, Downs,
Jose Melis on
The Tonight Show; Downs was host Paar's announcer. on the
set of the TV series
Riverboat for
Today during the
1968 Republican National Convention Downs made his first television news broadcast in September 1945 from the still-experimental studio of
WBKB-TV (now WBBM-TV) in Chicago, a station then owned by the
Balaban and Katz theater subsidiary of
Paramount Pictures. Downs later recalled that when he went for his first job, he had never seen a television before, and he was unsure whether television would last. Downs became a television regular in 1950, announcing for
Hawkins Falls, the first successful television
soap opera, which was sponsored by
Lever Brothers'
Surf detergent. He also announced the
Burr Tillstrom children's show
Kukla, Fran and Ollie from the
NBC studios at Chicago's
Merchandise Mart after the network picked up the program from WBKB. In March 1954, Downs moved to
New York City to accept a position as announcer for
Pat Weaver's
The Home Show starring
Arlene Francis. That program lasted until August 1957. He was the announcer for
Sid Caesar's ''
Caesar's Hour'' for the 1956–57 season and one of NBC Radio's
Monitor "Communicators" from 1955 to 1959. Downs became a bona fide television "personality" as
Jack Paar's announcer on
The Tonight Show from mid 1957, when he replaced
Franklin Pangborn, until Paar's departure in March 1962, On August 25, 1958, Downs began a more-than-ten-year run concurrently hosting the original version of the game show
Concentration. Downs earned a postgraduate degree in
gerontology from
Hunter College while he was hosting
Over Easy, a
PBS television program about aging that aired from 1977 to 1983. He was probably best known in later years as the
Emmy Award-winning co-anchor—again paired with Walters—of the
ABC news
TV show
20/20, a prime-time news magazine program, from the show's second episode in 1978 until his retirement in 1999. In that same year, he was certified by the Guinness Book of World Records (now
Guinness World Records) as holding the record for the greatest number of hours on network commercial television (15,188 hours), though he lost the record for most hours on all forms of television to
Regis Philbin in 2004. A published composer, Downs hosted the PBS showcase for
classical music Live from Lincoln Center from 1990 to 1996. Downs made a cameo appearance on
Family Guy in addition to other television shows. Downs was seen in infomercials for
Bottom Line Publications, including its ''World's Greatest Treasury of Health Secrets
, as well as one for a personal coach. He appeared in an infomercial for Where There's a Will There's an A'' in 2003. His subsequent infomercial work aroused some controversy, with many arguing that the products were scams. Downs appeared in regional public-service announcements in Arizona for the state's
Motor Vehicles Division and for Hospice of the Valley, a Phoenix-area non-profit organization specializing in
hospice care. He also produced some public short-form programs in which he served as host of educational interstitials. On October 13, 2007, Downs became one of the first inductees into the
American TV Game Show Hall of Fame in
Las Vegas, Nevada. Downs was inducted as a Lincoln Laureate in
the Lincoln Academy of Illinois and was awarded the Order of Lincoln (the state's highest honor) by the
governor of Illinois in 1967. ==Public service and political views==