Bob Barker, the "Price Is Right" host whose silky-smooth command, impish sense of humor and advocacy for animal welfare issues made him a beloved fixture on television for more than 35 years, has died. He was 99.
For 35 years, Barker was the host of the classic CBS game show that asks players to bid on such items as a pack of gum, a popcorn popper and a luggage lock in hopes of winning, as its announcers trumpet, "A BRAND NEW CAR!"
The show, which had a nine-year run in the '50s and '60s with Bill Cullen, returned in 1972 with Barker. He stayed for 35 years, passing the mic to comedian Drew Carey in 2007.
Barker earned 19 Emmys and a lifetime achievement award in the process.
He attributed "The Price is Right's" success to its fast pace and focus on the unvarnished personality of its contestants, who, unlike on other shows, were not pre-screened.
"I think television viewers like to see people just like they are up on the stage doing this stuff," he told the Archive of American Television in 2000.
For all of the fun Barker had doing "The Price Is Right" -- and he obviously took pride (and pain) in the contestants' shrewd guesses or way-out wagers -- he found his true passion in advocating on behalf of animals. He devoted his name, and significant amounts of his wealth, to programs to end animal cruelty and reduce pet overpopulation.
The most visible element of that passion was his daily admonition to "The Price is Right" viewers at the end of each telecast when he said, "Don't forget to have your pets spayed or neutered!"
"How would I like to be remembered? As the man who said, 'have your pets spayed or neutered,'" Barker told the Archive of American Television.
Beginnings
Barker, who was part Native American, was born Robert William Barker in Mission, South Dakota, a town of 200 people on the Rosebud Indian Reservation, on December 12, 1923. He recalled playing basketball, fishing on the local reservoir and excelling as a student there. His mother was a teacher, and his father was a utility worker.
He attended Drury College in Springfield, Missouri, on a basketball scholarship but dropped out two years later to join the U.S. Navy during World War II, after seeing a photograph of a naval aviator decked out in his formal dress whites.
"I thought, 'If I'm going to go to war, I want to go looking like that guy,'" he told CNN in 2013. "I'd never been up in an airplane. I had certainly not thought about what was involved in landing one on a carrier, and I have never even seen the ocean. But I loved that picture."
He never made it to combat. The war ended before he could be assigned to a seagoing unit, so instead he went back to Drury and started to work in radio writing news and doing a five-minute sportscast for Springfield radio station KTTS. Eventually, he had his own radio show in Los Angeles, "The Bob Barker Show."
It was then that he got his television break. Ralph Edwards, the producer and host of "Truth or Consequences," was looking for an emcee for a new daytime version of the TV show -- a long-running hit that Edwards had begun on radio. Edwards heard Barker and hired him for the job.
NBC, which was going to air the show, wasn't impressed. According to the book "Television Game Show Hosts," the network gave Barker four weeks to prove his abilities. The show was a hit, and Barker ended up hosting it for 19 years -- on NBC until 1966 and then in syndication until 1975.
Every year on December 21 -- the day Edwards offered him the job -- Barker and Edwards would get together for a celebratory drink. Edwards died in 2005.
This story will be updated.