacs' brilliant use of video comedy demonstrated the unique possibilities of television decades before similar techniques became popular on Rowan and Martin's Laugh In and the various David Letterman shows. His live shows were characterized by ad-libbed routines, enormous flexibility with the TV camera, experimentation with video effects, complete informality while on camera, and a permissiveness that expanded studio boundaries by allowing viewers to see activity beyond the set.
His routines frequently parodied other programs and introduced imaginative Kovacsian characters such as the magician Natzoh Hepplewhite, Professor Bernie Cosnowski, and Mr. Question Man, who resembled Johnny Carson's Carnac the Magnificent. The best known of his creations was the Nairobi Trio, three ape instrumentalists playing "Solfeggio" in a deadpan manner like mechanical monkeys. The high point come when the percussionist turned jerkily to the conductor and bopped him on the head with a xylophone hammer.
Not bad, Cosby was about 12th on my list.
Michael Landon, your right - huge TV star
Sammy Davis Jr.?
Ernie would definitely be in the top 15, he sadly left us too soon to go into the top 10.
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