Rob Elliott Wheel Of Fortune

  1. Rob Elliott Wheel Of Fortune Bob Mackie
  2. Wheel Of Fortune Hosted By Rob Elliott 2003
  3. Wheel Of Fortune 2003 Rob Elliott
  4. Wheel Of Fortune Rob Elliott Australia
Elliott
Born8 October 1965 (age 55)
Brisbane, Queensland
NationalityAustralian
OccupationAustralian radio announcer and television show host

Rob Elliott, Actor: Neighbours. Rob was born in Brisbane, Australia in 1965. Prior to his television career, he had worked in radio for 14 years. After leaving school, Rob moved to rural Queensland to work in radio. This valuable experience pre-empted a career in radio, with Rob presenting various shows on the Triple M radio network in Auckland, Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane. In 1997 Barber was replaced by Rob Elliott (1997–2003), who was succeeded by Steve Oemcke (2004–05), and Larry Emdur (2006). Meanwhile Burgess moved to the Nine Network to host rival game show Catch Phrase (later Burgo’s Catch Phrase ). Wheel of Fortune (TV Series 1983– ) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

Wheel

Rob Elliott Wheel Of Fortune Bob Mackie

Rob Elliott (born 8 October 1965 in Brisbane, Queensland) is a popular Australian radio announcer and television show host, best known for hosting Wheel of Fortune.

Television career[edit]

Wheel Of Fortune Hosted By Rob Elliott 2003

His first TV job was the children's TV program OK for Kids in Brisbane on Channel 9. Then became the Melbourne-based reporter for Wombat for the Seven Network during the 1980s. Had several parts in Neighbours and in 1996, he became host of Talking Telephone Numbers (based on a UK format) for the Seven Network. During the mid to late 80s he also worked for Brisbane Radio Station, 1008AM 'Stereo 10' as a radio announcer and Geelong's 93.9 Bay FM / 3XY in the early '90s.

Elliott

His best-known role was as the host of Wheel of Fortune from 1997 to 2003,[1] replacing Tony Barber.[2] After being fired from the show, Elliott created a board game called Smart Ass. He explained, I used to play Trivial Pursuit and never won - I hated it. I created a game I could win.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ abCarbone, Suzanne (12 October 2010). 'Good fortune shines on ex-Wheel host'. The Age. Retrieved 16 September 2011.
  2. ^'Burgo and the psychics'. Herald Sun. 21 March 2007. Retrieved 16 September 2011.

Wheel Of Fortune 2003 Rob Elliott

External links[edit]

  • Rob Elliott at IMDb

Wheel Of Fortune Rob Elliott Australia


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