• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Willard Scott, rollicking weatherman of TV’s ‘Today’ show 35 years, dies at 87

September 5, 2021 by David Barret Leave a Comment

September 5, 2021

By Bill Trott

(Reuters) – Willard Scott, the ebullient former “Today” show weatherman, venerator of centenarians, pitchman extraordinaire and the original hamburger-hawking Ronald McDonald, died on Saturday, his successor on the morning show Al Roker said. He was 87.

Scott’s chatty, folksy manner covered up his lack of meteorological training during his time as American television’s most popular weatherman.

Roker tweeted that Scott died peacefully surrounded by family but released no further details. He described Scott as a broadcast icon.

Believing television weather forecasters needed to have some sort of shtick, Scott gave viewers a madcap, eager-to-please persona during a 35-year run on NBC’s “Today” that ended with his retirement on Dec. 15, 2015.

Scott was with NBC a total of 65 years.

His act was aided by a high threshold for embarrassment. He dressed as Cupid for one Valentine’s Day, came out of a manhole in a groundhog costume on Groundhog Day, had an on-the-air bar mitzvah (he was a Southern Baptist) and kissed a pig.

Most famously, he went on the air dressed as 1940s dancer Carmen Miranda – including dress, earrings, high heels and fruit-laden hat – to benefit a charity.

“People said I was a buffoon to do it,” Scott told the New York Times. “Well, all my life I’ve been a buffoon. That’s my act.”

At his peak popularity, Scott also was a well-paid, in-demand convention speaker and ubiquitous pitchman, promoting sodas and tea, oranges, cars, hotels, jelly, hardware and other products.

Scott was born and grew up in Alexandria, Virginia, a Washington suburb, and was a teenager when he took his first broadcast job as a page for an NBC station in Washington in 1950.

FROM BOZO TO RONALD MCDONALD

While working in Washington TV and radio, Scott took a side job portraying Bozo the Clown on a children’s show, which led to another clown role that became one of the world’s best-known marketing characters.

A Washington-area McDonald’s franchise owner hired Scott in the early 1960s for ads for his restaurants as the first Ronald McDonald, the hamburger-loving clown. It was a crude costume – Scott wore a food box on his head and had a paper cup for a nose – but the people at McDonald’s headquarters liked it enough to take the character nationwide.

For the national ad campaign McDonald’s hired someone else to play Ronald, leaving Scott to think it was his size – he was 6-foot-3 (1.9 meters) and weighed close to 300 pounds (136 kg) at times – that cost him the job.

Scott’s success in Washington led to the weather job at “Today” in 1980 and his outsized personality, good ole boy demeanor and small-town values made him a fan favorite. Viewers sent him gifts and flocked to see him when he did the weather live from county fairs, parades and civic events around the country.

In 1983 Scott wished a happy 100th birthday to a woman on the air, starting a tradition that became one of the “Today” show’s most popular features. The show received hundreds of requests for 100th birthday shout-outs and Scott did them once a week on the show into 2015, long after he had turned over the full-time weather job. In all, he announced some 40,000 100th birthdays, NBC said.

GUMBEL MEMO

Not everyone appreciated Scott’s on-air antics. In a 1989 internal memo that was leaked to the media, “Today” co-anchor Bryant Gumbel said Scott was holding the show “hostage to his assortment of whims, wishes, birthdays and bad taste.”

“This guy’s killing us and no one’s even trying to rein him in,” Gumbel wrote.

Scott was miffed but popular sentiment was on his side. More than 27,000 respondents to a USA Today phone-in poll said Scott was an asset to the show, with 854 saying he hurt it.

“I work because people know I love them,” Scott once told People magazine. “I also know that just the fact that I’m alive offends some people. I’m big, overpowering, flamboyant and loud … I might put my foot in my mouth five times out of six but the sixth time, I strike a chord and people respond.”

Scott, who wrote several books, also was a co-anchor of NBC’s coverage of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Parade from 1987 to 1997 and often appeared as Santa Claus at the White House.

Scott and his wife Mary were married from 1959 until her death in 2002 and had two daughters. Shortly after turning 80 in 2014, he married Paris Keena, whom he first met in 1977 at a Washington television station.

(Writing and reporting by Bill Trott; Editing by Matthew Lewis and Howard Goller)

Source Link Willard Scott, rollicking weatherman of TV’s ‘Today’ show 35 years, dies at 87

David Barret
David Barret

Related posts:

  1. Exclusive-Apple hit with antitrust case in India over in-app payments issues
  2. WTO chief seeks fishing, pandemic accords by year end
  3. 5 Star Wars games we’d love to see on PC
  4. Amazon Labor Day sales 2021: the best early deals

Filed Under: News

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

  • The Science Of Magic: Find Out More In Issue 41 Of CURIOUS – Out Now
  • People Sailed To Australia And New Guinea 60,000 years ago
  • How Do Cells Know Their Location And Their Role In The Body?
  • What Are Those Strange Eye “Floaters” You See In Your Vision?
  • Have We Finally “Seen” Dark Matter? Mysterious Ancient Foot May Be From Our True Ancestor, And Much More This Week
  • The Unexpected Life Hiding Out in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch
  • Scientists Detect “Switchback” Phenomenon In Earth’s Magnetosphere For The First Time
  • Inside Your Bed’s “Dirty Hidden Biome” And How To Keep Things Clean
  • “Ego Death”: How Psychedelics Trigger Meditation-Like Brain Waves
  • Why We Thrive In Nature – And Why Cities Make Us Sick
  • What Does Moose Meat Taste Like? The World’s Largest Deer Is A Staple In Parts Of The World
  • 11 Of The Last Spix’s Macaws In The Wild Struck Down With A Deadly, Highly Contagious Virus
  • Meet The Rose Hair Tarantula: Pink, Predatory, And Popular As A Pet
  • 433 Eros: First Near-Earth Asteroid Ever Discovered Will Fly By Earth This Weekend – And You Can Watch It
  • We’re Going To Enceladus (Maybe)! ESA’s Plans For Alien-Hunting Mission To Land On Saturn’s Moon Is A Go
  • World’s Oldest Little Penguin, Lazzie, Celebrates 25th Birthday – But She’s Still Young At Heart
  • “We Will Build The Gateway”: Lunar Gateway’s Future Has Been Rocky – But ESA Confirms It’s A Go
  • Clothes Getting Eaten By Moths? Here’s What To Do
  • We Finally Know Where Pet Cats Come From – And It’s Not Where We Thought
  • Why The 17th Century Was A Really, Really Dreadful Time To Be Alive
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version