Joel Siegel (July 7, 1943 – June 29, 2007) was an American film critic for the ABC morning news show Good Morning America for over 25 years. Born to a Jewish family, and raised in Los Angeles, California, he graduated cum laude from UCLA. During college, he worked to register black voters in Georgia, and he spoke frequently of having met Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. He also worked as a joke writer for Senator Robert F. Kennedy and was at the Ambassador Hotel the night the senator was assassinated.

Siegel died of complications from colon cancer on June 29, 2007, in New York.

Siegel worked at a range of jobs throughout the 1960s, often concentrating on the civil rights movement. In the late '60s, before moving to New York, he worked as an advertising agency copywriter and producer. While working in advertising for Carson/Roberts Advertising, he invented and named ice cream flavors for Baskin-Robbins. These flavors were: German Chocolate Cake; Peaches & Cream; Pralines & Cream; Blueberry Cheesecake; Strawberry Cheesecake; Green Cheesecake; Red, White and Blueberry; and Chilly Burgers.

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Joel Siegel." | Wiki History
Watercooler Stories (59 min)
Jockstrip: The world as we know it.
Your Daily Horoscope
The almanac
NBA: Utah 105, Chicago 86
More companies allowing cyber shopping
NHL: Vancouver 4, Los Angeles 1
fark
Photoshop this colorful commuter
Man digs up wife's corpse just for hugs
Forget killer bees. Here come super termites
Wal-Mart taking extra safety precautions this Black Friday to prevent unruly deal-deprived mobs...
Ugly-ass baby meerkats cuddle up with a plush meerkat doll after losing their mother. The Sun is...
Scottish brewery releases world's strongest beer, Tactical Nuclear Penguin, that's 32% alcohol....