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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › GhoulardiGhoulardi - Wikipedia

    Ghoulardi. Ghoulardi was a fictional character created and portrayed by voice announcer, actor and disc jockey Ernie Anderson as the horror host of Shock Theater at WJW -TV, Channel 8 (a.k.a. "TV-8") the CBS Affiliate station in Cleveland, Ohio, from January 13, 1963, through December 16, 1966. [1] Shock Theater featured grade-"B" science ...

  2. Jan 12, 2013 · A devious ghoul who rose up in the middle of the night -- tipsy, no less -- to cast a spell over the city. Late-night horror host Ghouldardi, real name Ernie Anderson, hit the airwaves 50 years ...

  3. Oct 26, 2017 · Cleveland legend Ghoulardi casts long shadow. Ghoulardi’s “Shock Theater” hit the airwaves on a cold Friday night — 11:20 p.m. Jan. 11, 1963. For three wild and woolly years in the 1960s ...

    • When did 'Ghoulardi' come out?1
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    • When did 'Ghoulardi' come out?3
    • When did 'Ghoulardi' come out?4
    • When did 'Ghoulardi' come out?5
  4. Ernie Anderson. Ernest Earle Anderson (November 12, 1923 – February 6, 1997) was an American radio and television personality, horror host, and announcer. Known for his portrayal of "Ghoulardi", the host of late night horror films on WJW Channel 8 on Cleveland television from 1963 to 1966, [1] he worked as an announcer for the ABC television ...

  5. Dec 21, 2013 · Ghoulardi hosted horror movies on Friday nights at 11:30. His real name was Ernie Anderson and he was a booth announcer for WJW TV in Cleveland. For Ghoulardi's Shock Theater, he copped a ...

    • Mark Urycki
  6. Jan 12, 2016 · Ghoulardi hit the air on a cold January night in the middle of a blizzard. For three wild and woolly years, the late-night host mesmerized Cleveland and spawned a legend that lives on.

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  8. Oct 31, 2014 · The interesting doc here—based on the 1997 book, Ghoulardi: Inside Cleveland’s Wildest TV Ride, brought out by Gray & Company, an enterprising Cleveland publisher doing books of local interest—shows how Hollywood studios’ rediscovery and repackaging of their old horror classics for local TV stations in the late 1950s and early ’60s prompted many local TV stations to program horror ...

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