Muntz started his career in the 1930s selling used cars, but he truly became a sensation after moving to Southern California. He pioneered wild, high-energy advertising with his “Madman” persona: wearing outrageous costumes (like Napoleon hats or animal skins), performing stunts, and plastering his name everywhere with slogans like “I wanna give ’em away, but my wife won’t let me!” His over-the-top commercials and billboards made him a local celebrity and one of LA’s biggest tourist attractions in the 1940s. He sold massive volumes of cars (including during WWII when new ones weren’t available) and reportedly made and lost fortunes multiple times.
Muntz TVs worked great in cities with strong signals but struggled in fringe areas due to the stripped-down circuits (fewer tubes meant less heat and better reliability in ideal conditions, but weaker amplification). Still, they democratized TV ownership, putting sets in middle-class homes years earlier than might have happened otherwise. The company faced challenges—overexpansion, competition, and financial issues—and Muntz TV went bankrupt around 1959. But Muntz bounced back as always. He later invented the Muntz Stereo-Pak “The Fidelipac” (a 4-track car tape player that inspired the famous 8-track format), dabbled in other ventures like his short-lived Muntz Jet sports car, and kept innovating until his death from lung cancer on June 21, 1987.
Earl “Madman” Muntz was a showman, a cost-cutting genius, and a pioneer who used sheer personality and bold engineering to make technology accessible—and entertaining. His legacy lives on in affordable consumer electronics, wild advertising, and the term “TV” itself.
Fred Latremouille (1945–2015) was a beloved Canadian broadcaster, renowned as a "broadcaster’s broadcaster" for his…
Sedaka passed away today, in Los Angeles at age 86, shortly after a hospital admission.…
Hal worked the West Coast (KAYO/Seattle, KEX/KISN/KGW all in Portland), KBOX in Dallas, and stations…
From RadioInsight - Station personalities Bob Buck, Richard ‘Rick Allen’ Axenty, and David Maul’s KBZY…
The Vancouver Sun - February 1940 The Vancouver Sun - September 16, 1949 The Vancouver…