Regis Filbin, iconic who wants to be a millionaire host and TV personality

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Regis Filbin,

 iconic who wants to be a millionaire host and TV personality has died at the age of 88: 
report
(New York) - General host Regis Philbin, who for decades shared his life with television viewers over morning coffee and helped enrich himself and some fans with the too Millionaire game show, has died at the age of 88. Gone, People magazine reported.

Philbin died on Friday, exactly one month before his 89th birthday. He died of natural causes, according to its statement.

Celebrities stop through the famous Syndicate Morning Show in the Philippines, but the heart was in the first and 15 minutes when he and co-host Kathy Lee Gifford -Live! From 1985-2000 - or Kelly Ripa - - Live! From 2001 to his retirement in 2011 - with Regis and Kelly, the day's events were banned.

"I even have some frustration," he told the Associated Press in 2006 when asked how he did a show every day. You wake up in the morning  you say, 'What did I do last night that I can talk about?' What's new on paper? How do we complete 20 minutes? '"

He added, he wouldn't say it always works with brilliance. They connect more often than they do.

Philippine has been recognized in the Guinness Book of World Records for the most broadcast time by a TV personality after engaging in an entertainment career by parking his car at a TV station in Los Angeles. He logged in the air for more than 15,000 hours.
"Every day, you see the record shattered, Pal!" Philippine used to tell the audience. "One more hour!"

He hosted the prime-time game show, "Who Wants to Millionaire," in short, the most popular television show at the turn of the century. The ABC family-friendly program airs five times a week. It grossed nearly 1 1 billion in its first two years - commented it was the profitable show in TB history - and helped the Philippines become a millionaire many times over.

Philippine contestants question, "Is this your final answer?"
 Became a national caf Philbin was even a fashion trendsetter; She wore a line of monochromatic shirts and ties to match what she wore to the set.
In 1967, they hired  Philbin as an announcer and sidekick to comic Joe Bishop on his network show. When he heard that they were going to fire him because of the bad ratings, Philbin cried and announced that he was leaving on July 12, 1968, during a live broadcast. He returned three days later with a letter of support.

His and the blood of bishop was bad bishop called Philbin a hint for running into a salary dispute and later making him worse.

His second wife, Joy, was the assistant of the bishop.

After traveling to St. Louis every week for three years on a local Saturday night show, Philbin became a star on local morning television - first in Los Angeles, then in New York. She teamed up with Kathy Lee Johnson in 1985, a year before she married former football star Frank Gifford, and the show went national in 1986.

Good Housekeeping Magazine wrote in 2000 that was funny jokes of Philbin made him a favorite among fans.

He was the little guy who protests the injustices of life, from the waves of crime to the cuts of paper the magazine wrote.
The tenant sticks punctuated by familiar of Lee shout of Oh, Reig, which is sometimes said in sibling sympathy and sometimes in teaching advice.
The mild confusion in the onscreen relationship between Philbin and Gifford and the urge to eyeballs were familiar to anyone in a long-term relationship.

The Philippines told a theater audience in 2000 at this point there is no more argument, no more harsh words.
 I have not spoken to him in two weeks. I did not want to stop him. 

Gifford left the show in 2000 to fill the slot with soap star Ripa (All My Children) after trying to replace a.

The same Hooghler who parked the car in Hollywood worked just fine to get the job done on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire.

He told People magazine: I begged to go my own way. There was a shortlist, and I was not on it. I called my agent that we had a full attack on ABC in L. A.

The role of the audience is in the warm, comic touch of Philbin.
 He later referred to himself as the man who saved ABC.
 It was not entirely hyperbole: ABC was suffering in ratings before the smash of the game was a success. Forbes reports that two-thirds of ABC's operating profit in 2000 was due to who Wants to Millionaire.

The Philbin appears to love it every minute. Even the final arbitrator of the buttocks, the MTV Video Awards, asked him to attend.

It was good to be warm that he told the AP. It was funny that he knew this business. I was satisfied with my morning show. People used to ask me, 'What's next?' There's nothing left after that. What I wanted when I started this show in 19 wanted1 should be a national success.

The prime-time game burned out quickly due to overuse and ended in 2002.

Feldman enjoyed a side life as a singer when he sang "Pennies from Heaven" on Billy Crossby on the bishop's show. He said that the next day a record company called him and he made an album.


Although Lifetime of Regis Filbin's Health Style series was part of his long career in the 19th Life0s, Filbin had health problems. In 1993, doctors performed an angioplasty to remove a blocked artery. She underwent bypass surgery in 2007 at the age of 75.

He survived by his wife, Joy, and their daughter, JJ, along with Jonah Filbin and his daughter Amy Filbin, his first wife, Catherine Faylen.

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