Saturday, October 11, 2025

FAME

When you've spent your working life as a broadcast journalist, as I did, you run into a lot of famous, or at least well-known people.

But my first brush with the famous started when I was a wee lad and was photographed with that mighty lumberjack of the north woods, Paul Bunyan.


I'm in the lower left of this photograph.

It was at a theme park in some part of northern Minnesota.

That brief meeting with a storybook hero may have led me on.

Later on, as a rock and roll disc jockey I conducted my first interview with a famous piano player and singer, Fats Domino.


Unfortunately the interview was done over the telephone and I didn't get a picture with him.

But I did get a photo of me greeting one of my personal heroes, the late NBC newscaster, Chet Huntley.


Later on, I met his broadcast partner, David Brinkley, but again no photo.

Barry Goldwater brought his presidential campaign to North Dakota in 1964 and I was nearby, peering over someone's shoulder.


The gentleman standing with Goldwater is Tom Kleppe, at the time a congressman from North Dakota who later served as administrator of the Small Business Administration and then Secretary of the Interior.

A couple of years later, the Democrats were descending on the state.

I was a news director welcoming Vice-President Hubert Humphrey into my t.v. station for an exclusive interview.


 And around that same time, I caught up with Senator Eugene McCarthy when he came to town.


In Phoenix, I would see Senator Goldwater fairly frequently, along with many other politicians.

But I also interviewed a local celebrity who made it big, Vincent Furnier.


You might not recognize him without his stage makeup, where he's more commonly known as Alice Cooper.

I also ran into another famous rock and roll singer when he was on tour in Seattle.


Well, Elvis Presley was long gone by then but this statue of him was in some shops in the Pike's Place Marketplace.

Speaking of "statuesque", John Wayne dropped by one of my homes for a visit one day.


Okay, to be honest, that's just a cardboard cutout but I actually did meet the real "Duke" on the patio of his home in Newport Beach, California some years before.


The subject matter we discussed was his plan to take a few Vietnamese refugees and give them a home on one of his Arizona ranches.

This was the same week I met a Vietnamese refugee, the former Prime Minister Nguyen Cao Ky and his lovely wife.


Speaking of Prime Ministers, while I never met him, I did pay a visit to a statue of my 15th cousin in the United Kingdom, Winston Churchill.


Back in the U.S. of A., retirement took me to my acting career.

As an un-credited extra.

In a movie called "What's Eating Gilbert Grape", I was briefly seen carrying a bag of groceries to the parking lot of a store behind the nearly unknown actor at the time: Johnny Depp.


Leonardo DiCaprio was also in that movie and received his first Academy Award nomination for his role.

Another extra role had me on screen for about a quarter of a second but the film "A Perfect World" got me a handshake from the director, Clint Eastwood, when my brief scene was over.

Ah, yes, it's been an interesting life.

8 comments:

  1. Old age gives you time to look back on all those years. Glad they were memorable!

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  2. Brushes with the famous and infamous!

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  3. What was John Wayne saying as he pointed his banana-sized finger at you?..."Who the hell is this guy? Can somebody drive him home!"

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    1. Okay, I've had enough. Get this pilgrim offa my deck!

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  4. That's a whole bunch of famous people...and great cutouts/statues! I can't compete even a little bit. I did shake Ronald Reagan's hand in Sick's Stadium in Seattle (no longer there) before he was president. Never liked him as a President but I definitely felt the charm. By the way, Pike Place Market. (never Pike's) Love, Your Washingtonian Friend

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    1. Correction accepted. Down here in the desert, our eyesight is affected.

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  5. You've met more interesting people than the average citizen.

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