Bob Harris

Bob or Bobby Harris may refer to:

  • Bob Harris (baseball) (1915–1989), American baseball player
  • Bob Harris (basketball) (born 1927), American basketball player
  • Bob Harris (footballer) (born 1987), Scottish footballer
  • Bob Harris (radio) (born 1946), "Whispering" Bob Harris, British radio and TV presenter
  • Bob Harris (sportscaster) (born 1942), American sports broadcaster
  • Bob Harris (writer) (born 1963), American political commentator and writer
  • Bob L. Harris (1922–2014), American actor
  • J. Robert Harris (1925–2000), U.S. composer of the 1967 Spider-Man television series theme
  • Robert S. Harris, video game programmer
  • Bobby Harris (gridiron football) (born 1983), professional American and Canadian football offensive lineman
  • Bob Harris, character in the 2003 film Lost in Translation, played by Bill Murray
  • See also

  • Robert Harris (disambiguation)
  • Bob Harras, American comics writer and editor
  • Bob Harris (baseball)

    Robert Arthur Harris (May 1, 1915 in Gillette, Wyoming – August 8, 1989 in North Platte, Nebraska) was a Major League Baseball pitcher from 1938 to 1942. He was the first Wyoming-born player in Major League history.

    He finished in the top-ten in losses three seasons in a row.

    References


    Bob Harris (writer)

    Bob Harris (born October 15, 1963) is an American radio commentator, writer, comedian, and former Jeopardy! champion.

    Early career

    Early in his career, Harris was a stand-up comedian who appeared in numerous comedy clubs, and he has spoken at over 200 colleges.

    Harris has written for the TV shows Bones and CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, appeared frequently as a debunker of urban legends on the TLC Network program Mostly True Stories: Urban Legends Revealed, and provided voiceover work on an episode of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and throughout the This Modern World animated web series and the Torchwood web series Web of Lies. In addition, Harris has contributed to several comic book projects published by Dark Horse Comics, narrated an audiobook on Kosovo by Noam Chomsky, and contributed to National Lampoon, the Chicago Tribune, Paul Krassner's magazine The Realist, and numerous other publications.

    From 1998–2002, his daily political commentaries aired on an average of 75 radio stations across the U.S., winning awards from the Los Angeles Press Club and the Associated Press. He was also the morning drive-time host on the Working Assets attempt at explicitly liberal talk radio, RadioForChange.com, and wrote online political columns for Mother Jones magazine.

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