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Jackie Martling is a Actor American born on 14 february 1948

Jackie Martling

Jackie Martling
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Birth name John Coger Martling, Jr.
Nationality USA
Birth 14 february 1948 (76 years)

John Coger "Jackie" Martling, Jr. (born February 14, 1948) is an American comedian, comedy writer and radio personality. He is best known for being the head-writer and on-air personality on The Howard Stern Show from 1983 to 2001.

Biography

Early life and career
Jackie Martling was born in Mineola, New York, on Long Island. He attended Oyster Bay High School and lived in East Norwich, New York, earning a mechanical engineering degree from Michigan State University in 1971. Martling is of English, French, and Dutch ancestry.

Martling began his show business career as a musician on Long Island, New York, playing with an original music and comedy trio, "The Off Hour Rockers," until the late 1970s, when he began telling jokes on stage solo. Jackie's partners in "The Off Hour Rockers" were Chris Bates on guitar and Herbie Werner on keyboards. In 1979, he segued into performing full-time as a standup comedian.

Jackie's breakthrough into major radio came in 1981 when longtime writer/producer of the Rick Dees Morning Show on KIIS-FM, Los Angeles, Dave Lipson, discovered Jackie's "Use Your Finger! (516) 922-WINE" telephone service. Each day's offerings were recorded and aired daily on the Dees morning show, eventually leading to Jackie recording daily joke segments just for Dees' shows. That's when Dees suggested Jackie be referred to on his show as "The Joke Man." This turned out to be one of the most popular bits on Dees' morning show.

In his standup routine, and during his tenure on The Howard Stern Show, they often played "Stump The Joke Man," where audience members were challenged to start a joke that Martling couldn't provide the punch line to. If they successfully were able to "Stump The Joke Man," they would win a T-shirt. Frequently Martling was stumped.


The Howard Stern Show
In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Martling recorded several comedy albums, including What Did You Expect?!, Goin' Ape, and Normal People Are People You Don't Know That Well. Although album sales were anemic, Martling mailed the albums to Howard Stern at WNBC-AM when Stern first arrived in New York City in 1982. A guest appearance on Stern's radio show in February 1983 led to his eventual hiring as a cast member when the show moved to morning drive on K-Rock in 1986.

Along with Fred Norris, Martling wrote bits, song parodies, and material for the infamous "Jackie puppet" for The Howard Stern Show. Billy West, who voiced the puppet, said how surreal it was to sit behind Martling, and viciously attack him with lines Jackie had just written for him. Martling demanded the billing "head writer" for Howard Stern's TV show which aired on WWOR and also was nationally syndicated 1991–1992.

Martling left the Stern show in March 2001 after his salary demands were not met. In mid-August 2001 Jackie was quoted in a newspaper article as saying he wanted to come back to the show but Howard said that he blew it when he walked off the show. Howard said it was better if they just go their separate ways and leave it at that. Martling's chair on The Howard Stern Show was eventually filled by former MADtv cast member Artie Lange, who has also since left the show. Martling appeared on Stern's second-to-last last show on terrestrial radio on December 16, 2005, and on his last show the following day, Howard Stern's last two words on terrestrial radio were, "F. Jackie."

During the time Martling served on The Howard Stern Show staff, many fans who called in, other show staff members, and Howard himself frequently would throw out the remark, "F. Jackie,” short for "Fuck Jackie," a reference to the opening line in the chapter about Jackie in Stern's 1995 book, Howard Stern Miss America. Often, many calls to the show would end in the expression "F. Jackie."


"Jackie's Joke Hunt" & SiriusXM
Martling returned to radio by joining the Howard 100/101 Sirius Radio channels with Jackie's Joke Hunt. The weekly one-hour show, co-hosted by a fellow member of the legendary Friar's Club, Ian "McKean" Karr, premiered on October 3, 2006, at 7 p.m. EST, and in October 2012 began its seventh year. It continues to air live 7–8 PM EST every Tuesday on SiriusXM Howard 101, and replays Tuesday nights at 8pm, Wednesday mornings at 2am & 5am, Saturdays at 2am & 10pm and Sundays at 6am & midnight (all EST).

Martling can also frequently be heard on SiriusXM's Raw Dog Uncensored Comedy 99. On March 13, 2007, Martling made a guest appearance on Stern's SiriusXM show. Since that time, Martling has made additional guest appearances, both in the studio and by phone. In May 2007, Stern aired a two-day salute to Martling on SiriusXM's Howard 100. The show contained dozens of classic moments, intercut with new interviews with Martling and others.


JokeLand products
Martling started expanding on his standup comedy career very early, self-producing three dirty joke lp's in 1979, 1980 & 1981, which were partially funded with a loan from comedy legend Rodney Dangerfield, which according to Dangerfield was never repaid (for his part, Martling claims to have repaid the loan "in jokes" written for Dangerfield). Since 1993, he has released six 78-minute dirty joke CDs, three videos, a DVD (A Safe Distance From Genius), five joke books including 1998's best-selling Simon & Schuster title, Jackie "The Joke Man" Martling's Disgustingly Dirty Joke Book, and the iPhone app The Jackie Button. He also co-created a line of electronic joke products with EB-Excalibur, and their MiniJokeMaster Jr. keychain is sold through various retailers. In April 2007, he released his first musical CD, Happy Endings, co-produced by guitarist, Frank Vignola.


Jackie in the movies and on TV
Martling has appeared in many films during his career, including the comedy documentary The Aristocrats, Venus & Vegas, Mail Order Bride and White Irish Drinkers. He appeared in the 2005 short film "Jokebitch" and received the Best Supporting Actor Award from New York International Independent Film & Video Festival.He appeared on the TNT television show Leverage and in August 2007, Jackie filmed the pilot episode for the sitcom The Pikers in Los Angeles. He wrote and performed a one-man show, JokeLand on Broadway in summer 2010 in New York City. In 2012, he appeared in Fred Carpenter's "Send No Flowers," the short film "My Cross To Bear," and voiced two puppets in 2013's human/puppet movie "The Fuzz."

In October 2008, Martling and former American Idol runner-up Bo Bice entertained U.S. troops in Kuwait and Iraq.
Jackie occasionally appears on The Mark Simone Show on WABC-AM, SiriusXM's The Opie and Anthony Show, the tri-state area's The Jim Kerr Rock & Roll Morning Show on Q-104 and Wake Up with the Wolf in Albany, New York.



^ About Jackie Martling, accessed July 24, 2007

^ http://www.marksfriggin.com/news07/9-3.htm#wed

^ http://www.koam.com/rodney.

Usually with

Howard Stern
Howard Stern
(1 films)
Kim Chan
Kim Chan
(2 films)
Dan Lauria
Dan Lauria
(1 films)
Sylvia Miles
Sylvia Miles
(1 films)
Source : Wikidata

Filmography of Jackie Martling (3 films)

Display filmography as list

Actor

White Irish Drinkers, 1h49
Origin USA
Genres Drama, Thriller
Actors Geoffrey Wigdor, Regan Mizrahi, Stephen Lang, Karen Allen, Peter Riegert, Zachary Booth
Roles Cop
Rating66% 3.3415253.3415253.3415253.3415253.341525
Brooklyn, 1975: brothers Brian and Danny Leary are looking for a way out of their working-class neighborhood, so they make a pact to rob a local theater on the night of a Rolling Stones concert.
Private Parts, 1h49
Directed by Betty Thomas
Origin USA
Genres Drama, Biography, Comedy
Actors Mary McCormack, Howard Stern, Fred Norris, Paul Giamatti, Carol Alt, Allison Janney
Rating68% 3.4478053.4478053.4478053.4478053.447805
Howard Stern boards a flight home following an appearance at the MTV Music Video Awards as his alter-ego, "Fartman". He finds himself seated next to Gloria (Carol Alt), who is visibly repulsed by him. He begins to tell his life story in his mind from his childhood, explaining the verbal abuse he received from his father Ben (Richard Portnow). Stern dreams of being on the radio after going to work with his father, a recording engineer, and grows up to be a quiet, socially awkward teenager. He then studies communications at Boston University, where he becomes a disc jockey at WTBU, the college radio station. He meets and becomes close to Alison (Mary McCormack), the girl of his dreams before graduating. It is 1977, and Howard works at WRNW in Briarcliff Manor, New York. He gets promoted to program director, where his increase in salary allows him to marry Alison. After being forced to fire a fellow DJ, he quits the station.