NEW YORK — Chuck Woolery, the affable, smooth-talking sport present host of Wheel of Fortune, Love Connection, and Scrabble who later grew to become a right-wing podcaster, skewering liberals and accusing the federal government of mendacity about COVID-19, has died. He was 83.
Mark Young, Woolery’s podcast co-host and pal, stated in an e-mail early Sunday that Woolery died at his residence in Texas along with his spouse, Kristen, current. “Chuck was an expensive pal and brother and an incredible man of religion, life is not going to be the identical with out him,” Young wrote.
Woolery, along with his matinee idol seems to be, coiffed hair and ease with witty banter, was inducted into the American TV Game Show Hall of Fame in 2007 and earned a daytime Emmy nomination in 1978.
In 1983, Woolery started an 11-year run as host of TV’s Love Connection, for which he coined the phrase, “We’ll be again in two minutes and two seconds,” a two-fingered signature dubbed the “2 and a pair of.” In 1984, he hosted TV’s Scrabble, concurrently internet hosting two sport exhibits on TV till 1990.
Love Connection, which aired lengthy earlier than the daybreak of relationship apps, had a premise that featured both a single man or single lady who would watch audition tapes of three potential mates after which decide one for a date.
A few weeks after the date, the visitor would sit with Woolery in entrance of a studio viewers and inform all people concerning the date. The viewers would vote on the three contestants, and if the viewers agreed with the visitor’s selection, Love Connection would provide to pay for a second date.
Woolery advised The Philadelphia Inquirer in 2003 that his favourite set of lovebirds was a person aged 91 and a lady aged 87. “She had a lot eye make-up on, she appeared like a stolen Corvette. He was so outdated he stated, ‘I bear in mind wagon trains.’ The poor man. She took him on a balloon journey.”
Other profession highlights included internet hosting the exhibits Lingo, Greed, and The Chuck Woolery Show, in addition to internet hosting the short-lived syndicated revival of The Dating Game from 1998 to 2000 and an ill-fated 1991 discuss present. In 1992, he performed himself in two episodes of TV’s Melrose Place.
Woolery grew to become the topic of the Game Show Network’s first try at a actuality present, Chuck Woolery: Naturally Stoned, which premiered in 2003. It shared the title of the pop tune in 1968 by Woolery and his rock group, the Avant-Garde. It lasted six episode and was panned by critics.
Woolery started his TV profession at a present that has turn into a mainstay. Although most related to Pat Sajak and Vanna White, Wheel of Fortune debuted Jan. 6, 1975, on NBC with Woolery welcoming contestants and the viewers. Woolery, then 33, was attempting to make it in Nashville as a singer.
Wheel of Fortune began life as Shopper’s Bazaar, incorporating Hangman-style puzzles and a roulette wheel. After Woolery appeared on The Merv Griffin Show singing Delta Dawn, Merv Griffin requested him to host the brand new present with Susan Stafford.
“I had an interview that stretched to fifteen, 20 minutes,” Woolery advised The New York Times in 2003. “After the present, when Merv requested if I needed to do a sport present, I assumed, ‘Great, a man with a foul jacket and an equally dangerous mustache who doesn’t care what you must say—that’s the man I need to be.’”
NBC initially handed, however they retooled it as Wheel of Fortune and received the inexperienced mild. After a couple of years, Woolery demanded a elevate to $500,000 a 12 months, or what host Peter Marshall was making on Hollywood Squares. Griffin balked and changed Woolery with climate reporter Pat Sajak.
“Both Chuck and Susie did a advantageous job, and Wheel’did properly sufficient on NBC, though it by no means approached the sort of rankings success that Jeopardy! achieved in its heyday,” Griffin stated in Merv: Making the Good Life Last, an autobiography from the 2000s co-written by David Bender. Woolery earned an Emmy nod as host.
Born in Ashland, Kentucky, Woolery served within the U.S. Navy earlier than attending school. He performed double bass in a folks trio, then fashioned the psychedelic rock duo The Avant-Garde in 1967 whereas working as a truck driver to help himself as a musician.
The Avant-Garde, which toured in a refitted Cadillac hearse, had the Top 40 hit “Naturally Stoned,” with Woolery singing, “When I put my thoughts on you alone/ I can get a great sensation/ Feel like I’m naturally stoned.”
After The Avant-Garde broke up, Woolery launched his debut solo single “I’ve Been Wrong” in 1969 and several other extra singles with Columbia earlier than transitioning to nation music by the Seventies. He launched two solo singles, “Forgive My Heart” and “Love Me, Love Me.”
Woolery wrote or co-wrote songs for himself and everybody from Pat Boone to Tammy Wynette. On Wynette’s 1971 album We Sure Can Love Each Other, Woolery wrote “The Joys of Being a Woman” with lyrics together with “See our child on the swing/ Hear her chortle, hear her scream.”
After his TV profession ended, Woolery went into podcasting. In an interview with The New York Times, he known as himself a gun-rights activist and described himself as a conservative libertarian and constitutionalist. He stated he hadn’t revealed his politics in liberal Hollywood for worry of retribution.
He teamed up with Mark Young in 2014 for the podcast Blunt Force Truth and shortly grew to become a full supporter of Donald Trump whereas arguing minorities don’t want civil rights and inflicting a firestorm by tweeting an antisemitic remark linking Soviet Communists to Judaism.
“President Obama’s reputation is a fantasy solely held by him and his dwindling legion of juice-box-drinking, anxiety-dog-hugging, safe-space-hiding snowflakes,” he stated.
Woolery additionally was lively on-line, retweeting articles from Conservative Brief, insisting Democrats had been attempting to put in a system of Marxism and spreading headlines resembling “Impeach him! Devastating photograph of Joe Biden leaks.”
During the early levels of the pandemic, Woolery initially accused medical professionals and Democrats of mendacity concerning the virus in an effort to harm the economic system and Trump’s possibilities for reelection to the presidency.
“The most outrageous lies are those about COVID-19. Everyone is mendacity. The CDC, media, Democrats, our docs, not all however most, that we’re advised to belief. I feel it’s all concerning the election and protecting the economic system from coming again, which is concerning the election. I’m sick of it,” Woolery wrote in July 2020.
Trump retweeted that publish to his 83 million followers. By the tip of the month, practically 4.5 million Americans had been contaminated with COVID-19 and greater than 150,000 had died.
Just days later, Woolery modified his stance, saying his son had contracted COVID-19. “To additional make clear and add perspective, COVID-19 is actual and it’s right here. My son examined constructive for the virus, and I really feel for of these struggling and particularly for individuals who have misplaced family members,” Woolery posted earlier than his account was deleted.
Woolery later defined on his podcast that he by no means known as COVID-19 “a hoax” or stated “it’s not actual,” simply that “we’ve been lied to.” Woolery additionally stated it was “an honor to have your president retweet what your ideas are and suppose it’s essential sufficient to do this.”
In addition to his spouse, Woolery is survived by his sons Michael and Sean and his daughter Melissa, Young stated.