Bob Broder dead: TV star who worked on Ted Danson’s Cheers passes away at 85

Bob Broder dead: TV star who worked on Ted Danson’s Cheers passes away at 85

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Bob Broder, a TV executive and talent agent, passed away from cancer on Tuesday, according to his family and friends, who praised the actor for “inspiring a lot of people” throughout his career.

A TV executive who pioneered the smash hit sitcom Cheers has died at the age of 85.

Bob Broder was behind the programme, which starred Ted Danson, Woody Harrelson and Kirstie Alley, and attracted millions of viewers during its original run from 1982 to 1993. Some 275 episodes of the sitcom were broadcast, and it won several awards, including four Golden Globes.

Broder represented and packaged the programs for broadcast on various networks, including NBC, as well as other well-known shows like Frasier and The X-Files. Broder’s own companies, BWCS and ICM Partners, served as agents to secure these programs’ significant TV deals.

And he was still in contact with Chuck Lorre, the producer, until his passing this week. The TV exec was a part of Georgie & CBS sitcom Maddy’s First Marriage.

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Broder, who had been fighting cancer, passed away on Tuesday at the age of 85. His friends and family praised Broder as a pioneer in the TV industry for acting with great “sophistication, complexity, and authority,” according to Broder, who was surrounded by him.

He “elevated the concept of what it means to be an agent,” according to Ted Chervin, the founding partner and board member of ICM Partners. He really changed the game because of his sophistication, complexity, and authority.

In the way in which he led the agency, in which he managed his clients, and in which he interacted with the rest of the community, he had a true statesman-like quality. And through it all, he greatly inspired others, including myself, Chris [Silbermann]. “

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Broder helped secure Cheers TV rights in 1982, which would run for 11 years and bring laughter and joy to both the UK and US audiences. The scene of Cheers, which is still broadcast on British television today, is set in a bar owned by former Boston Red Sox relieve pitcher Sam Malone.

Opportunities for his work with Cheers’ three creators, brothers Glen and Les Charles, and director-producer James Burrows, including Dharma &; The Big Banff Theory, Two and a Half Men, Touched By An Angel, and Gregg, are just a few examples.

Source: Mirror

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