نتيجة بحث الصور عن ‪Robin Leach‬‏

Robin Leach, best known for facilitating the hit TV arrangement "Ways of life of the Rich and Famous," kicked the bucket on Friday morning in Las Vegas, as indicated by the Las Vegas Review-Journal. He was 76. 

The columnist had apparently been hospitalized since Nov. 21 following a stroke. 

"Tragic to report the passing of well known celeb columnist, companion and associate #RobinLeach @ 1:50 a.m. in #LasVegas," tweeted John Katsilometes, an editorialist for the Las Vegas Review-Journal, where Leach worked. "He would have been 77 Wednesday. He endured a second stroke Monday. He in hospice mind. He'd been hospitalized since Nov. 21, in the wake of affliction a stroke in Cabo San Lucas."

"In spite of the previous 10 months, what a wonderful life he had. Our Dad, Grandpa, Brother, Uncle and companion Robin Leach passed away calmly the previous evening at 1:50 a.m.," the family said in an announcement, which Katsilometes likewise tweeted. "Everybody's help and love over the past, right around one year, has been mind boggling and we are so appreciative. Commemoration courses of action to take after. With affection, Steven, Gregg and Rick Leach." 

Filter started covering excitement as a young person in his local England. He increased universal popularity as the talkative host of the syndicated arrangement "Ways of life of the Rich and Famous," which bowed in 1983 and stayed broadcasting live through the mid-1990s. 

The arrangement exemplified the love of superstars and riches that turned into a characterizing highlight of the 1980s. The show charged itself as "TV's unchallenged specialist on riches, distinction, and achievement." Leach finished every scene by wishing watchers "champagne wishes and caviar dreams." Shari Belafonte joined Leach as co-have toward the finish of the arrangement's run. 

Drain's unmistakable British articulation (depicted as Cockney blended with Manchester) and way of talking turned into his trademark as he portrayed every scene of "Ways of life." The show delighted in the prominent utilization and abundances that it featured, yet it likewise had a populist contact as Leach frequently interposed a note of mistrust at the over-the-top ways of life of the subjects he profiled. The show made Leach synonymous with big name and extravagance — a brand that Leach expertly misused in endless TV and film appearances. He was most as of late found in two scenes of the NBC drama "Extraordinary News." 

Conceived in London amid World War II, Leach inclined toward reporting as a young person. By age 18, he was working for the Daily Mail. In 1963, he moved to the U.S., where he worked for the New York Daily News, People magazine, and Ladies' Home Journal, covering excitement. He functioned as a best proofreader for the Star newspaper, and filled in as U.S.- based the entertainment biz editorial manager for Rupert Murdoch's U.K. daily papers for a long time. 

Filter's on-air vocation started with nearby TV reports for ABC-possessed KABC-TV Los Angeles and WABC-TV New York. In 1980, he joined the then-juvenile CNN as host of "Individuals Tonight." Around this time he was a piece of the publication group that propelled "Stimulation Tonight" in syndication. "Ways of life of the Rich and Famous" became out of Leach's work with "ET." 

Filter facilitated the ABC daytime arrangement "Popularity, Fortune and Romance" from 1986 to 1987. He was likewise a nearness in the beginning of link's Food Network, facilitating a bring in arrangement. 

In the late 1990s, Leach moved to Las Vegas and in the end made Sin City his lasting home. Notwithstanding his segment for the Las Vegas Review-Journal, he ran a creation organization, Total Vegas Television, that delivered YouTube recordings and other substance. 

Drain remained a staple of the TV syndicated program circuit. His other TV appearances throughout the years included visitor shots on "Roseanne," "Kid Meets World," "Thirtysomething," "The Guiding Light," "The Love Boat," "Hollywood Squares," "I'm a Celebrity … Get Me Out of Here," "The Surreal Life: Fame Games," and "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire." 


Some sources variety.com