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PitchMen (original name: But Wait...There's More) [1] is a docudrama television program produced for the Discovery Channel in the United States. The show followed infomercial producers and talent Billy Mays and Anthony "Sully" Sullivan as they attempted to sell various inventions through direct marketing, mainly through Telebrands, one of the largest direct response/infomercial companies.
He had a son with Dolores named Billy Mays III (born August 12, 1986) who worked as a production assistant alongside his father on the PitchMen television show. [6] Mays had a daughter, Elizabeth, with his second wife, Deborah Mays. His daughter was three years old at the time of his death. [21] [22]
The Howard Stern Channel 9 Show: WWOR-TV: 1990–1992: Acapulco H.E.A.T. M6/Syndication: 1993–1994 1997: produced by Balenciaga Productions, M6 Films, CNC, Les Films du Triangle, Film Groupe S. A. (1993–94), France Triangle Films (1996) and A Max Keller & Micheline Keller Presentation Currently owned by Keller Entertainment Group Beach ...
Stevenson compared Offer to earlier, "more upbeat" television pitchmen like Billy Mays and the Home Shopping Network hosts and concluded that Offer's "smooth-talking condescension" was more suited to the present "zeitgeist" than the "earnest fervor" of spokesmen like Mays and Ron Popeil. [15] Consumer Reports reported that the infomercial for ...
Anthony Sullivan is a British producer and pitchman of media shopping in the United States, best known for his work in television commercials. He is the founder and CEO of Sullivan Productions, Inc. which produces commercial spots for brands such as OxiClean, Nutrisystem and Arm & Hammer.
Rebecca De Mornay (born August 29, 1959 [1] [2] [3] [a]) is an American actress.Her breakthrough film role came in 1983, when she starred in Risky Business.De Mornay is also known for her roles in The Slugger's Wife (1985), Runaway Train (1985), The Trip to Bountiful (1985), Backdraft (1991), and The Hand That Rocks the Cradle (1992).
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In 1986 he replaced Bernie Smilovitz as the sports anchor on WTTG-TV's The Ten O'Clock News. [1] After a stint at Philadelphia's WCAU-TV, Fowler became a reporter for KCAL-TV in Los Angeles. While there, he appeared in two episodes of Coach as sportscaster Bob Clifton. He also hosted Tuesday Night Muscle, a weekly women's bodybuilding show, on ...