Skipper Stu Nahan

December 27, 2007

Home » Commentary » Skipper Stu Nahan

Wednesday night, after I’d scurried around the airport in Fresno, looking for luggage that wasn’t there, my cell phone vibrated but I ignored it and instead stepped to customer service and politely scolded the airline representative for shoehorning me into a connecting flight that, especially during holiday season, was unlikely to receive bags from my preceding flight into San Francisco. After filling out the forms and being told to drive on home to Bakersfield and wait for their call, I reached into my pocket, pulled out the phone, summoned my message, and heard the voice of a childhood friend tell me Stu Nahan had died earlier that day.

For kids growing up in Sacramento in the early and mid-1960’s, Skipper Stu Nahan was by several lengths the biggest celebrity in town.  Even Captain Sacto, Harry Martin, lacked Nahan’s dynamism.  Who else could’ve competed?  Governor Pat Brown to us was a rather portly and obscure figure.  Ronald Reagan hadn’t yet taken the town.  Pro sports were still a generation away, and provincial citizens of the capital city enjoyed moaning that Sacramento could never support anything big time and shouldn’t try.

Stu Nahan understood that and marked time as he hosted a children’s show featuring cartoons, Skipper Stu’s easy banter with kids on an imaginary boat, and his signature jest, “You’re a hamburger.”  In the evenings and late nights on TV he read the sports, and his insight and energy made many viewers feel they were, for the moment, in a major league city.  In my neighborhood of Sierra Oaks along the American River several miles east of downtown, kids who loved cartoons and sports were delighted that Skipper Stu lived among us.  We didn’t have to worry about rudeness when knocking on his front door.  We went to school with his eldest son, Mickey, probably the only kid in Central California who knew how to ice skate and play hockey.  Stu had starred as a goalie for McGill University in Montreal, where he was raised.

In the Nahan’s house, in the early 1960’s, I saw one of my first color television programs: Count Basie and his orchestra were playing, and after so many years of black and white programming the bright images exploded like the Fourth of July.  Upstairs, in the master bedroom, there was a laundry shoot to the washer room below.  I still haven’t seen another.  One of my most exciting experiences came a couple of years later when Stu called my home and challenged me to a sports knowledge contest.  His son and others had told him I studied statistics and history quite a bit.  We answered each other’s questions without a miss until I asked him one about the nationally ranked basketball team at Western Kentucky University, in Bowling Green where I’d lived until age five.

“Oh no,” he said.  “None of that obscure stuff.  Only the big leagues.”

“Okay.  Who was the pitcher when Babe Ruth hit his 60th home run?”

That was a batting practice pitch for a guy like Stu Nahan.  “Tom Zachary,” he said.

He had too much talent and enthusiasm to stay in sleepy Sacramento.  In 1966 he moved to become Captain Philadelphia for the kids and broadcast professional hockey for the Philadelphia Flyers.  Two years later he landed in Los Angeles.  And that’s where the handsome and charming fellow belonged.  Late in his career, Stan Atkinson, the suavest of Sacramento newsreaders in the 1970’s and 80’s, commented in a newspaper interview that as fledgling TV talkers he and Stu Nahan had been “bad boys” and courted most of the blonds in the Sacramento Valley.  In that regard, a kid who lived on my street returned after a flight from Reno and excitedly told us he’d seen Skipper Stu on board with a beautiful lady.

In L.A. Nahan warmly delivered the sports news on television for 29 years and also worked in radio.  While at KABC Channel 7 he drove a car with the license plate “Stu 7” and publicly traded fusillades with the network’s most popular and unpopular sportscaster, Howard Cosell, whose paradoxical talent made him simultaneously acerbic and thoughtful, eloquent and verbose.  “Watch him,” Nahan commented.  “He tries to embarrass the other announcers.”  ABC executives generally routed them away from each other.  Nahan’s largest audiences came with his appearances as a sportscaster in all the Rocky films.

Since his passing, more than 40 years after his final broadcast from Sacramento, numerous local kids from the 1960’s have sent me emails.  The messages are similar.  Skipper Stu was by far the best we had and memories have not weakened.

George Thomas Clark

George Thomas Clark is the author of Hitler Here, a biographical novel published in India and the Czech Republic as well as the United States. His commentaries for GeorgeThomasClark.com are read in more than 50 countries a month.

Recent Commentary

Books

HITLER HERE is a well researched and lyrically written biographical novel offering first-person stories by the Fuehrer and a variety of other characters. This intimate approach invites the reader to peer into Hitler’s mind, talk to Eva Braun, joust with Goering, Goebbels, and Himmler, debate with the generals, fight on land and at sea and…
See More
Art history and fiction merge to reveal the lives and emotions of great painters Vincent van Gogh, Pablo Picasso, Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, William H. Johnson, Lee Krasner, and many others.
See More
This fast-moving collection blends fiction and movie history to illuminate the stimulating lives and careers of noted actors, actresses, and directors. Stars of this book include Humphrey Bogart, Clark Gable, Marilyn Monroe, Bette Davis, Alfred Hitchcock, Clint Eastwood, Cate Blanchett, and Spike Lee.
See More
In this collection of thirty-eight chiseled short stories, George Thomas Clark introduces readers to actors, alcoholics, addicts, writers famous and unknown, a general, a lovelorn farmer, a family besieged by cancer, extraterrestrials threatening the world, a couple time traveling back to a critical battle, a deranged husband chasing his wife, and many more memorable people…
See More
Anne Frank On Tour and Other Stories
This lively collection offers literary short stories founded on History, Love, Need, Excess, and Final Acts.
See More
In lucid prose author George Thomas Clark recalls the challenges of growing up in a family beset by divorce, depression, and alcoholism, and battling similar problems as an adult.
See More
Let’s invite many of the greatest boxers and their contemporaries to tell their own stories, some true, others tales based on history. The result is a fascinating look into the lives and battles of those who thrilled millions but often ruined themselves while so doing.
See More
In a rousing trip through the worlds of basketball and football, George Thomas Clark explores the professional basketball league in Mexico, the Herculean talents of Wilt Chamberlain, the artistry of LeBron James, the brilliance of Bill Walsh, and lots more. Half the stories are nonfiction and others are satirical pieces guided by the unwavering hand of an inspired storyteller.
See More
Get on board this collection of satirical stories, based on news, about the entertaining but absurd and often quite dangerous events following the election of President Donald J. Trump in November 2016 until January 6, 2021, shortly after his loss to Joe Biden.
See More
Join Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton, Bernie Sanders, Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, Jeb Bush and other notables on a raucous ride into a fictional world infused with facts from one of the roughest political races in modern U.S. history.
See More
History and literary fiction enliven the Barack Obama phenomenon from the African roots of his father and grandfather to the United States where young Obama struggles to control vices and establish his racial identity. Soon, the young politician is soaring but under fire from a variety of adversaries including Hillary Clinton, John McCain, Sarah Palin, Sean Hannity, and Rush Limbaugh.
See More
These satirical columns allow startlingly candid Saddam Hussein and George W. Bush to explain their need to control the destinies of countries, regions, and, ultimately, the world. Osama bin Laden, Dick Cheney, Condoleezza Rice, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Karl Rove, and other notables, not all famous, also demand part of the stage.
See More
Where Will We Sleep
Determined to learn more about those who fate did not favor, the author toured tattered, handmade refuges of those without homes and interviewed them on the streets and in homeless shelters, and conversed with the poor in the United States, Mexico, Ecuador, and Spain, and on occasion wrote composite stories to illuminate their difficult lives.
See More
In search of stimulating stories, the author interviewed prostitutes in Madrid, Mexico City, Havana, and Managua and on many boulevards in the United States, and he talked to detectives and rode the rough roads of social workers who deal with human trafficking, which is contemporary slavery, and sometimes used several lives to create stories, and everywhere he ventured he witnessed struggles of those whose lives are bound In Other Hands.
See More
In compressed language Clark presents a compilation of short stories and creative columns about relationships between men and women.
See More