Pat Sajak Bio, Age, Wife, Height, Net Worth, Illness, Wheel of Fortune 

Pat Sajak Biography

Pat Sajak is a game show host and television personality from the United States. He is best known for his work as the host of the American television game show Wheel of Fortune, which he has done since 1981. Sajak has received 19 nominations for the Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Game Show Host for his work on Wheel, winning three times.

How old is Pat Sajak? – Age

He is 76 years old as of 26 October 2022. He was born in 1946 in Chicago, Illinois, United States.

Pat Sajak Education

Sajak attended Columbia College Chicago while working as a desk clerk at the Palmer House hotel after graduating from Farragut High School in 1964.

Pat Sajak Wife

Sajak is married to photographer Lesly Brown-Sajak, with whom he has two children: Patrick Michael James Sajak, born on September 22, 1990, and Maggie Marie Sajak, born on January 5, 1995. The couple has a primary residence in Severna Park, Maryland, and a secondary residence in Los Angeles, California.

Pat Sajak Net Worth

He has an estimated net worth of $70 Million.

How tall is Pate Pat Sajak? – Height

He stands at a height of 5 feet 10 inches.

Pat Sajak Wheel of Fortune

Merv Griffin asked Sajak if he would be interested in taking over as host of Wheel of Fortune from Chuck Woolery in 1981. However, NBC President and CEO Fred Silverman rejected his hiring, claiming Sajak was too local, to which Griffin responded by imposing a moratorium on new tapings until Sajak was hired.

Sajak and his Wheel of Fortune co-star Vanna White appeared on an episode of the NBC sitcom 227 in 1986. Sajak appears alongside co-star Vanna White in the fourth-season episode “Wheel of Fortune” of The A-Team. Murdock wins big at Wheel of Fortune thanks to Face’s system of correctly guessing the letters.

In “That Brother’s My Father,” the fourth episode of season three of Comedy Central’s Brickleberry, Sajak is kidnapped and becomes a hostage to the wheel of fortune. Since the beginning of Season 39 in 2020, Sajak has been credited as a Consulting Producer on Wheel of Fortune.

Sajak and White have hosted ABC’s Prime Time Celebrity Wheel of Fortune since 2021. It was announced in September 2021 that both Sajak and White had agreed to continue hosting Wheel of Fortune through the 2023-24 season. In a Muppets Haunted Mansion television special in 2021, Sajak voiced a singing bust.

Does Pat Sajak have an illness? – Surgery

On November 8, 2019, Sajak underwent emergency intestinal surgery to remove a blockage. While Sajak was recovering, co-host Vanna White took over as host. The first day he was unable to work was during a Disney-themed Christmas episode week. For that week, Disney characters took over White’s role at the puzzle board. Maggie, Sajak’s daughter, also assisted White for a week.

Pat Sajak Military Service

Sajak admitted on the Military Channel’s An Officer and a Movie that he messed up President Richard Nixon’s 1969 Christmas broadcast to the troops by accidentally cutting the feed off too soon. When Sajak realized the error, he decided not to resume the feed. He worked as a DJ for a Murray, Kentucky radio station for a year in the early 1970s.

Pat Sajak Photo
Pat Sajak Photo

Pat Sajak Career

He started DJing at Nashville’s 50,000-watt WSM; at the time, WSM was playing pop music during the day, and he was the 2:30-5:00 pm afternoon personality. WSM-TV (now WSMV), the radio station’s television sister, brought Sajak to the screen, first as a voiceover artist making station identifications and anchoring the five-minute newscasts during NBC’s Today Show, then as a weekend and substitute weatherman, where he met anchor Dan Miller. When KNBC-TV in Los Angeles was looking for a weather reporter in 1977, they came across Sajak working in Nashville. He agreed to KNBC’s request that he become a full-time weather reporter for the station.

Sajak accepted the position despite having already hosted two game show pilots in 1980, Press Your Luck for Ralph Edwards and Puzzlers for Mark Goodson. From 1983 to 1989, Sajak hosted both the daytime (NBC) and syndicated evening versions of Wheel, and he still hosts the latter. With the return of Sajak for his 36th season in 2018-19, he surpassed Bob Barker as the longest-running host of any game show, having hosted The Price Is Right from 1972 to 2007. The episode, which was taped on March 28, 2019, and aired on May 8, 2019 (two days before the primetime version’s 7,000th episode), was officially recognized as such by Guinness World Records.

In the 1982 comedy film Airplane II: The Sequel, Sajak played a Buffalo, New York newscaster. When his late-night talk show on CBS debuted in January 1989, he was replaced on the daytime version of Wheel by former San Diego Chargers place-kicker Rolf Benirschke. Sajak appeared on Super Password from 1984 to 1989, as well as Password Plus in 1981, shortly before taking over as host of Wheel. He also appeared as a celebrity guest on Dream House, Just Men!, and Match Game-Hollywood Squares Hour.

From January 9, 1989, to April 13, 1990, Sajak hosted a late-night talk show on CBS. Dan Miller, an old friend and former anchor at Nashville’s WSM-TV, joined Sajak as his sidekick. When King was unable to do the show, Sajak became a frequent guest host for CNN’s Larry King Live. On the syndicated Live with Regis and Kelly, he became a regular substitute host for Regis Philbin. In 2003, Sajak hosted Pat Sajak Weekend on Fox News. Sajak hosted The Pat Sajak Baseball Hour, a syndicated weekly radio sports talk show that ended in 2006 due to scheduling conflicts, since at least 2002.

Eagle Publishing, a conservative publishing house, employs Sajak as an external director. He has served on the Claremont Institute’s board of directors. Sajak played Kevin Hathaway in the NBC daytime soap opera Days of Our Lives in 1983.

Sajak made an appearance as himself on the children’s cartoon show Rugrats in 1993. When Vanna White and he were contestants on an episode of Wheel hosted by Alex Trebek in 1997, Sajak played an April Fool’s Day prank on fans. Both Sajak and White’s winnings were donated to charity. In exchange, Sajak hosted an episode of Jeopardy! in place of Trebek. Along with Jeff Probst and Neil Patrick Harris, Sajak made an appearance at the start of an April Fool’s episode in 2010.

In the episode “Inner Tube” of The King of Queens in 2001, Sajak played himself. In 2010, Sajak began contributing to the National Review Online. In his first post, he questioned whether government employees should be allowed to vote on issues that directly benefit them. He has also contributed to Ricochet.com, a center-right sociopolitical / social networking website.

Sajak is the creator of several puzzle games, the first and most well-known of which is “Lucky Letters,” which was released in 2007. The games, which Sajak co-created with puzzle creator David L. Hoyt, are distributed by Universal Uclick.

Sajak has appeared with Stugotz on episodes of ESPN Radio’s The Dan Le Batard Show, as well as on episodes of Le Batard’s other show, Highly Questionable.