Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

‘Unlikely star’ hosted ‘Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous’

- By Adam Bernstein

Robin Leach, a Britishbor­n TV personalit­y and unapologet­ic practition­er of “Jacuzzi journalism” whose long-running show “Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous” ogled the world’s most conspicuou­s consumers consuming conspicuou­sly, died Thursday at a hospital in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. He was 76.

The cause was a stroke, his family said in a statement.

With his thinning hair, paunch, elfin grin and tendency to speak in a quasiCockn­ey tongue at carnivalba­rker volume, Mr. Leach was few people’s idea of an urbane sophistica­te or a blow-dried television host. He called himself “the most unlikely star in the world.”

Yet as a veteran gossip writer and son of a London vacuum company manager, he understood better than most the success-obsessed middle class and, in his exclamator­y catchphras­e, their “champagne wishes and caviar dreams!” He offered voyeuristi­c access to the decadent playground­s of the 1 percent, from Hollywood to the Riviera, and he packaged it as a veneration of free-market, up-by-yourbootst­raps capitalism.

“What Robin Leach presented is an incredibly seductive batch of cultural catnip,” said television and popculture scholar Robert Thompson. “However much you may think it’s terrible to feature people with way more than their share of the resources of the Earth, it is really fun to watch how incredibly luxuriousl­y it is possible to live as a human being.”

“Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous” began its 11-year run in syndicatio­n in 1984. It was picked up by more than 200 stations and such was its penetratio­n that, in some markets, it was broadcast seven days a week, often multiple times a day, beaming garish displays of wealth into millions of living rooms.

Mr. Leach spent his early career as a tabloid scoop artist and flourished as a cheeky guest on TV entertainm­ent programs. He joined the nascent celebrityi­nterview show “Entertainm­ent Tonight” in 1981 but, after a few years, complained to producer Al Masini that the focus was too much on actors bloviating about their latest work and not enough on beautiful people enjoying their trappings.

“I became frustrated,” Mr. Leach told the Chicago Tribune. “We’d go into these houses and we’d talk to these blond-headed bimbos who’d talk about how they wanted to stretch by doing Shakespear­e-in-the-park. They were nothing more than jiggle queens and I’d say to myself, ‘I don’t want to see anything more than you taking your clothes off and stepping into the bubble bath.’ From that gem of facetiousn­ess came a TV show.”

Over 60 minutes — later reduced to 30 — Mr. Leach interviewe­d actors, models, industrial­ists and anyone else with a net worth above $50 million, the minimum cutoff. He delivered bromides in breathless tones, promising “Lifestyles” viewers “another journey with the most envied people in the world” and admission to “the homes of the world’s elite ... where winning at the top is the ultimate victory.” He repeated “glamorous,” “exclusive” and “success” loudly and ad nauseam.

“I believe in talking in 96point,” he told The New York Times, referring to the font size of banner tabloid headlines. “I love cliches. I love alliterati­on. On television, you can wrap your tongue around cliches and aggressive verbs.”

Cameras lingered adoringly over the rococo and the vulgar. In the $10 million home of the Vegas animalact duo Siegfried and Roy, Mr. Leach marveled at their replica of a section of the Sistine Chapel over the bar. One Australian business magnate had a dining room with a wall that opened to reveal a private bullring. Another episode featured a 120-foot-long limousine modified to fit a hot tub and a helicopter landing pad.

The show traded skindeep access for celebrity brand-building, letting supermodel­s present themselves as relatable homebodies and showcasing the profanely rich as humble. A segment on Adnan Khashoggi, the checkered Saudi arms merchant and notorious playboy, described him as “a pure monetary force, the golden artery feeding the world’s biggest deals” and “a surprising­ly private family man.”

Television critics feasted on what they regarded as a cultural carcass ripe for picking. “The onslaught of the superficia­l is reaching absurd proportion­s,” Times reviewer John J. O’Connor wrote, noting how the success of People magazine had helped spawn imitators in print and on air. But “Lifestyles,” he concluded, dispatched the competitio­n with its “almost fanatical preoccupat­ion with money and/or power.”

There were a few exceptions, namely dictators like the Duvaliers of Haiti and the Marcoses of the Philippine­s. “We turned them down cold,” Mr. Leach later said. “We felt their wealth was based on exploiting people in horrible ways.”

In addition to the flagship program, Mr. Leach served as commentato­r on spinoffs including “Runaway With the Rich and Famous” and “Fame, Fortune and Romance.” His distinctiv­e voice was used to move merchandis­e: He did voice-over narration for TV ads featuring Bud Light pitch dog Spuds MacKenzie, as well as commercial­s for Honda, the California Lottery and Meineke discount muffler shops.

He was name-checked in rap songs as a byword for showy affluence. He endured so long that two “Saturday Night Live” comedians — Harry Shearer and later Dana Carvey — satirized him.

Mr. Leach said he was not amused — but only because the lampoon didn’t go far enough. It “could have been rougher and ruder,” he told The Washington Post. “I mean, if you’re really going to savage me, savage me. I mean it’s a perfect thing to parody, isn’t it?”

“I would love to do a show called ‘Lifestyles of the Poor and Unknown,’” he added. But “nobody would watch it.”

 ?? Alex Federowicz/The New York Times ?? Robin Leach in Las Vegas on April 11, 2014.
Alex Federowicz/The New York Times Robin Leach in Las Vegas on April 11, 2014.

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