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K-Tel commercials are as memorable as the gadgets they were selling. Watch these famous television ads for the ultimate throwback.
TORONTO (AP) — Philip Kives, the tireless TV pitchman whose commercials implored viewers to “wait, there’s more!” while selling everything from vegetable slicers to hit music compilations ...
WINNIPEG – Phil Kives, the tireless and optimistic pitchman who pioneered the television infomercial, died Wednesday after being hospitalized with an undisclosed illness. Kives, who was 87, grew ...
Business K-Tel founder, who transformed the sales pitch, dies at 87 In this Dec. 2, 2009, photo, Phil Kives, president of K-Tel International, poses for a photo in Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Philip Kives, in word and deed as much as anyone, reminded millions of us that life is full of unimagined possibilities yet ultimately also finite. In other words, wait, there’s more. And qua… ...
Philip Kives, master of the infomercial, has died. He was 87. With gadgets like the Miracle Brush and — wait, there's more! — the Veg-O-Matic food slicer, Kives started reeling in customers ...
Kives, who was 87, grew up in poverty and made his riches after founding marketing company K-tel International.
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