Chuck Schodowski began his career as a producer/engineer at
KYW-TV in 1961, then joined WJW-TV in the same capacity within several months. Upon joining WJW, he was tasked to do production for ''Ernie's Place
, a movie showcase starring announcer Ernie Anderson and comedian/writer Tom Conway (later known as Tim Conway), as Anderson falsely claimed Conway had directorial experience. When Conway left the station after being discovered by Rose Marie, Anderson was cast as horror host Ghoulardi''. Schodowski was instrumental in bringing in the blend of blues and polka music that helped define the show, adding comic audio drop-ins to enliven the often awful movies, and immortalized
The Rivingtons' tune "
Papa Oom Mow Mow" by marrying it to the image of an old man
gurning. Anderson utilized Schodowski as a sidekick in comedy skits, including a controversial spoof of
Peyton Place called
Parma Place that played heavily to ethnic stereotypes in the Cleveland suburb. When Anderson left Cleveland for California in 1966, his popular Ghoulardi character was retired, and a talent search ensued to find a replacement. Schodowski agreed to help
Bob Wells (WJW's "Hoolihan the
Weatherman") with his audition, and the management decided they liked the way the two performed together. They became co-hosts of
The Hoolihan and Big Chuck Show, which launched on December 23, 1966. In addition to screening horror films, the duo soon started filming comedy skits interspersed within the host segments. After Wells left the show in 1979, John Rinaldi, a jeweler by trade who had already been featured on many of the program's skits, took over as co-host. The show itself was relaunched as ''The Big Chuck and Lil' John Show
, and while effectively a separate and distinct show, the familiar Catch As Catch Can
theme was retained, among other show elements. Moreover, taped skits from the preceding show often would be rerun on The Big Chuck and Lil' John Show'' through various "oldies nights". For many years, the show aired at 11:30 p.m. on Friday nights before moving to 11:30 p.m. on Saturday nights starting on October 1, 1988 (to accommodate
The Arsenio Hall Show, which WJW was airing following their weeknight 11 p.m. newscasts), then back to Fridays following WJW's affiliation switch to
Fox in 1994. After Fox acquired WJW in 1996, the movies selected for ''The Big Chuck and Lil' John Show
were no longer done by either host, and began to deviate from the original horror/science fiction genre into more conventional movie fare. In addition, the start time was again moved in 1996 to Saturdays at midnight following Mad TV, then after Fox debuted Talkshow with Spike Feresten'' in 2006, the show settled in its final start time of 12:30 a.m. Saturday nights/Sunday mornings. Along with the Saturday night shows, Schodowski and Rinaldi hosted a companion
Couch Potato Theater program airing from 10 a.m. - noon on Saturday mornings, which featured at various times
Three Stooges shorts, episodes of
The Abbott and Costello Show, movies, cartoons, or (due to schedule conflicts) an hour long skits only show. In December 2006, Schodowski announced he would retire in June 2007. As part of his farewell, WJW broadcast the hour-long retrospective ''Big Chuck and Lil' John: The End of an Era''. This also marked the end of ''The Big Chuck and Lil' John Show'', with the last regular episode airing the afternoon of June 16, 2007, and again in the early morning of June 17. In October 2008, Schodowski released his autobiography,
Big Chuck!: My Favorite Stories from 47 Years on Cleveland TV, co-written by
The Plain Dealer media writer Tom Feran. The book debuted at the 2008
Ghoulardifest convention. During the summer of 2011, it was announced that ''Big Chuck and Lil' John
would return to TV on WJW every Saturday morning at 11 a.m. (this time, in a 30-minute all skits show similar to the Couch Potato Theater
format). This version of the show began on September 10, 2011. In 2015, the show was moved to Sunday nights at 11:30 p.m. The show moved to Monday mornings at 12:30 a.m. in 2021, and the show has been retitled The Best of Big Chuck and Lil' John'' and introductions to the skits have been dropped. Lil' John made news in December 2014, after
Cincinnati Bengals head coach
Marvin Lewis referred to
Cleveland Browns quarterback Johnny Manziel as a "
midget". WJW sent the Rinaldi to Cincinnati to cover Lewis' weekly press conference, and he asked the coach some questions. In 2019 the duo reunited with Wells to film the five-episode
web series Space Ship One. Schodowski died in January 2025, at the age of 90. Rinaldi retired as "Lil' John" in September 2025. == Notable sketches and parodies ==