He is remembered for one line. "Heeeere's Johnny!!" β boomed with that unmistakable voice, night after night, for three decades.
But Ed McMahon was never just a sidekick. Long before television discovered him, the U.S. Marine Corps already had.
In 1944, McMahon earned his pilot's wings and became a test pilot and flight instructor, training other men to fly the fearsome F4U Corsair. He never made it to the Pacific front - the war ended before his orders could be carried out. But he stayed in the Marine Corps Reserve. Quietly.
Waiting. And when Korea erupted, the Marines called him back.
This time, there was no staying behind. McMahon flew an OE-1 observation aircraft β a small, unarmed plane β directly into combat zones over North Korea. No guns. No armor. Just skill, nerve, and a voice that never shook.
He flew 85 missions, spotting targets for artillery batteries and guiding Navy and Marine fighter-bombers onto their marks.
For that, he earned six Air Medals.
He remained in the Reserve through the Vietnam era and retired in 1966 as a full Colonel. Sixteen years later, he was honored as a Brigadier General in the California Air National Guard.
He went on to co-host The Tonight Show alongside fellow veteran Johnny Carson for 30 years, anchor NBC's Macy's Thanksgiving coverage, host Star Search, and share the stage with Dick Clark on TV's Bloopers & Practical Jokes.
America watched him every night and laughed. Very few knew what he had flown through to get there. Ed McMahon passed away on June 23, 2009, at the age of 86 - a Colonel, a combat aviator, and one of the most genuinely decorated entertainers America ever produced.
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@nicksortor This is obviously the white man picking on her. They made her lie about her age, marry her brother and steal millions of taxpayer dollars. Those SOB's!