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Zindler and was
Marvin Harold Zindler ( August 10, 1921 – July 29, 2007 ) was a news reporter for television station KTRK-TV in Houston, Texas, United States.
Zindler's father, Abe Zindler, who founded and owned a successful clothing store in Houston, was disappointed in Marvin, whom Abe considered frivolous and irresponsible.
In 1950 Zindler became a reporter and cameraman for Southwest Film Production Company which produced the 6 P. M. news for KPRC-TV, but in 1954, he was fired by an executive who said he was " too ugly " to work in TV.
Two years before joining KTRK-TV, Zindler was assigned by the Sheriff and District Attorney to establish a Consumer Fraud Division with the Harris County District Attorney's Office.
After Jack Heard was elected Sheriff of Harris County in 1972, Zindler was unceremoniously let go, a move that Zindler blamed on agitated car dealers who were alleged to have been rolling back odometers.
The story, along with his trademark reporting style, was instrumental in Zindler signing an unprecedented lifetime contract with Capital Cities / ABC, Inc. and KTRK-TV in September 1988, which he honored.
* In the first spin-off, Marvin Zindler also rewarded restaurants for operating clean kitchens continuously with his " Blue Ribbon Awards ," which was done in his final years with local beauty pageant contestants giving the envelopes of the winning restaurants to Zindler.
Marvin Zindler's trademark signoff at the end of each report was, nearly shouting: " Marrrrrvin Zindler ..... Eyeeeeeewitness NEWS!
Zindler was the recipient of hundreds of awards from news organizations, charity groups, and medical professionals.
Zindler was known for wearing makeup continually, loved cigars, and was a frequent golfer.
Zindler was also noted for his seventeen cosmetic surgeries, the first of which took place in 1954 after the KPRC-TV firing.
In 1994, Zindler was diagnosed with prostate cancer, but he overcame the illness.
On July 5, 2007, it was announced on KTRK's 6: 00 p. m. newscast that Zindler was diagnosed with inoperable pancreatic cancer that had also spread to his liver.
Zindler stated that he planned to stay on the air as his illness was treated, even doing restaurant reports and greetings from his bedside.
In November 2007, Bellaire Park in Bellaire, Texas was renamed to Bellaire Zindler Park.

Zindler and also
On Friday nights, Zindler also gave viewers additional good wishes just before his traditional sign-off: " Have a good weekend-good golf, good tennis, or whatever makes you happy.
On his Friday reports, Zindler had also reported birthday and wedding anniversary greetings on air, usually involving those celebrating their 100th birthday or at least a 50th wedding anniversary.

Zindler and Houston
Zindler attended Pershing Middle School and Lamar High School in Houston before graduating from a different high school, San Jacinto High School in Houston.
Zindler began his broadcasting career in 1943 as a part-time night radio disc jockey and spot news reporter at now defunct Houston radio station KATL-AM while working for his family's clothing store.
Two years later, Zindler joined the Scripps Howard Houston Press to work part-time as a crime reporter and photographer.
Before his death, Marvin and Niki Zindler lived in the Houston neighborhood of Maplewood, where Zindler had lived continuously for forty-eight years.
Zindler died from the cancer at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in the Texas Medical Center section of Houston on July 29, 2007, two nights after what would turn out to be his final newscast.
Marvin Zindler Oral History, Houston Oral History Project, January 20, 1975.
When crusading television reporter Melvin P. Thorpe ( based on real-life Houston news personality Marvin Zindler ) decides to make the illegal activity an issue, political ramifications cause the place to be closed down.

Zindler and for
While working for the newspaper and his father's store, Zindler became dissatisfied with the retail business and in 1962 took a career detour to join the Harris County Sheriff's Department.
Then Zindler stepped in to shed more light on the operation, which led to its being closed for good.
The station has stated that over 100, 000 requests for help from Zindler were received yearly.
The Plastic Surgeons of America honored Zindler for his openness and honesty in talking about his cosmetic surgeries and for the help he obtained for charity patients who desperately needed reconstructive surgery.
At one point in the 1970s, Zindler considered running for Congress as a Republican, and the local GOP commissioned surveys that predicted he would win.

Zindler and where
Student, Zindler and McKinsey Ha-Notzri is not found in other early pre-censorship partial manuscripts ( the Florence, Hamburg and Karlsruhe ) where these cover the passages in question.
* The other spin-off showcased places where Zindler preferred to dine, called " Where Marvin Likes to Eat ...".

Zindler and from
Upon news of Zindler's departure from the Harris County Sheriff's Department, KTRK anchor Dave Ward recommended Zindler to the station's assistant news director.
Zindler had been a primary factor in KTRK's rise from a perennial third in the ratings to its usual number one position.
* Marvin Zindler ( ABC Local News Anchor-Zindler graduated from a different school )

Zindler and reports
These reports conclude with restaurants that were reported to have slime in their ice machines, which is referred to on the air by Zindler as " Sliiiime in the Ice Machine !".

Zindler and on
Zindler made local and national headlines when he and reporter Larry Conners closed the Chicken Ranch in Fayette County, Texas, near La Grange, after he made a news report on it in 1973.
Zindler did his expose after two college students — Peggy Meek ( Venable ) and Bill Boe — wrote an article on the Chicken Ranch which landed them an Intercollegiate Press Award.
In choosing stories, Zindler focused on two factors-neediness and chance of success.
The role of Melvin P. Thorpe, as played by Dom DeLuise, in the 1982 film The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas, is based on Zindler.

Zindler and air
The closing did not go well with the sheriff of Fayette County, T. J. Flournoy, who later attacked Zindler in a fight that left Zindler with two fractured ribs, along with a snatched toupee ; reportedly, Flournoy waved the hairpiece in the air as if it were a prized enemy scalp.

Zindler and .
Similar views have been expressed by skepical science writer Frank R. Zindler in his polemical work The Jesus the Jews Never Knew: Sepher Toldoth Yeshu and the Quest of the Historical Jesus in Jewish Sources deliberately published outside the realm of Christian and Jewish scholarship.
* Frank R. Zindler, The Jesus the Jews Never Knew: Sepher Toldoth Yeshu and the Quest of the Historical Jesus in Jewish Sources, American Atheist Press, 2003
In 1941, when the United States entered World War II, Zindler joined the United States Marine Corps and later received an honorable discharge.
On January 1, 1973, Marvin Zindler joined KTRK, a station with a news program languishing in third place.

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