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Pat Paulsen

Patrick Layton Paulsen (July 6, 1927 – April 25, 1997) was an American comedian and satirist notable for his roles on several of the Smothers Brothers television shows, and for his satirical campaigns for President of the United States between 1968 and 1996.

Pat Paulsen

Patrick Layton Paulsen

(1927-07-06)July 6, 1927

April 25, 1997(1997-04-25) (aged 69)

Tijuana, Mexico
  • Comedian
  • satirist
Betty Jane Cox
(m. 1959; div. 1988)
Linda Chaney
(m. 1988; div. 1989)
Noma Littell
(m. 1990)

www.paulsen.com
(discontinued)

Early life and education[edit]

Paulsen was born July 6, 1927, in South Bend, Washington, a small fishing town in Pacific County.[1] He was the son of Beulah Inez (née Fadden) and Norman Inge Paulsen, a Norwegian immigrant who worked for the Coast Guard.[2][3] The family moved to California when he was 10, where he graduated from Tamalpais High School in Mill Valley in May 1945.


Paulsen joined the U.S. Marine Corps after high school, when World War II was still being waged, but it ended before he was shipped overseas.[4] However, he did experience overseas duty, including guarding captured Japanese soldiers during their repatriation.[2] He returned home after the war and worked as a posting clerk, a truck driver, a hod carrier, a Fuller Brush salesman, and a gypsum miner. Later, he was employed as a photostat operator for several years. He attended San Francisco City College, then joined an acting group called "The Ric-y-tic Players," and he formed a comedy trio that included his brother Lorin.

Political campaigns[edit]

After CBS sold five minutes of airtime on The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour for a political ad, the show's writers came up with a bit in which Paulsen disclaimed association with the ad and stating that the ad was unfair to him as a candidate. CBS refused to air the bit, but the incident became the impetus for the Smothers Brothers writers launching a Pat Paulsen presidential campaign.[1] His campaign in 1968 and succeeding years was grounded in comedy, although not without serious commentary. He ran the supposed campaigns using obvious lies, double talk and tongue-in-cheek attacks on the major candidates, and he responded to all criticism with his catchphrase, "Picky, picky, picky". His campaign slogans included "Just a common, ordinary, simple savior of America's destiny", "We’ve upped our standards, now up yours" and "United we sit". He gave essentially the same answer to every question on social issues: "To get to the meat of the matter, I will come right to the point, and take note of the fact that the heart of the issue in the final analysis escapes me."[6] In announcing his candidacy on the Smothers Brothers show, Paulsen said, "Now I ask you: Will I solve our economic problems? Will I ease the causes of racial tension? Will I bring a peaceful end to Vietnam? Sure, why not?"[7]


Paulsen's name appeared on the ballot in New Hampshire for the Democratic primary several times. In 1996, he received 921 votes (one percent) to finish second to President Bill Clinton (76,754 votes); this was ahead of real politicians such as Buffalo mayor James D. Griffin. In 1992, he came in second to George Bush in the North Dakota Republican primary. In the 1992 Republican Party primaries, he received 10,984 votes total.

Winemaking[edit]

In 1971, Paulsen and his then-wife Jane opened Pat Paulsen Vineyards, a vineyard and winemaking operation in Sonoma County, California.[8] Shortly after Clint Eastwood was elected mayor of Carmel, California (1986), Paulsen proclaimed himself "mayor" of Asti, the small town near his vineyard. The office was of his own invention.[9]

Personal life and death[edit]

In the 1980s, Paulsen began a relationship with social worker Linda Chaney, whom he met at a Denver comedy club. She began serving as his booking agent, and the two were married in 1988. However, he learned that she was diverting his funds into her own personal accounts, and he filed for divorce after only 40 days. He later sued her and was awarded a judgment of $233,000, but Chaney said that, even if she had the money, she would rather "go out and shred it rather than turn it over" to Paulsen.[10]


In 1995, Paulsen was diagnosed with colon cancer, and doctors discovered that the cancer had spread to his brain and lymph nodes in 1997.[11] He sought alternative medicine treatment for his cancer in Tijuana, Mexico, and died there from complications of pneumonia and kidney failure on April 25, 1997.[5] Paulsen was fondly remembered by fans who enjoyed his mockery of the entire electoral process. "Whenever I’d walk around with him," Tom Smothers said, "people would yell, 'Hey, Mr. President.' We miss him."[12]

Pat Paulsen for President (1968)

Live at the Ice House (1970)

Unzipped (1998)

Paulsen, Pat (1972). . Nash Pub. ISBN 978-0840212580.

How to wage a successful campaign for the Presidency

List of notable brain tumor patients

"Pat Paulsen for President!: America's Favorite Also-Ran!" article by Wayne Hicks, Filmfax magazine, May–July 2016, (cover). Filmfax, Inc., Evanston, Illinois USA. Four pages (70–73) with 17 photographs.

number 144

at IMDb

Pat Paulsen