Press release

This Old House® to Air Tribute Special to Master Carpenter and Television Trailblazer, Norm Abram

The House That Norm Built To Premiere October 3rd STAMFORD, Conn. & SAN JOSE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- After over four decades, This Old House’s Master

articleRoku, Inc.May 19, 20224/company/roku-inc/news/this-old-houser-to-air-tribute-special-to-master-carpenter-and-television-trailblazer
This Old House® to Air Tribute Special to Master Carpenter and Television Trailblazer, Norm Abram

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[{"type":"text","content":"\nThe House That Norm Built To Premiere October 3rd\n\n STAMFORD, Conn. & SAN JOSE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--\nAfter over four decades, This Old House’s Master Carpenter and pioneer of the home improvement television genre, Norm Abram is officially leaving the show and hanging up his toolbelt. Norm will be sent off in style with a one-hour tribute special The House That Norm Built premiering Monday, October 3rd at 9pm ET on PBS and streamed on The Roku Channel.\nThis press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220519005404/en/This Old House® to air tribute special to master carpenter and television trailblazer, Norm Abram. Photo Credit Bob O’Connor/This Old House.\nThe special will highlight and chronicle 43 years of Norm’s incredible career featuring classic moments, archived footage, interviews and memories from celebrities, friends, peers and those who worked alongside him. Norm’s inspiration reached far and wide for a humble man who became a national celebrity through his uncompromising craftsmanship, trademark plaid shirt, impersonations on popular sitcoms, bits on late night TV shows, morning shows, nationally syndicated cartoons and as the ultimate authority in home improvement. Norm appeared in over 1000 episodes of This Old House, worked on over 50 home renovation projects and hosted more than 280 episodes of The New Yankee Workshop.\n\nIt all started for Norm on Christmas Eve in 1958 as he went with his father, a Boston carpenter on a job installing hardwood floors. They installed the floors the old-fashioned way – with cut nails and a skill saw turned upside down on a milk crate. That first job led to many weekends and summer breaks spent with his father learning the discipline of methodical pace and common sense. Twenty years after that Christmas, Norm was “discovered” by creator Russell Morash, who had commissioned him to build a barn. So taken with Norm’s work, he invited the carpenter to help with the renovation of a house in Boston’s historic Dorchester section—with a WGBH camera crew recording the process for a series. It was an instant success, and Norm catapulted into home improvement guru status. He served as Master Carpenter of This Old House since the series’ 1979 premiere and host of The New Yankee Workshop a decade later.\n\n“Norm is a living leg...

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