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Ken Levine (TV personality) : ウィキペディア英語版
Ken Levine (screenwriter)

Ken Levine (born February 14, 1950) is a writer, director and producer in the television and film industry, and an author. Levine has worked on a number of television series, including ''M
*A
*S
*H
'', ''Cheers'' (for which he shared Outstanding Comedy Series honors at the 35th Primetime Emmy Awards), ''Frasier'', ''The Simpsons'', ''Wings'', ''Everybody Loves Raymond'', ''Becker'' and ''Dharma and Greg''. Along with his writing partner David Isaacs, he created the series ''Almost Perfect''.〔(IMDb listing for "Almost Perfect (TV Series)" )〕
Levine was also the co-writer of the feature films ''Volunteers''〔(IMDb listing for "Volunteers" (1985) )〕 and ''Mannequin Two: On the Move''.〔(IMDb full crew for "Mannequin: On The Move" )〕
Levine has also been a radio and TV play-by-play commentator for Major League Baseball games, having worked with the Baltimore Orioles〔(Baltimore Sun ) article, "Ken Levine brings story-telling talent to Orioles broadcast booth," April 08, 1991〕 (1991), Seattle Mariners〔(My Northwest ) article, "Ken Levine: From Hollywood producer to broadcaster," Jun 4, 2011〕 (1992–94, 2011-2012), and San Diego Padres〔(Baseball Reference.com )〕 (1995–96). From 2008 to 2010, he co-hosted the KABC ''Dodger Talk'' radio call-in program after every Los Angeles Dodgers game, as well as the station's weekly ''Sunday Night Sports Final'' program. During his second stint with the Mariners, he returned to help fill in for the deceased Dave Niehaus.
==Radio career==
For several years in the 1970s, Levine was a disc jockey using the air name "Beaver Cleaver" on several West Coast Top 40 radio stations including KYA San Francisco, KFMB-FM San Diego, and KTNQ, KIQQ and KHTZ Los Angeles.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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