By age 16, George was working as a disc-jockey at AM radio station
KIEV in
Glendale, California, followed by work at other stations in Los Angeles, Santa Rosa and Guam. George also authored entertainment-oriented columns for the
Los Angeles Times and the Evening Vanguard/Star News. In 1968, he launched
The Wally George Show on FM radio station
KTYM in Inglewood, California. In 1975, he became producer and co-host of
The Sam Yorty Show on Los Angeles television station
KCOP with his political mentor
Sam Yorty, the former
mayor of
Los Angeles. By 1980, George had his own talk show at KWHY, and when it moved to fledgling UHF station
KDOC in Anaheim, he launched
Hot Seat in 1983. George was known for his combative, almost farcical interview style and shocking antics on
Hot Seat where he would yell at people and pontificate on his borderline nationalistic views. Wally let people know what he was about. He played to an eager studio audience and often ejected guests from the set, using uniformed private security guards. Hanging behind him were pictures of
John Wayne and the U.S.
Space Shuttle, both with strong links to
Orange County, California, where the episodes were taped. He staunchly supported then-president
Ronald Reagan, and his show was sponsored mostly by local Orange County businesses. George's gray slacks, navy blue blazer, white dress shirt and U.S. flag tie along with his platinum blond wig—combed straight down at ear-length and parted on the side—became a conservative style trademark. He called his delivery "combat TV," a phrase he used in his 1999 autobiography.
Johnny Carson labeled George "the
William F. Buckley of the cockfighting set."
Hot Seat, in turn, became known for its provocative guest appearances. A 1983 appearance by
Blase Bonpane ended when Bonpane overturned George's desk and walked out of the studio. When similar incidents occurred on later talk shows, such as those hosted by
Geraldo Rivera and
Jerry Springer, George called them "copycat combat." However, many claimed that the stunts on
Hot Seat were staged, and that some guests were hired to be controversial and disruptive. Wally also hosted an afternoon live television call in show, where he would read a prepared daily commentary, and then take live phone calls on the air. The overwhelming majority of these calls were prank phone calls. In late 1992, financial troubles at KDOC led to the closure of the production studio where Hot Seat was filmed and he stopped filming debates in front of a studio audience. He carried on hosting rerun segments until June 2003. George hosted a few short-lived television variety shows. In 1965, he hosted the Wally George Showpeople's Show on
KTTV. In 1970, he hosted Wally's World on
KHJ-TV. In 1976, he hosted Wally George's Hollywood Showcase on
KCOP-TV. George released a four track 12" (30 cm) EP entitled
Wal-ly! Wal-ly! (drawn from the rallying cry of his
Hot Seat studio audience) on
Rhino Records in 1984. George played himself in the films
Grunt! The Wrestling Movie (1985),
A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child (1989),
Repossessed (1990) and
Club Fed (1990). He played a
Porsche salesman in the movie
Squanderers (1996). He gave halftime "studio analysis" and sometimes "endgame news" on the
roller derby television program
RollerGames which aired in 1989-90 and later on the
Nintendo Entertainment System game of the same name. He also appeared on ''
The People's Court program after being sued by an attorney who had been on Hot Seat
. E! True Hollywood Story'' ran a feature on Wally George in 2000. ==Personal life==