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Book cover of Ain't the Beer Cold!
Journalists, Radio & Television - News & Media Biography, Sports Broadcasting & Journalism, Television Programs - Sports Programs, Sport Figures - General & Miscellaneous - Biography, Major League Teams - American League, Television & Radio - Biography

Ain't the Beer Cold!

by Chuck Thompson, Gordon Beard
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Overview

In this book, Chuck Thompson offers a delightful and insightful perspective on his profession, its people, and its place in the heart of American sports.

Synopsis

In this book, Chuck Thompson offers a delightful and insightful perspective on his profession, its people, and its place in the heart of American sports.

Publishers Weekly

The words of the title comprised the trademark, tagline and rallying cry of radio and TV broadcaster Thompson until some Bible Belters complained and he dropped it. But annoyances like that are minor to a man inducted into the Broadcasters Wing of the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1993 and who has been on the air since 1939. Thompson started his career in Pennsylvania covering the A's and Phillies, then the Senators in Washington. He joined the Orioles in Baltimore in 1953 and, except for a brief hiatus, has been with them ever since; he also broadcast Colts' football games for some 30 years. Writing with freelancer Beard, Thompson offers dozens of anecdotes, some serious, most not, and his sense of humor relies heavily on practical jokes and booze-generated exploits. This is a typical sportscaster's autobiography, but it should sell like crabcakes in Maryland. Photos not seen by PW. (Oct.)

About the Author, Chuck Thompson

Chuck Thompson, a resident of Timonium, Maryland, and co-author Gordon Beard, who resides in Baltimore, Maryland, have been friends since the 1950s, their paths crossing often at sporting events, on television shows, and on the rubber-chicken circuit. Gordon Beard worked for the Associated Press for 37 years. Along with being a gag writer for the op-ed page cartoon "Emcee," he has also authored a book about the 1966 Orioles, and two books on the unique dialect of his hometown of "Balamer, Murlin."

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

The words of the title comprised the trademark, tagline and rallying cry of radio and TV broadcaster Thompson until some Bible Belters complained and he dropped it. But annoyances like that are minor to a man inducted into the Broadcasters Wing of the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1993 and who has been on the air since 1939. Thompson started his career in Pennsylvania covering the A's and Phillies, then the Senators in Washington. He joined the Orioles in Baltimore in 1953 and, except for a brief hiatus, has been with them ever since; he also broadcast Colts' football games for some 30 years. Writing with freelancer Beard, Thompson offers dozens of anecdotes, some serious, most not, and his sense of humor relies heavily on practical jokes and booze-generated exploits. This is a typical sportscaster's autobiography, but it should sell like crabcakes in Maryland. Photos not seen by PW. (Oct.)

Library Journal

Two recent electees to the Broadcasters' Wing of the Baseball Hall of Fame tell amusing tales from their careers. The books' intriguing titles and humorous content should appeal to patrons at large public libraries.

Book Details

Published
November 1, 2002
Publisher
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Pages
208
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781888698527

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