- Bob Barker
Robert William "Bob" Barker (born December 12, 1923) is a nineteen-time Emmy Award-winning American television game show host. He is best known for hosting CBS's "The Price Is Right" since September 4, 1972, making it the longest-running daytime game show in television history. - Alex Trebek
George Alexander Trebek (born as Giorgi Suka-Alex Trebek on July 22, 1940) is an Emmy Award-winning Canadian-American television personality and game show host who's best known as the host of the game show "Jeopardy!" since September 10, 1984. He has hosted numerous game/quiz shows and has appeared in television series, usually as himself. Though a native of Canada, he became a naturalized United States citizen in 1998. - Pat Sajak
Pat Sajak (born Patrick Leonard Sajdak on October 26, 1946), is an Emmy Award-winning television personality and one-time talk show host, best known as the host of the popular and long-running American television game show, "Wheel of Fortune". - Ken Jennings
Kenneth Wayne Jennings III (born May 23, 1974) holds the record for the longest winning streak on the U.S. syndicated game show "Jeopardy!" Jennings won 74 games before he was defeated by challenger Nancy Zerg on his 75th appearance. His total earnings on "Jeopardy!" are US$3,022,700 ($2,520,700 in winnings, a $2,000 consolation prize on his 75th appearance, and $500,000 in the "Jeopardy!" Ultimate Tournament of Champions). - Monty Hall
Maurice "Monty Hall" Halperin, O.C., B.Sc., LL.D (born on August 25, 1921 in Winnipeg, Manitoba) is a Canadian-born actor, singer and sportscaster, best known as the host of the long-running television game show "Let's Make a Deal" - Vanna White
Vanna White (born Vanna Marie Rosich on February 18, 1957) is a American television personality, best known as the hostess and puzzle board operator on the long-running game show "Wheel of Fortune". She is the niece of actor Christopher George. - Bob Saget
Bob Saget (born Robert Lane Saget on May 17, 1956 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) is an American actor, stand-up comedian, writer, director, producer, and game show host. He is well known for his role as Danny Tanner in the ABC sitcom "Full House" from 1987 to 1995 and as host of "America's Funniest Home Videos" from 1989 to 1997 and "1 vs. 100" since 2006. - Richard Dawson
Richard Dawson (born November 20 1932) is a British-born American actor, comedian, game show panelist and host. He is best known for his role as Bob Crane's British officer, Corporal Peter Newkirk, on the World War II situation comedy "Hogan's Heroes", and as the original host of the "Family Feud" game show from 1976-1985 on ABC and again in 1994. - Bill Cullen
William "Bill" Lawrence Frances Cullen (February 18, 1920 - July 7, 1990), was an American radio and television personality. He was best known for his roles in game shows, both as host and panelist, that spanned a period of five decades in radio and television. - Charles Nelson Reilly
Charles Nelson Reilly (January 13 1931 - May 25 2007) was a Tony Award-winning American actor, comedian, director, and drama teacher known for his comedic roles in movies, children's television, animated cartoons, and as a panelist on the game show "Match Game". - Chuck Barris
Chuck Barris (born Charles Hirsch Barris on June 3, 1929) is an American game show producer of the 1960s and 1970s and author. - Wink Martindale
Wink Martindale (born Winston Conrad Martindale on December 4, 1934 in Jackson, Tennessee, USA) is a disc jockey and television game show host. Martindale started his career as a disc jockey at age 17 at WPLI in Jackson, earning $25 a week. He was hired away by WTJS for double the salary. Jackson's only other station, WDXI, hired him away from WTJS. He next hosted mornings at WHBQ in Memphis. In 1959, he became morning man at KHJ in Los Angeles, … - Joey Fatone
Joseph Anthony Fatone, Jr. (born January 28, 1977) is an American singer and actor. He is best known as a member of the boy band, N Sync, in which he sang baritone. In 2007, he came in second place on the ABC reality show Dancing With The Stars. He is also the host of the new game show, "The Singing Bee". - Anne Robinson
Anne Josephine Robinson (born September 26, 1944) is an English television presenter and television game show hostess who is most famous for hosting the BBC game show, "The Weakest Link" which coined her the name 'Queen of Mean'. She was also one of the presenters on the long-running British consumer affairs series, "Watchdog", from 1993 to 2001. - Brett Somers
Brett Somers (born Audrey Sommers on July 11, 1924) is an actress, singer, and comedienne. She is perhaps best known as a panelist on the 1970s CBS game show "Match Game". - Bob Eubanks
Robert Leland "Bob" Eubanks (born January 8 1938, Flint, Michigan, raised in California) is an American radio, game show host and television personality best known for hosting the game show "The Newlywed Game" on and off from 1966 to 2000, where he was known for using the catch-phrase, "Makin' Whoopee". He also hosted other short-lived game shows such as "Dream House", "The Diamond Head Game", and "Trivia Trap". - Carol Vorderman
Carol Jean Vorderman MBE (born 24 December 1960 in Bedford) is an English television personality and mathematician best known for being a long-standing co-presenter of Channel 4 game show "Countdown". She was awarded an MBE in June 2000. - Danny Bonaduce
Danny Bonaduce (pronounced), born Dante Daniel Bonaduce, August 13, 1959 in Broomall, Pennsylvania, is an American comedian, actor, radio personality, and television personality. He is the son of veteran TV writer/producer Joseph Bonaduce. Bonaduce's primary current occupation is co-hosting "The Adam Carolla Show". He frequently makes personal appearances in television, radio, and at public events. - Donny Osmond
Donald Clark 'Donny' Osmond (born December 9 1957) is an American Welsh entertainer. He is a singer, musician, actor and former teen idol. He has also been a talk show and game show host, record producer, race car driver and author. He is known for being half of the brother-sister singing act "Donny & Marie" and a member of the "Osmond Brothers" singing group. - Joe Rogan
Joe Rogan (born August 11 1967) is an American comedian and actor best known for his role as host on the TV game/reality program "Fear Factor" and as a cast member of the sitcom "NewsRadio". Rogan is also a color commentator for the Ultimate Fighting Championship. He holds a Brown Belt in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu under Eddie Bravo and Jean Jacques Machado. - John Carpenter
John Carpenter (born 1967) was the first $1,000,000 winner on the United States version of the game show "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire". The historic event occurred on November 19, 1999. He held the record for the largest single win in United States game show history, until it was broken by Rahim Oberholtzer on another U.S. quiz show, "Twenty One". - Mark Goodson
Mark Goodson (January 14, 1915 - December 18, 1992) was an accomplished American television producer who specialized in game shows. - Johnny Olson
John Leonard "Johnny" Olson (May 22, 1910 - October 12, 1985) was an American radio personality and television announcer, most notable for announcing 32 game shows from Mark Goodson-Bill Todman productions, from the late 1950s through the mid 1980s. Born in Windom, Minnesota, while landing jobs at WIBA and KGDA in and nearby Madison, Wisconsin after 1928, Olson enrolled in pharmacy classes at the University of Minnesota. He also worked a string of odd jobs, … - Allen Ludden
Allen Ludden was an American television presenter and game show host. He was born Allen Packard Ellsworth in Mineral Point, Wisconsin. The surname Ludden was his stepfather's. Ludden hosted many game shows, including the "GE College Bowl," but he was most famous for hosting both the daytime and primetime versions of "Password" on CBS and ABC between 1961 and 1975. He started hosting an updated version of the game, … - Tom Kennedy
Tom Kennedy (born James Narz on February 26, 1927, in Louisville, Kentucky) is a television game show host who had his greatest fame in the 1960s and 1970s. He is the younger brother of host Jack Narz and the brother-in-law of Bill Cullen, and changed his name to avoid confusion prior to hosting his first national show, "The Big Game", in 1958. His biggest hit series were "You Don't Say!", … - Jim Perry
James Edward "Jim" Perry (born James Edward Dooley on November 11, 1934 in Camden, New Jersey) is a former television game show host, singer and performer in the 1970s and 1980s. He has had success on both Canadian and American television. - Paul Lynde
Paul Edward Lynde (June 13, 1926 - January 11, 1982) was an American comedian and actor. A noted character actor, Lynde was well known for his roles as Uncle Arthur on "Bewitched" and Harry McAfee, the befuddled father in "Bye Bye Birdie". He was also the regular "center square" guest on the classic game show, "Hollywood Squares," from 1968 to 1981. - Maury Povich
Maurice Richard "Maury" Povich (born January 17, 1939 in Washington, D.C.) is an American TV talk show personality who currently hosts his self-titled talk show "Maury" which has earned him national recognition due to the paternity tests that are often aired. Povich is the son of "Washington Post" sportswriter Shirley Povich, who wrote a weekly column for the paper for more than 70 years. Povitch is an Lithuanian Jewish surname. - Ray Combs
Raymond Neil Combs, Jr. (April 3, 1956 - June 2, 1996), was an American comedian and host of the game show "Family Feud" from 1988 to 1994. The Hamilton, Ohio-born Combs ascended into the world of comedy after moving to Los Angeles in 1983 and doing audience warmups for sitcoms. Johnny Carson noticed this and invited him to perform on "The Tonight Show" in 1986; the audience gave him a standing ovation his first time on stage, … - Bert Convy
Bernard Whalen "Bert" Convy (July 23, 1933 - July 15, 1991) was an American game show host and panelist, actor and singer known for his tenure as the host for "Tattletales", "Super Password", and "Win, Lose or Draw". - Alan Thicke
Alan Thicke (born Alan Willis Jeffrey on March 1, 1947 in Kirkland Lake, Ontario, Canada) is a Canadian actor, songwriter, game show host and talk-show emcee. Throughout the late 1980s to early 1990s, he was most famous as Jason Seaver, the patriarch on the ABC television series "Growing Pains". His son, Robin Thicke, is a popular musician. Alan is an avid hockey fan and player. - Jack Barry
Jack Barry (born Jack Barasch, March 20, 1918, Lindenhurst, New York; died May 2, 1984, New York City) was an American television game show host and producer, whose career was nearly ruined in the quiz show scandal of the late 1950s but who made a remarkable comeback over a decade later. - Rod Roddy
Robert Ray "Rod" Roddy (September 28, 1937 - October 27, 2003) was an American radio and television announcer, best known as the announcer for the popular game show "The Price is Right" from 1986 until his death. - Marc Summers
Marc Summers (born Marc Berkowitz November 11, 1951 in Indianapolis, Indiana) is an American television personality, popular game show host, producer, and a two-time talk show host, perhaps best known for hosting the children's game show "Double Dare" on Nickelodeon. He currently hosts "Unwrapped." - Cindy Margolis
Cynthia D. "Cindy" Margolis (born October 1, 1965) is an American glamour spokesmodel and actress. - Garry Moore
Garry Moore was born in Baltimore, Maryland as Thomas Garrison Morfit, and graduated from the Baltimore City College high school. A popular radio personality of the 1940s, he was a friendly, smiling television host on several programs during the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, particularly game shows and variety shows. Starting in 1937, he worked for Baltimore radio station WBAL as an announcer, writer and actor/comedian. He used his birth name until 1940 when, … - Richard Whiteley
John Richard Whiteley, OBE, DL (28 December 1943 - 26 June 2005) was an English television presenter and journalist. He was most famous for his 23-year stint as presenter of "Countdown", a letters and numbers arrangement game show broadcast daily on Channel 4. An edition of "Countdown" was the launch programme for Channel 4 at 4:45pm on 2 November 1982, and Whiteley was the first person to be seen on the channel, discounting a programme montage. - Arlene Francis
Arlene Francis (born Arline Francis Kazanjian October 20 1907 - May 31 2001) was an American actress, radio talk show host and game show panelist of Armenian descent. Born in Boston, Massachusetts, she is probably best known for her long-standing role as a panelist on the television game show" What's My Line?", on which she regularly appeared for twenty-five years, from 1950 through the mid-1970s. - Bob Monkhouse
Robert Allen Monkhouse OBE (June 1, 1928 - December 29, 2003) was an English entertainer in the traditional sense, though primarily known as a comedian and game show host. - Alison Sweeney
Alison Ann Sweeney (born September 19, 1976) is an American soap opera actress. She was born in Los Angeles, California. Alison is best known for her portrayal of Samantha "Sami" Gene Brady on the American soap opera "Days of Our Lives". In this role, she has earned four "Soap Opera Digest Awards" and a Fan Voted Daytime Emmy Award. She has been on "Days" since January 22, 1993.
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