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Later in the 1970s, Kaiser Broadcasting syndicated The Ghoul Show to Detroit, Chicago, Boston, Philadelphia, San Francisco and Los Angeles. [8] It bombed in Chicago—replacing the locally-produced Svengoolie hosted by Jerry G. Bishop —and in Boston, but found success in Detroit at WKBD (channel 50) [ 12 ] and enjoyed varying degrees of ...
The Ghoul. "The Ghoul" was a hosted horror show with Ron Sweed as "The Ghoul" on Saturdays at 11:30 pm on WXON-TV, Channel 20 Detroit, Michigan between 1976 until 1978.
3 kwi 2019 · Ron Sweed, the horror host who became a hit on early 1970s Detroit TV in a haze of firecrackers, absurdist humor and the never-ending torture of his sidekick Froggy, has died in Cleveland at...
7 paź 2019 · The Ghoul was one of Michigan late-night TV's most-loved horror show hosts, but was canceled thanks to angry parents. Here are video clips, photos, info and details!
3 kwi 2019 · Ron Sweed, also known by his late-night television host character "The Ghoul," has passed away according to reports from friends and his ex-wife Barbara…
19 paź 2020 · 1977 With his slapstick humor, juvenile high jinks, and snarky contempt for the low-grade horror films he aired weekly, TV personality The Ghoul (real name Ron Sweed) was more foolish than ghoulish.
24 paź 2019 · For Detroit TV watchers, there were two big horror movie show hosts: Count Scary and The Ghoul. Count Scary. The Count was actually a Detroit-area radio DJ named Tom Ryan.