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Showman car salesman Cal Worthington dies at 92

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Cal Worthington, the Oklahoma native whose old-time carnival flair built one of the most successful car dealerships west of the Mississippi, has died. He was 92.

Worthington died Sunday while watching football at his home on the Big W Ranch near Orland, Calif., said Brady McLeod of the Miles Law Firm in Sacramento, which represented Worthington.

Described as a cross between Dale Carnegie and Slim Pickens, Worthington was best known for his wacky television pitches that had him wrestling with a tiger, flying upside down on an airplane wing or riding a killer whale. His sales antics with his “Dog Spot” drove a career that took him from a three-car lot on a patch of Texas dirt to a multi-make dealership empire that grossed billions of dollars and stretched from Southern California to Alaska.

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FULL OBITUARY: Cal Worthington and his wacky pitches

In 1950, Worthington bought a car dealership in Huntington Park and in the years that followed began to use his down-home theatrical style to drum up more business.

Worthington’s enduring mark on regional television wasn’t made until 1971, when he began running his famous “Dog Spot” commercials. The ads were inspired by two competitors, Ralph Williams and Fletcher Jones, who both ran television ads featuring dogs. In particular, Jones was shown cuddling puppies and promised he’d give customers a dog from the pound.

“I decided I’d mimic them,” Worthington told the Los Angeles Times in 2002. So he borrowed a gorilla, chained it to a car bumper and let the cameras roll. With the ape snarling in the background, Worthington said: “Howdy, I’m Cal Worthington and this is my dog Spot. I found this little fella down at the pound, and he’s so full of love.”

PHOTOS: Classic Hollywood

Worthington spoofed the ads for decades, offering customers his dog Spot, who always turned out to be any animal other than a dog. At one time or another, frogs, lizards, grizzly bears, hippos and even elephants played the part of Spot. It was during this time, too, that Worthington aired the famous 26-stanza jingle he’d written himself titled “Go See Cal.”

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From the start, Worthington insisted on writing and starring in his own ads. And he believed in the power of repetition. At its peak, he spent $12 million to run his commercials 50,000 times a year.

A complete obituary will follow at latimes.com/obits.

ALSO:

Murray Gershenz, 91, record store owner and actor

Gerald Buck, 73, private art collector in Orange County

David Frost, 74, journalist interviewed President Nixon

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Twitter: @latimesmmiller
martin.miller@latimes.com



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