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What was your local horror movie host's name?

Started by Georgie Boy, July 29, 2005, 07:21:18 AM

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Georgie Boy

What was the name of your local channel horror guy?  They names are usually very clever and I get a kick out of them.

I grew up in Indiana and channel 4 had two:

1.  Sammy Terry
2.  Baron Von Wolfstein and Robin Graves

Who were yours?

onionhead

Back in the 70s there were a couple of guys locally.  On  KIRO channel 7 Joe Towey was the KIRO Count, host of Nightmare Theater, from 11:00 to 1AM.  Towey also produced the local children's classic JP Patches (were you a Patches pal or a Boris buddy??)
http://trashfiend.bizland.com/nightmaretheatreschedule.chtml
Here is the entire show schedule from 1964-1978

Also we had the pleasure of Robert O Smith for a while, itenerant DJ, whose Dr ZinGRR ran on channel 13 before it became a FOX affiliate.  He showed the worst flicks he could dredge up, and interrupted them every 15 minutes with commentary in costume, sometimes making blue-screen appearances within the films.

Some people like cupcakes better--I for one care less for them

Master Blaster

Ours was Edmus Scary in Phoenix AZ. I was a huge fan as a kid. Apparently he got busted for child molestation or something really awful and the show was canceled.

Flangepart

Other then out side product, like Larry "Seymore" Vincent, The Ghoul from Cleveland, and such, out locals were Fritz The nite owl, and for a short time, Zac with Fright Nite, on the old ch 8.
Fritz is cool. Knows his movies, and delivered his comments on the flicks with a low, warm jazz man's voice. Fritz does Jazz shows on radio, btw.
Zac was Mike Perkins, and he played a lawyer, who had to show bad movies to inherit his granpa Von Strolite's bucks.
The armchair ate people, the lawn did too! And he had problims with his neighbor, "Mel Dunger".
I thought he was realy funny, and clever. Maby too clever for the Saturday night crowd that he had. I wish he'd gotten a chance to work with Best Brains.
I thought he was that good.

"Aggressivlly eccentric, and proud of it!"

Menard

The only one I recall from a local station was in the early 80s. She was Millie and was more of a bad movie host (there were some truly wretched movies) although there was a higher percentage of horror movies. The show would come on Saturday night following Saturday Night Live. Millie and her co-hosts were more of just a goofy intermission during commercial breaks and she seemed to take her dressing tips from Cindi Lauper.


ErikJ

Here we have the legend Rich Koz or as he is otherwise known Svengoolie

If God is watching us, the least we can do is be
entertaining.


daveblackeye15

I don't think Eugene Oregon had one, if it did then I was too busy watching Joe Bob Brigs on Monster Vision and that was just fine for me.

Now it's time to sing the nation anthem IN AMERICA!!!

Bandit Keith from Yu-Gi-Oh the Abridged Series (episode 12)

Yaddo 42

We had one in the late 80s just as the horror host thing was dying out in bigger cities. Guess you know a trend is over when Huntsville AL finally picks up on it. It might have been a syndicated show for all I know. I just remember that the host dressed and acted like Robert Morley doing the Hunckback of Notre Dame. Don't remember his name but they kept the movies longer than they kept the host. At one time I thought it was the son of the channel's morning show host, who was quite popular here. BUt that was just a guess based on a vague resemblance I thought I noticed.

Years later we had a late night movie show (some horror, but also low budget and cult stuff, lots of AIP and Corman produced films) on the ABC station hosted and produced by the technical staff at the station. Mostly camera and sound people and news producers. The show was called "WAAY Too Late" after the call letters, there was also a "WAAY Too Early" morning show but it was really lame. Anyway, the host of the movie show would create little short films unrelated to the film or put up top 10 lists poking fun of the movie or mention fun facts about the movie. They had real fun with "Fast Charlie the Moonbeam Rider", apparently David Carradine hated Brenda Vaccaro so much he would punch her in the mouth if she tried to speak to him when they weren't filming a scene together. But the short films were the best part. They did spoofs of stuff like the "slow walk" from "Reservoir Dogs", a version of "My Friend Flicka" with a giant pet tick named "Ticka", treat a long delayed half completed local highway project like it was an ancient archaeology dig, and a film about a guy driving through neighborhoods in the early morning with a garage door opener opening all the doors with the whole thing synchronized to the "Blue Danube" waltz. It was funny but also kind of beautiful. Damn I miss that show.
blah blah stuff blah blah obscure pop culture reference blah blah clever turn of phrase blah blah bad pun blah blah bad link blah blah zzzz.....

peter johnson

We had 2:
The Bowman Body on WAVY Ch. 4 out of Norfolk, Virginia and when he quit he was replaced by Dr. Madblood from "Beautiful Downtown Pungo", Virginia.
This was late '60's/early '70's.
The Bowman Body was famous for his tuxedo & sneakers ensemble, his paisly-lined coffin, and a large bandaid on his forehead.  Otherwise, sort of like Joe Flaherty's Count Floyd character.  He came to William & Mary college once when I was there in '73, and he actually was a pretty good trumpet player.  Catch line:  "We have spared absolutely NO expense to bring you the most HORRIBLE motion pictures from Hollywood!!".
Dr. Madblood was a typical mad scientist with a huge bushy afro wig & numerous sidekicks that couldn't act worth a lick.  One of the "Vampira" types was actually the local weather gal.  God, she was awful!  Couldn't deliver a straight line or a punch line.  He ran a much more "kiddy"-oriented show, showing crayon drawings that 3rd & 4th grade fans had sent in to the show.  This always confused the hell out of me, as most nights the show would START at 1am -- what the hell were young children DOING up at that hour?!?!?
peter johnson/denny crane

I have no idea what this means.

Herodotus

In Northern California in the late 70's and early 80's we had Bob Wilkins, who was the host of Creature Features on KTUV 2 from Oakland/SF. He was an unusual horror movie host in that he had no costume, he just dressed in regular clothes, sat in a rocking chair, smoking a cigar and would tell stories about the movie in a normal voice. He was great! A veritable font of information and (as the links will show) had some pretty good guests during his host segments. The movies tended to range from awful (The Creeping Terror) to the good (Horror Express), the inexplicable (The Brain that Wouldn't Die) and the underrated  (The Asphyx). A show like his is definitely missed around here.


http://www.subcin.com/wilkins.html
http://www.comic-con.org/wc/wc_celebs_wilkins.shtml

_____________________
 "Wait! There's a family with kids. Do the kids make the mother watch."-Dogville

akiratubo

I can't remember the name.  All I remember was that he was an incredibly fat hillbilly who sat on a bale of hay and announced the show along with his friend, a skeleton.
Kneel before Dr. Hell, the ruler of this world!

DaveMunger

I just realized that the closest thing we've had to that in my lifetime (besides Elvira) here is http://www.geocities.com/dreamtownfilms/">Snarky the Clown of Darkness, a friend of mine who makes movies and puts them on public access.


Shadow

Herodotus wrote:
>In Northern California in the late 70's and early 80's we had Bob Wilkins, who was the host of Creature Features on KTUV 2 from Oakland/SF.

Yeah, growing up in the SF bay area, I rememember watching him all the time as a kid. His show was great. Fond memories.

Shadow
www.bmoviegraveyard.com
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Derf

Back in the 70s (as many of these local hosts seem to be), we had Count Vesco and his sidekick Derf (one of the inspirations for my screen name). He was basically a cheesy vampire type like Count Floyd, and Derf was a hunchback. I don't really remember that much about him except that he put in an appearance at our local Boll Weevil Festival (a festival celebrating the conquering of the boll weevil in South Texas--yes, I live in cotton-growing territory, and yes, rednecks rule around here). He signed autographs and gave out 8X10 photos, also autographed. We are indeed easily impressed around here. . .

"They tap dance not, neither do they fart." --Greensleeves, on the Fig Men of the Imagination, in "Twice Upon a Time."

Scott

I grew up in the Finger Lakes region of New York state in the 70's and we had a great one every Saturday afternoon called MONSTER MOVIE MATINEE, but I don't know the host name of this mad doctor with the patch on one eye and his companion which I believe was a talking hand with a big ring on it's finger. Don't remember if the hand actually talked, but I know they both communicated always. The set was a dark foggy set with test tubes and all sorts of things. One year they cut the host head off and put it on a table and talked to the audience. I guess he became part of his own experiment. If anyone knows the name of  this one let me know. Thanks.

Other than that we had CHILLER THEATER on WPIX with a great intro, but no host and our Sunday afternoon Giant Monster movies from WOR out of New York. Scroll to the bottom of this link to see the later claymation intro to CHILLER THEATER-2

In the 80's I moved to South Jersey where we had Stella the Maneater from Manayunk, Pa. Read the fun bio on this horror host of Saturday Night Dead.



Post Edited (08-03-05 10:49)