It's been a year since your favorite pitchman's favorite pitchman Billy Mays passed and, amazingly, the world is still rotating on its axis, even without the help of a mass-produced plastic thingy ...
PITTSBURGH — If you watch TV, you’ve seen pitchman Billy Mays with his trademark blue-collar shirt, jet-black beard and mustache. More to the point, you’ve heard him hawking gadgets and cleaning ...
Billy Mays — and his booming voice — was a fixture on television screens in the early 2000s, selling products like OxiClean and Kaboom. But his career as a pitchman was tragically cut short when he ...
Deceased TV pitchman Billy Mays got a fitting posthumous tribute this past weekend, 15 years after his death. In the early part of this century, Mays and his trademark blue shirt were ubiquitous on ...
TAMPA, Fla. -- Billy Mays, the burly, bearded television pitchman whose boisterous hawking of products such as Orange Glo and OxiClean made him a pop-culture icon, has died. He was 50. Tampa police ...
Even in the afterlife, late salesperson Billy Mays is still beloved as the OxiClean man. Mays tragically died on June 28, 2009, at age 50 due to hypertensive heart disease, and at the funeral, some ...
Billy Mays knew how to sell. He was the consummate pitchman, rising from boardwalks to state fairs to short-form direct-response ads. By the time he died of heart disease on June 28 at 50, he was on ...
Back in the '90s and 2000s, Billy Mays was a man who could sell anything, selling products around the United States and Canada through the Home Shopping Network, as well as several other syndicated ...
Billy Mays, the burly, bearded television pitchman whose boisterous hawking of products such asOrange Glo and OxiClean made him a pop-culture icon, has died. He was 50. Tampa police said Mays' wife ...
Billy Mays, the burly, bearded television pitchman whose boisterous hawking of products such as Orange Glo and OxiClean made him a pop-culture icon, has died. He was 50. Tampa police said Mays’ wife ...
There were no signs of a break-in at the home, and investigators do not suspect foul play, said Lt. Brian Dugan of the Tampa Police Department, who wouldn't answer questions about how Mays' body was ...
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