Biography and history of american bandstand philadelphia
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Dick Clark
American radio and television personality (–)
For other people named Dick Clark, see Dick Clark (disambiguation).
Richard Wagstaff Clark[1][2] (November 30, April 18, ) was an American television and radio personality and television producer who hosted American Bandstand from to He also hosted five incarnations of the Pyramid game show from to and Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve, which broadcast New Year's Eve celebrations in New York City's Times Square.
As host of American Bandstand, Clark introduced rock and roll to many Americans. The show gave many new music artists their first exposure to national audiences, including The Supremes, Ike & Tina Turner, Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, Stevie Wonder, Simon & Garfunkel, Iggy Pop, Prince, Talking Heads and Madonna. Episodes he hosted were among the first in which black people and white people performed on the same stage, and they were among the first in which t
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Dick Clark at his DJ post in the s. "I don't make culture," he reportedly said at one point, "I sell it."
The son of a radio-station owner in Utica, N.Y., Dick Clark had been a radio disc jockey as a lärjunge at Syracuse University. bygd , when he landed a job at ABCs WFIL hållplats in Philadelphia, he worked in radio, regarded as too youthful looking to be a credible TV newscaster. Clarks big break c
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“American Bandstand” goes national
On August 5, , TV's "American Bandstand" began broadcasting nationally beaming images of clean-cut, average teenagers dancing to the not-so-clean-cut Jerry Lee Lewis’ “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On” to 67 ABC affiliates across the nation. The show would become an iconic expression of American teen culture.
Television, rock and roll and teenagers. In the late s, when television and rock and roll were new and when the biggest generation in American history was just about to enter its teens, it took a bit of originality to see the potential power in this now-obvious combination. The man who saw that potential more clearly than any other was a year-old native of upstate New York named Dick Clark, who transformed himself and a local Philadelphia television program into two of the most culturally significant forces of the early rock-and-roll era.
The show that evolved into "American Bandstand" began on Philadelphia’s WFIL-TV in , a few years before