Close Search Close

 

  • Comics
  • Theatre
  • Site News

In Memoriam

Juuuuuuust a Bit Outside: Bob Uecker, 1934-2025

Truly the greatest color man in the business.

You wouldn’t think he would have been on the schedule if you know how I feel about sports. Inasmuch as I am not, generally speaking, a fan. Oh, he seemed nice enough, but “nice” is not actually a criterion for being on the schedule. There are a lot of people in my day-to-day life who are nice. But they’re not, generally speaking, going to appear in Celebrating the Living because few of my friends have done anything worth discussing on a pop culture-centered site. Those that do, I’ll just pester for an interview. And it is true that Bob Uecker was first and foremost known for sports. But I watch a movie he’s in every year, and I watched a sitcom he was on now and again as a kid.

Uecker was an actual baseball player. He played in the Army. Then, when he got out, he signed with the then-Milwaukee Braves. He played for teams in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, and Boise, Idaho, I guess Minor League teams associated with the Braves. He then played for the Braves, then was traded to St. Louis. He was on their World Series-winning team in 1964. Then they traded him to the Phillies. The Phillies traded him back to the Braves, which were in Atlanta by then. By all accounts he was a decent catcher and a kind of lousy batter, but you couldn’t prove it by me.

After his baseball career ended, he started working as an announcer. He worked in Atlanta, then returned home to Milwaukee. He spent 54 years as announcer to the Milwaukee Brewers, most of them without a real contract. (He only got one quite recently, when SAG-AFTRA wasn’t covering his health insurance, which is a depressing Only In America story.) He mentored a bunch of guys I’m assuming you’d know if you knew more about baseball than I do. He also did some announcing for hockey and professional wrestling and generic sports shows, and he did beer commercials as well, playing on his announcing persona.

Which is what got him cast as Harry Doyle in Major League. Wherein he steals every single scene he’s in. He starts the movie knowing exactly what kind of team he’s announcing for and absolutely certain that no one’s listening to a word he says, even the guy next to him in the booth. It’s not even certain how much he cares. He’s getting paid, and that’s the important bit. And then as the team gets better, he starts caring more. And then there’s that killer punchline of “the greatest color man in the business” that even I get. It’s fantastic.

Why is he the dad in Mr. Belvedere? No idea. Your guess is as good as mine. Maybe someone was a Brewers fan. Maybe his reputation for being a funny guy was what it took. His autobiography was called Catcher in the Wry, which proves that he’s someone who definitely understood the assignment when it comes to naming a celebrity autobiography. Even for such a relatively minor celebrity as Bob Uecker.

Want to support more great writing like this? Get exclusive member benefits like access to our Discord, early access to Media Magpies content, and more by joining our Patreon!