Jack Sajak
Posted : admin On 4/11/2022Jack Sajak And Wife Lesley Brown
As we have said, Pat Sajak is a happy and proud father of two children. One is a son and the other is a daughter. His son, Patric Michael James, was born on the 22nd of September, 1990. Sajak got his start as a weatherman at WSM-TV Nashville before moving to KNBC Los Angeles where he got the exposure that landed him a spot on Wheel of Fortune (1975). Was a disc jockey on the armed forces radio while he served in Vietnam. Roommates with Joe Moore when they served in Vietnam. Host Pat Sajak got riled up on Wheel of Fortune Wednesday night, after a contestant questioned one of the puzzle answers. Contestant Darin McBain, whose mother was a three-day champion on the show.
Transcript for Pat Sajak Loses His Cool on 'Wheel of Fortune' Leaving is not a rare moment from wheel of fortune host pat say Jack after thirty plus years. A contestants they ills and slobs. 11, 2019 - Long-time 'Wheel of Fortune' host Pat Sajak is recovering after emergency surgery on Thursday to repair a blocked intestine, CBS News reports. A statement issued by the show said.
As the host of Wheel of Fortune, Pat Sajak is undeniably one of the most recognizable figures on television. That's why it's hard to imagine the TV landscape without him. Thankfully, he scored his gig back at a time when it sounded like a good idea, because even the star himself doesn't think that he would have been given the chance these days. Sajak broke it down for the Chicago Tribune, saying, 'Look, if I went into a network today and said, 'I have an idea for a program. We're gonna play Hangman. We're going to spin the wheel, watch the wheel go around, they're going to say, 'Is there an R?' And I'm going to say, 'No, there isn't.' And we're going to spin the wheel again.' By that time, I'm gone. They're having a meeting with the next Bachelorette.'
Granted, due to the fact that Sajak has had plenty of time to establish himself, he's had the opportunity to become someone who's beyond familiar to fans. But how well do you really know the entertainment industry icon? For instance, were you aware of the fact that he was born on Oct. 26, 1946, in Chicago? Or could you have informed others that his full name is Patrick Leonard Sajdak? If so, then you may be a Pat Sajak super-fan.
But there's also a very good chance that you weren't aware of those particular tidbits of trivia. And beyond that, you likely didn't know these other untold truths about Pat Sajak either.
Pat Sajak's family life
When Pat Sajak isn't on set, he's likely with his family. The host was first married to Sherrill Sajak, but that relationship didn't last. While he was 'fresh off [of that] divorce,' he met Lesly Brown in 1988 at a sports bar, according to Closer Weekly. Brown was an 'aspiring actress who once posed for a Playboy pictorial titled 'Women of Washington,' skimpily clad in sheer red lingerie,' per People. However, despite her apparent charms, Sajak admitted that when they were introduced, 'There was no electricity in the air.'
While it obviously wasn't a case of love at first sight for Sajak and Brown — and there was also the fact that he was 18 years older than her — the two formed a friendship that she explained 'wasn't romantic.' Instead, they would chat on the phone. 'He was fun and easy to talk to,' she told People. He recalled, 'Often the calls were, 'Well, I have to hang up now. I'm going out on a date.' Eventually, things changed between them when she went on a vacation, which left Sajak 'a little annoyed' and feeling 'borderline jealousy.' He also realized that Brown was 'the woman [he] wanted to spend the rest of [his] life with.'
They were married on Dec. 31, 1989, and went on to have two children together, a son named Patrick Leonard Michael James Sajdak Jr. (born in 1990), and a daughter, Maggie Marie Sajak (born in 1995), while the star also has a stepson, Mason.
Pat Sajak's political leanings and 'outspoken' opinions
The Washington Post has pointed out that 'lots of game show hosts are outspoken conservatives,' and that's certainly the case when it comes to Pat Sajak. The famous figure is republican, which is why he has written for the conservative publication, Human Events. If you're into deeply right-leaning views or like to occasionally sink into some rage-reading, you can check out his articles, which include, 'Opposed to Obamacare? Then You Must Be a Racist' and 'Celebrities Unqualified to Give Political Endorsements.' Once you know that, it's probably unsurprising to find out that he also financially supports the Young America's Foundation, which is a 'national conservative group' that arranges speeches at schools, according to The New York Times.
Beyond that, Sajak has taken his opinions into undeniably controversial realms, such as 'slam[ming] stay-at-home orders during [the] coronavirus pandemic,' per the Daily News. In a now-deleted tweet, he wrote, 'When a disc jockey or a talk show host or a journalist who is being paid to work from his or her home tells people who can't work, pay bills or pay their rent or mortgage to 'Stay home and be careful because we're all in this together,' it's okay to question the premise.' Um...
On top of that, Sajak's also gone off about climate change, tweeting in another since-deleted message (via The Washington Post), 'I now believe global warming alarmists are unpatriotic racists knowingly misleading for their own ends. Good night.' Again, um...
Pat Sajak's military service and work at the Pentagon
Pat Sajak may go down in entertainment industry history as one of the most notable game show hosts that ever held cue cards — but before his days on television, he was actually in the military. In 1968, he enlisted in the army and 'was originally trained as a clerk typist, was sent to Vietnam as a finance clerk, and finally was transferred to Saigon,' according to the U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs. Sajak was then reassigned to Texas. However, The New York Times Magazine noted that 'after ... deciding it was not for him, he smooth-talked a captain into changing his orders.'
When Is Pat Sajak Birthday
That's how 'Sajak found himself in the bowels of the Pentagon running slide projectors for military officials,' according to Mental Floss. While talking to The New York Times Magazine back in 1988, he explained, ”It was a very high-clearance job. And I suppose I heard very high-level secrets.' While that sounds pretty darn intriguing, Sajak did admit, 'But it seems to me there was more talk about the then-postal strike than anything else.' Although he did spot 'maps of Vietnam' during the war, he 'saw them backwards,' and pointed out, 'It always looked like we were retreating.”
Pat Sajak went from working at radio stations to owning them
Pat Sajak may have worked at the Pentagon, but he also had a role while serving that is perhaps even more unexpected when you think about what most people do in uniform — and yet maybe not so unexpected when you think about his eventual career. Up until 1972, the future television star worked as a D.J. for an armed forces radio station while he was posted in Vietnam. He later went on to get a gigs as a radio personality in various U.S. cities, according to TV Guide.
While talking to NPR, Sajak confirmed a somewhat strange aspect about one of his earlier radio jobs when he admitted that he speaks no Spanish — even though he was a D.J. at a Spanish radio station in Chicago. ”The D.J. played Spanish music, did Spanish commercials, and I would read the news in English. To this day I do not know why,” he told The New York Times Magazine. ”... I would [also] play records. I don't know what they were.”
It also turned out that Sajak has never really left his roots in radio behind. While you may not necessarily hear him popping up as a D.J. on your local airwaves, according to the Chicago Tribune, the star did go on to buy multiple radio stations in Maryland, where he lives. He apparently saw it as an ideal investment and was surely able to put his familiarity with the medium to good use.
Hey Pat Sajak, what is the Golden Baseball League?
Considering Pat Sajak was born and raised in Chicago, it's not surprising that he's a fan of the Cubs and the White Sox. 'I've never understood why I had to hate one or the other,' he told the Chicago Reader. 'I grew up close enough to Comiskey that I could hear the fireworks after games, but I watched the Cubs on TV. And back when Bill Veeck was with the White Sox I used to go to the Sunday double-headers for $1.50.' However, Sajak admitted to The Frederick News-Post, 'When I moved to California, I became a Dodgers fan. I go to spring training every year ... It reminds me of minor league baseball. It's loose and fun and affordable. Nobody takes it that seriously.'
Sajak also turned his love of sports into a professional gig when he spent three years hosting ThePat Sajak Baseball Hour on MLB.com. He only gave up the job 'because of scheduling conflicts.' He went on to become 'an investor in the Golden Baseball League, an independent professional league with eight teams in the western U.S. and Canada.' Founded in 2004 with the action kicking off in 2005, per Dutch Baseball Hangout, 'The league merged with the United Baseball League and the Northern League into the North American Baseball League' after the 2010 season.
As for Sajak's own athletic abilities, he confessed to the Chicago Reader, 'No, I didn't throw or hit or field or run well — other than that I was a good athlete [laughing].'
The Pat Sajak Show didn't last very long
Wheel of Fortune isn't the only show that was led by Pat Sajak. In 1989, he landed his own talk show, aptly called The Pat Sajak Show. CBS was banking on the game show's success and 'in preparation ... reportedly spent over $4 million dollars on a new studio, and Sajak's two-year deal was worth a reported $60,000 per week, with an option for 3 more years built in,' according to Vulture's Splitsider (via Medium).
The talk show seemingly started out strong with Chevy Chase as the first guest. However, The New York Times noted that it '[made] no attempt to conceal its role model,' which was Johnny Carson's popular show. Although, to be fair, Sajak did try to change things up by 'avoid[ing] a traditional monologue at the top of the show,' spent 'more time on his guests,' and 'tried distinguishing himself by wearing silly and abstract neckties every night.'
While the show did earn an Emmy nomination for outstanding art direction for a variety or music program in 1989, with the Times pointing out that 'if Jay Leno weren't around, [Sajak] would be a perfect successor to Mr. Carson,' it turned out that it 'couldn't overcome its competitors' like David Letterman, as well as 'the legendary Arsenio Hall Show,' which premiered six days before Sajak's show. Unfortunately for Sajak, there just didn't seem to be room for him on the late-night scene, and his show only lasted until 1990.
Pat Sajak's other onscreen opportunities
The Pat Sajak Show wasn't the titular host's only failed entertainment industry endeavor. The Chicago Tribune noted that along with being 'a washout as a late-night talk show host on CBS in the late 1980s,' a 'weekend gig on Fox News Channel didn't go over any better.' On top of that, Pat Sajak was also a TV weatherman in Southern California, quipping to the outlet, 'Where there is no weather.'
However, those less-than-successful projects didn't stopped Sajak from taking on other onscreen opportunities, such as playing Kevin Hathaway on Days of Our Lives and turning up as 'Buffalo Anchorman' in 1982's Airplane II: The Sequel. After establishing himself as a pop culture icon, he also started appearing as himself on shows like The A-Team, Santa Barbara, The Commish, and The Larry Sanders Show, as well as The King of Queens and Fresh Off the Boat. If you watched Rugrats when you were young or have a little one who watches it nowadays, then you also might have heard Sajak's voice (again, as himself) on the animated kids show.
While Sajak's other projects may not have been as memorable or as successful as Wheel of Fortune — and the Tribune notes that 'there's a big difference between then and now, besides the considerably larger paychecks' — the star seems happy to have avoided a more demanding gig. 'If I had to come in and do this every day for 21 years, I'd probably be taking hostages by now,' he joked in his arguably inappropriate way.
Pat Sajak's Wheel of Fortune-related Guinness World Record
Pat Sajak has obviously been on Wheel of Fortune for a long time — IMDb notes that he took over from the show's original host, Chuck Woolery, in 1981 — but on March 22, 2019, he actually earned a Guinness World Record for the surprisingly long time that he's been with his show business job. The extreme-goal-tracking organization addressed the accomplishment, explaining that 'after an exciting 35 years 198 days of seeing contestants take home grand prizes, Sajak officially holds the Guinness World Records title for having the longest career as a game show host for the same show.' A representative from Guinness even made an appearance on the set of the show to present Sajak with a snazzy plaque. At the time, his aim was to keep going and 'get another [record] down the line.'
Sajak also opened up about his record-setting career, saying, 'I was very lucky in that I always knew that I wanted to be in broadcasting.' He continued, 'My early heroes were people like Arthur Godfrey, Dave Garroway, Steve Allen, and, especially, Jack Paar. They helped shape what a television personality was, paving the way for so many others.'
While earning a record is certainly exciting, it turns out that Sajak isn't the only member of the Wheel of Fortune team to bring home a plaque. Vanna White also has a Guinness World Record for Most Frequent Clapper, which may be the most random yet impressive record of them all.
Pat Sajak faced a serious health issue
In November 2019, viewers of Wheel of Fortune will know that Vanna White ended up filling in for Pat Sajak — who was 73 years old at the time — when he 'had to undergo emergency surgery for a blocked intestine,' according to People. The show tweeted that following the 'successful' operation, Sajak was 'resting comfortably and looking forward to getting back to work.' As for who filled in for White, since it was Disney Week (per TMZ), the show shared that 'Mickey, Minnie, Donald, Goofy, and Pluto [would] join in the fun!' By December, Sajak was back in the studio.
The host later talked to Good Morning America about what he'd been through, saying, 'You couldn't do anything. I was in a fetal position, lying on the bed. They try to give you various drugs for the pain, and none of it — none — was working.' However, he was eventually given something that sounds like it was a little (or a lot) stronger. 'I couldn't even tell you the name of it,' he said, adding, 'But suddenly, I wasn't thinking about the pain. I just had these beautiful pastels and lovely faces coming out of it.'
Sajak also recalled hearing his 'wife and daughter talking,' saying that 'it sounded like they were a mile off,' even though 'they were right next to' him. He added, 'I remember thinking, not in a morbid way, 'I think this must be death. This must be what death is like.'
Pat Sajak and those iffy situations
Pat Sajak can certainly be snarky, but in 2020, he 'finally snapped,' as he himself put it, per Good Housekeeping. After a Wheel of Fortune player noted that a puzzle was kind of questionable, the host freaked out on him, saying, 'Don't! You won! Don't argue, Darin! ... You got the puzzle. Ungrateful players! I've had it!' Although Sajak immediately admitted he was 'just teasing' and even later apologized, some fans saw no need for him to be sorry. 'He's totally joking here,' one person tweeted. Another Twitter user seemed to agree, writing, 'Pat was trying to be funny! He wasn't 'mean' or condescending.'
However, that's not the only arguably iffy thing that Sajak has done. During a 2012 interview with ESPN2 (via NBC Bay Area), it came out that he might have been 'hosting [Wheel of Fortune] under the influence' at times. He admitted that he and Vanna White used to go out between tapings and have 'two or three or six' margaritas. 'The average number was cuatro,' he said. 'I had a great time, I have no idea if the shows were any good, but no one said anything, so I guess I did okay.'
The Baltimore Sunnoted that Sajak later told ABC News Radio that they actually only did this about 'a half a dozen times.' He also admitted (via the Los Angeles Times), 'Now, if I were to inhale the cork in a bottle of wine, I'd probably keel over. I'm getting a little older.'
Pat Sajak is a millionaire who only works four days a month
When you think about who makes the big bucks in show business, you might assume that it's actors and singers who can easily bring in a fortune. And while that's true, Pat Sajak is doing pretty darn well for himself thanks to Wheel of Fortune. Unsurprisingly, back in 2012, he was included on the list of the richest game show hosts of all time. While Alex Trebek was worth $75 million at the time of his passing, Drew Carey has $165 million, and Steve Harvey has $200 million. As for Sajak, Celebrity Net Worth puts his fortune at $70 million and his salary at $15 million.
To earn that kind of money, Sajak works on Wheel of Fortune for just four days a month. The crew shoots six shows each day on Thursdays and Fridays. Sajak, along with Vanna White, turns up for work at 8:30 a.m. while taping starts around noon. They tackle three shows with one audience before taking a lunch break and welcoming in a new audience to tape three more shows.
While that may sound like a jam-packed schedule, Sajak told the Chicago Tribune, 'This has never exactly been heavy lifting ... I'd like to make it sound tougher than it is, but to be honest with you, this may be the softest job in all of entertainment-dom.' He also revealed that his kids 'barely know [he has] a job,' because he's around 'all the time.'
The Chicago native born in 1946 as Patrick Sajdak has been a reliable presence on TV screens every night for more than 30 years. We know him as Pat Sajak, host of the ever-popular game show Wheel of Fortune, but there's much more to his story than telling contestants how many Cs are in a puzzle or facilitating the purchase of vowels. Here's a look at Sajak's interesting life outside the Wheel.
Jack Sajak Family
He started out in radio
Sajak studied broadcasting at Columbia College Chicago in the late 1960s, and before he even graduated, he got a job at a small Chicago station called WEDC. It operated out of a Cadillac showroom...and he didn't know until he reported for work that it was a Spanish-language station, because it broadcast with such low wattage that he'd never heard it on the air. Fortunately, he wasn't hired for his Spanish—he worked as an English-language newsreader, reporting on the day's events for a few minutes every hour between midnight and 6 a.m.
He was an Armed Forces Radio DJ…and made a gigantic mistake
Sajak joined the army voluntarily in 1968, hoping to avoid a dangerous combat position in Vietnam. He was trained as a clerk typist, but was eventually stationed in Saigon to utilize his radio skills as a disc jockey for Armed Services Radio. (Like many morning DJs who worked at the station in the years after famed AFVN jockey Adrian Cronauer, he started his broadcasts by shouting 'good morning, Vietnam!') His tenure went smoothly until Christmas 1969. He was in his studio supervising the feed of President Richard Nixon's Christmas address to the nation. After what sounded like concluding remarks, Nixon went silent. Sajak thought the address was over, turned off the feed, and started playing a record—'1,2,3 Red Light' by the 1910 Fruitgum Company. But then, to his horror, he heard Nixon start talking again, now delivering an address directly to the troops serving in Vietnam. It was too late to cut back to the feed, so none of Sajak's fellow soldiers heard Nixon's message. 'Very belatedly,' he wrote years later, 'I want you all to know that Richard M. Nixon wishes you a very merry Christmas.'
He was a wacky weatherman
After his discharge, Sajak returned to radio and got a job as a DJ on a Nashville pop station, which led to a job at Nashville NBC affiliate WSM, where he did voiceovers and anchored five-minute local newscasts that aired in the middle of The Today Show. Viewers liked him so much that he was promoted to weatherman on local news broadcasts. An executive from KNBC, a powerful Los Angeles station, caught Sajak on TV while in Nashville and hired him to be a weatherman in Los Angeles. Since he was a weatherman—not a trained, legitimate meteorologist—he filled his broadcast segments with comedy bits, pranks, and stunts such as predicting snowstorms. Sajak's future boss Merv Griffin recalled seeing him wore a bandage over one eye, cut to commercial, and switched eyes during a commercial break—and he never mention why he'd been wearing the bandage in the first place.
An executive really didn't want him to host Wheel of Fortune
While Sajak was doing his schtick on the air in Los Angeles in 1981, game show producer Merv Griffin spotted him in action. Griffin needed a new host for his Hangman-inspired game show Wheel of Fortune, which had been airing on NBC daytime since 1975. Due to a contract dispute, host Chuck Woolery was leaving the show, and Griffin approached Sajak. But NBC president Fred Silverman reportedly opposed Griffin's choice, thinking the weatherman was too green for the job. Griffin so strongly believed he had the right man for the job that he threatened to halt production unless Sajak got the gig.
'I wasn't aware of it at the time, and I'm not really sure if the resistance came from Silverman or another executive,' Sajak told the Daily Caller in 2014. 'But there was no halt in taping prior to the issue being resolved, though he may have threatened it. In any event, it was very gratifying to learn of Merv's tough stand. When he believed in someone or something, that's the way he was.'
Wheel of Fortune wasn't his first game show
It's a little humorous that Silverman thought Sajak wasn't ready to host, because by the time he signed on for Wheel of Fortune, he'd already had several other game show gigs—they all just happened to be pilot episodes that were never developed into a regular series. Among them were a show called Puzzlers and an early, unsuccessful take on Press Your Luck.
He was drunk during some early episodes
Today, Wheel of Fortune contestants win money. In the early '80s, they took the money won in games and 'bought' prizes with it, which were displayed on gigantic rotating turntables. It took a long time to set up and reset those moving showrooms, which left plenty of downtime for Sajak and longtime Wheel letter-turner Vanna White. So what did they do to kill time? During a 2012 appearance on the ESPN2 show Dan Le Batard is Highly Questionable, Sajak said they'd sneak over to a Mexican restaurant across the street from the studio and have 'two or three or six' margaritas. He quipped that by the end of the day they'd 'have trouble recognizing the alphabet.'
He hosted one of the biggest talk show flops of all time
Sajak is affable and funny on air and well known to millions, so it's logical that he'd at least be considered to host a talk show. In 1989, CBS tapped him to host a late night series to directly compete against the undisputed king of late night, The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. The network spent $4 million to build a new studio for The Pat Sajak Show, paid the host $60,000 a week, and heavily promoted it in the weeks leading up to its January 1989 debut. But Carson simply could not be touched—and Sajak also had to compete with the newer, edgier The Arsenio Hall Show. Ratings for The Pat Sajak Show were usually about half of The Tonight Show's. After briefly removing Sajak in favor of a rotating group of guest hosts (but continuing to call it The Pat Sajak Show), CBS pulled the plug entirely in April 1990. Sajak was at least well compensated: His contract was for two years, so he got paid to host The Pat Sajak Show until early 1991, nearly a year after it went off the air.
He was once a contestant on Wheel of Fortune
On a 1997 episode of Wheel of Fortune, appropriately broadcast on April Fool's Day, Sajak didn't come out to host at the top of the show. Instead, Alex Trebek of Jeopardy! came out in Sajak's stead—and then the contestants were introduced: Sajak and Vanna White, playing for charity. (Subbing in for Vanna White on letter-turning duties: Lesly Sajak, Pat's wife.) Sajak returned the favor by hosting the April 1, 1997 episode of Jeopardy!
He really likes word games
Wheel of Fortune has a very collaborative environment. The show requires so many different word puzzles each day that everyone on staff is encouraged to contribute, and Vanna White and Pat Sajak have both come up with plenty of puzzles during their tenure on the show. Sajak must genuinely enjoy the work, because he's also the creator of a newspaper and digital game called 'Lucky Letters.'