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・ Bill McCarthy (politician)
・ Bill McCartney
・ Bill McCartney (footballer)
・ Bill McCauley
・ Bill McCaw
・ Bill McCay
・ Bill McChesney
・ Bill McChesney (athlete)
・ Bill McChesney (politician)
・ Bill McClard
・ Bill McClellan
・ Bill McClintock
・ Bill McCloskey
・ Bill McColl
・ Bill McCollum
Bill McCord
・ Bill McCormick (Canadian football)
・ Bill McCorry
・ Bill McCreary
・ Bill McCreary (referee)
・ Bill McCreary, Jr.
・ Bill McCreary, Sr.
・ Bill McCuddy
・ Bill McCue
・ Bill McCulloch
・ Bill McCutcheon
・ Bill McDermott
・ Bill McDonagh
・ Bill McDonald
・ Bill McDonald (American journalist)


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Bill McCord : ウィキペディア英語版
Bill McCord
William J. "Bill" McCord (December 18, 1916 – January 17, 2004) was an American radio and television announcer.
Born in Colville, Washington, McCord moved to Spokane in the 1930s, where he began his broadcasting career. During World War II, he served as a pilot in the United States Army Air Corps, stationed in Riverside, California, and rose to the rank of First Lieutenant. For several years starting in the 1940s, he was based out of WLW in Cincinnati, Ohio, and announced on a few programs that aired on NBC, including ''The Circle Arrow Show''.
McCord joined the announcing staff of NBC in New York in the early 1950s. His radio announcing credits for the network included ''Easy Money'', ''Monitor'', and a 1956 episode of ''X Minus One''.
On television, McCord was one of several announcers, including Don Pardo, Bill Wendell, Roger Tuttle, Vic Roby and Wayne Howell, whose voice was heard on several NBC game shows. His most notable credits in that realm, in the 1950s, included ''Twenty One'', ''Concentration'', and ''Tic-Tac-Dough''. In his later years with the network, up to his retirement in 1980, McCord's announcing work largely consisted of sub-announcing on ''NBC Nightly News'' and the one-minute ''NBC News Update''s (as a frequent fill-in for regular announcer Bill Hanrahan), as well as occasional booth announcing duties for the local flagship station, WNBC-TV. McCord hosted shows like 30 Minutes in New York until he moved to California.
Following his retirement, McCord moved to San Diego, California. He died there of complications from pneumonia at age 87.
His son is famed rock musician Billy Vera.
==References and sources==

*( Obituary ) on Clan MacCord USA website (Reprinted from The San Diego Union-Tribune, January 24, 2004)

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Bill McCord」の詳細全文を読む



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