Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
As of September 1, 2016 Arnie States is no longer working for KRXQ. [3] [better source needed] In 2016 Arnie States started hosting his own show on KUUB FM ESPN RADIO 94.5 in Reno, Nevada: The Arnie States Sports Show. He was released from the station due to budget cuts as of February 7, 2017. [4] As of June 2, 2017, States hosts the Arnie ...
The album was recorded on October 18, 2014 at his sold-out show at The Silver Legacy Casino in Reno, Nevada. The audio CD was released for sale on the show's website [ 1 ] and the digital download of the audio CD was available on iTunes on November 10, 2014 where it has peaked at #3 on the U.S. iTunes Comedy Charts.
WGN-TV: Bozo's Circus, later The Bozo Show and The Bozo Super Sunday Show (with Bob Bell, later Joey D'Auria) WGN-TV: Breakfast with Bugs Bunny (with Dick Coughlin and Ray Rayner) WGN-TV: Dick Tracy Crime Stopper Club (hosted by Ray Rayner) WBBM-TV/WBKB/WGN-TV: Garfield Goose and Friends (Frazier Thomas) WLS-TV: Gigglesnort Hotel (with Bill ...
Arnie is an American television sitcom that ran for two seasons (1970–72) on CBS. It starred Herschel Bernardi , Sue Ane Langdon , and Roger Bowen . Bernardi played the title character, Arnie Nuvo, a longtime blue-collar employee at the fictitious Continental Flange Company, who overnight was promoted to an executive position.
On May 28, 2009, Hosts Rob Williams and Arnie States from "The Rob, Arnie, and Dawn Show" drew media attention by advocating violence against LGBT children during their show, in reference to two recent news stories regarding transgender children. [2]
Arnie States, a radio host on The Rob, Arnie, and Dawn Show; Arnie Stone (1892–1948), American Major League Baseball pitcher; Arnie Stuthman (born 1941), American politician; Arnie Teves (born 1971), Filipino politician; Arnie Tuadles (1956–1996), Philippine Basketball Association player
Arnold William Ginsburg (August 5, 1926 – June 26, 2020), known as Arnie "Woo-Woo" Ginsburg, was an American disc jockey in the Boston radio market from the mid-1950s to the 1970s. Following this period, he became involved in the business side of radio as a business manager, president and owner of WVJV-TV, [ 1 ] and later as an executive with ...
Kornfeld was born in 1942 into a Jewish lower-middle-class family in Brooklyn, New York, United States. [5] [6]In his early teens, when his family had moved to North Carolina, he got a job at the Charlotte Coliseum selling soda pop so he could catch acts such as Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry, and Fats Domino.