//GA4 analytics
  • Home
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • Media
  • CratesHub.com
  • Audio on Demand
ATL FM NewsRoom
  • Home
  • Featured
    Government Targets ‘No Bed Syndrome’ with New Health Tech System

    Government Targets ‘No Bed Syndrome’ with New Health Tech System

    Fuel Prices Reduced As Cedi Stability Keeps Costs Down

    Fuel Prices Reduced As Cedi Stability Keeps Costs Down

    The National Anti-Illegal Mining Operations Secretariat (NAIMOS) has stepped up its nationwide crackdown on illegal mining, seizing equipment and making arrests as part of intensified efforts to curb galamsey activities.

    Security Threat Deepens as 94 Excavators Retrieved from Illegal Miners

    Dust on Kasoa–Winneba Road Is Causing Health Fears Now

    Dust on Kasoa–Winneba Road Is Causing Health Fears Now

    slavery

    President Mahama Justifies Resolution Against Slavery and Colonialism

    Catholic Bishops Raise New Legal Challenge in Wesley Girls Case

    Catholic Bishops Raise New Legal Challenge in Wesley Girls Case

    Blow Chem donates to Muslim Community in Cape Coast

    Blow Chem donates to Muslim Community in Cape Coast

    Ghana

    Ghana Becomes First African Nation to Sign Strategic Security Pact with EU

    Oil

    Oil price falls as Trump talks up Iran peace negotiations

  • News
    • All
    • Africa News
    • Business
    • International
    • Local News
    Shock as dozens of bodies, mostly infants, discovered in Kenya mass grave

    Shock as dozens of bodies, mostly infants, discovered in Kenya mass grave

    Col Michael Randrianirina seized power last October in the wake of youth-led protests

    Madagascar military leader dissolves government in surprise move

    US nationals urged to leave Middle East as conflict spreads

    US nationals urged to leave Middle East as conflict spreads

    Minority demands urgent review of the 2025 Common Fund plan

    Minority demands urgent review of the 2025 Common Fund plan

    Girl, 14, shot dead as South Africa’s ‘taxi wars’ hit school

    Girl, 14, shot dead as South Africa’s ‘taxi wars’ hit school

    Senegal PM proposes tougher anti-LGBT law, doubling prison terms

    Senegal PM proposes tougher anti-LGBT law, doubling prison terms

  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Technology
  • Lifestyle
  • Opinions
  • MediaAudio
    • All
    • Agyanom Afarifo
    • Cross Current
    • Sports Pai Mu Kan
    • Thursdays Sports

    Thursday Afternoon Sports

    Agoro Nie Pae Mu Ka

    Cross Current

    Agyanom Afarifo

  • Contact Us
  • About us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Featured
    Government Targets ‘No Bed Syndrome’ with New Health Tech System

    Government Targets ‘No Bed Syndrome’ with New Health Tech System

    Fuel Prices Reduced As Cedi Stability Keeps Costs Down

    Fuel Prices Reduced As Cedi Stability Keeps Costs Down

    The National Anti-Illegal Mining Operations Secretariat (NAIMOS) has stepped up its nationwide crackdown on illegal mining, seizing equipment and making arrests as part of intensified efforts to curb galamsey activities.

    Security Threat Deepens as 94 Excavators Retrieved from Illegal Miners

    Dust on Kasoa–Winneba Road Is Causing Health Fears Now

    Dust on Kasoa–Winneba Road Is Causing Health Fears Now

    slavery

    President Mahama Justifies Resolution Against Slavery and Colonialism

    Catholic Bishops Raise New Legal Challenge in Wesley Girls Case

    Catholic Bishops Raise New Legal Challenge in Wesley Girls Case

    Blow Chem donates to Muslim Community in Cape Coast

    Blow Chem donates to Muslim Community in Cape Coast

    Ghana

    Ghana Becomes First African Nation to Sign Strategic Security Pact with EU

    Oil

    Oil price falls as Trump talks up Iran peace negotiations

  • News
    • All
    • Africa News
    • Business
    • International
    • Local News
    Shock as dozens of bodies, mostly infants, discovered in Kenya mass grave

    Shock as dozens of bodies, mostly infants, discovered in Kenya mass grave

    Col Michael Randrianirina seized power last October in the wake of youth-led protests

    Madagascar military leader dissolves government in surprise move

    US nationals urged to leave Middle East as conflict spreads

    US nationals urged to leave Middle East as conflict spreads

    Minority demands urgent review of the 2025 Common Fund plan

    Minority demands urgent review of the 2025 Common Fund plan

    Girl, 14, shot dead as South Africa’s ‘taxi wars’ hit school

    Girl, 14, shot dead as South Africa’s ‘taxi wars’ hit school

    Senegal PM proposes tougher anti-LGBT law, doubling prison terms

    Senegal PM proposes tougher anti-LGBT law, doubling prison terms

  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Technology
  • Lifestyle
  • Opinions
  • MediaAudio
    • All
    • Agyanom Afarifo
    • Cross Current
    • Sports Pai Mu Kan
    • Thursdays Sports

    Thursday Afternoon Sports

    Agoro Nie Pae Mu Ka

    Cross Current

    Agyanom Afarifo

  • Contact Us
  • About us
No Result
View All Result
ATL FM NewsRoom
No Result
View All Result
--Advertisements--
Home E-News

“Coming to America” Star John Amos Dies at 84

Alloh Jean-Gervais by Alloh Jean-Gervais
2 years ago
in E-News
0
John Amos of "Coming to America" passed away at the age of 84.
0
SHARES
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
--Advertisements--

Hollywood actor, John Amos, known for his roles in ‘Coming To America’ and ‘Good Times’, has died at 84.

His son, Kelly Christopher Amos in a statement on Tuesday, announced that the actor died of natural causes on August 21.

--Advertisements--

“It is with heartfelt sadness that I share with you that my father has transitioned. He was a man with the kindest heart and a heart of gold and he was loved world over.

“Many fans consider him as their TV father. His legacy will live on in his outstanding works in television and film as an actor,” he announced.

--Advertisements--

Profile

John Amos, a running back turned actor who appeared in scores of TV shows — including groundbreaking 1970s programs such as the sitcom “Good Times” and the epic miniseries “Roots” — and risked his career to protest demeaning portrayals of Black characters.The talent agency Buchwald, which represented him, announced the death but did not provide a specific cause. It was unclear why the family waited weeks after his death to make it public.

After being cut by 13 professional and minor-league football teams in his 20s, often because of injuries, Mr. Amos supported himself variously as a ditch-digger, lumberjack, restaurant manager, social worker and advertising copywriter. 

With a self-confessed short fuse and a flair for showmanship, he found an outlet for his frustration and creativity writing jokes that he performed in nightclubs.

He enjoyed the applause and, he later said, found that being onstage “allowed me to be other people without getting in trouble.”

Settling in Los Angeles, he tried to break into TV by pitching ideas for comic sketches. “I’d go in when I first started in the business, trying to get a job as a writer, and they’d see a Black guy with 19-inch neck,” he recalled to Newsday. The reaction he got, he said, was, “What the hell could you know about comedy?”

His breakthrough came in 1969, when he became one of the first African Americans to write on staff for a network program (CBS’s “The Leslie Uggams Show”). Having impressed executives with his comic timing, he soon began performing on camera.

In the popular Eddie Murphy movie comedy “Coming to America” (1988), Mr. Amos was the self-important fast-food restaurant owner who insists that his McDowell’s — home of the “Big Mick” sandwich and the “Golden Arcs” — is not a copy of McDonald’s because “my buns have no seeds.”

He played a brutal prison guard in the Sylvester Stallone film “Lock Up” (1989) and a renegade Special Forces officer in the Bruce Willis action hit “Die Hard 2” (1990). But by the end of his career, he was best known for his steady run of TV roles.

His career was at times hindered by his admittedly “hardheaded” disposition, which he traced to his upbringing in New Jersey by a single mother who taught him to stand up for himself as he helped integrate classrooms in the 1940s and 1950s. During his years in Hollywood, he campaigned for acting opportunities for Black actors beyond the pimps and drug pushers they were often consigned to play.

In 1970, he landed a recurring guest spot as Gordy the weatherman on “The Mary Tyler Moore Show,” the acclaimed CBS sitcom set in a Minneapolis TV station. He said he was grateful that the writers did not typecast him as a sportscaster but instead presented him as a dapper, self-assured meteorologist who, as Mr. Amos put it, “could think beyond X’s and O’s.”

His career received another boost in 1973 when producer Norman Lear cast Mr. Amos as the underemployed husband of Maude Findlay’s maid — played by Esther Rolle — on the sitcom “Maude,” which had Bea Arthur in the title role.

Mr. Amos with co-star Madge Sinclair in a scene from the 1977 miniseries “Roots.”

Conflict over ‘Good Times’

Read also:Put souls above money – Piesie Esther to gospel acts.

The next year, he and Rolle starred in a spinoff, “Good Times,” also developed by Lear, which aired on CBS until 1979. The show was considered a breakthrough for its portrayal of a loving two-parent Black family — headed by James and Florida Evans — trying to make ends meet while living in a high-rise housing project in Chicago.

“I was carrying the weight of being the first Black father of a complete family,” Mr. Amos told the website Vulture in 2015, “and I carried that responsibility seriously. Maybe too much so. … I knew that millions of Black people were watching. I knew that my own father was watching. My own children were watching. And I was not going to portray something that was less than redeeming.”

Amid traditional sitcom high jinks, the show addressed gang violence and teen pregnancy, among other social issues. But Mr. Amos routinely clashed with the all-White writing staff, and with Lear, over what he considered the dilution of serious topical matters to focus on the antics of his fast-talking screen son J.J., played by the wiry comedian Jimmie Walker.

Mr. Amos found the emphasis on Walker’s silly strut and wardrobe, “dy-no-mite” catch phrase and shady, get-rich-quick schemes offensive. He contended that more attention should have been paid to his character’s two other children, who aspired to be a doctor and a lawyer. He and Rolle, reportedly aghast at Walker’s breakout stardom and the example he set for Black youths, had little on-set interaction with him.

Mr. Amos, who had angrily protested the show’s direction, was fired by Lear over the phone in 1976, and the James Evans character was killed off in a car accident. The writers, Mr. Amos recalled decades later, “got tired of having their lives threatened over jokes.”

Soon after departing “Good Times,” Mr. Amos was cast as the adult Kunta Kinte on “Roots,” the landmark 1977 ABC miniseries. The TV show, based on Alex Haley’s best-selling book of the same name, traces the impact of slavery on a Black family across generations.

The production ran eight nights and reached 130 million viewers, making it one of the highest-rated programs in television history. “Roots” provided a rare high-profile dramatic outlet for Black actors, including LeVar Burton (as the younger Kunta Kinte), Louis Gossett Jr., Cicely Tyson and Ben Vereen. It swept the Emmy Awards, and Mr. Amos received a nomination for his role.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE STORIES

SOURCE:GRAPHICONLINE.COM

Alloh Jean-Gervais

Alloh Jean-Gervais

Listen Live

ATL FM Live Streaming
Your browser does not support the audio element.

Stay Connected test

  • 1.9k Followers
  • 1000 Subscribers
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
IEPA

IEPA Calls for Ethical AI and Data-Driven Education to Accelerate 2030 SDG Goals

March 10, 2026
Col Michael Randrianirina seized power last October in the wake of youth-led protests

Madagascar military leader dissolves government in surprise move

March 10, 2026
Cape Coast North MP Supports UCC Youngsters with GH₵20,000 to Aid Survival Bid

Cape Coast North MP Supports UCC Youngsters with GH₵20,000 to Aid Survival Bid

March 10, 2026
Mpox Surge in Ghana: 1,038 Cases and Eight Deaths

Mpox Surge in Ghana: 1,038 Cases and Eight Deaths

March 9, 2026
Government Targets ‘No Bed Syndrome’ with New Health Tech System

Government Targets ‘No Bed Syndrome’ with New Health Tech System

0
Fuel Prices Reduced As Cedi Stability Keeps Costs Down

Fuel Prices Reduced As Cedi Stability Keeps Costs Down

0
The National Anti-Illegal Mining Operations Secretariat (NAIMOS) has stepped up its nationwide crackdown on illegal mining, seizing equipment and making arrests as part of intensified efforts to curb galamsey activities.

Security Threat Deepens as 94 Excavators Retrieved from Illegal Miners

0
Dust on Kasoa–Winneba Road Is Causing Health Fears Now

Dust on Kasoa–Winneba Road Is Causing Health Fears Now

0
Government Targets ‘No Bed Syndrome’ with New Health Tech System

Government Targets ‘No Bed Syndrome’ with New Health Tech System

March 25, 2026
Fuel Prices Reduced As Cedi Stability Keeps Costs Down

Fuel Prices Reduced As Cedi Stability Keeps Costs Down

March 25, 2026
The National Anti-Illegal Mining Operations Secretariat (NAIMOS) has stepped up its nationwide crackdown on illegal mining, seizing equipment and making arrests as part of intensified efforts to curb galamsey activities.

Security Threat Deepens as 94 Excavators Retrieved from Illegal Miners

March 25, 2026
Dust on Kasoa–Winneba Road Is Causing Health Fears Now

Dust on Kasoa–Winneba Road Is Causing Health Fears Now

March 25, 2026

Recent News

Government Targets ‘No Bed Syndrome’ with New Health Tech System

Government Targets ‘No Bed Syndrome’ with New Health Tech System

March 25, 2026
Fuel Prices Reduced As Cedi Stability Keeps Costs Down

Fuel Prices Reduced As Cedi Stability Keeps Costs Down

March 25, 2026
The National Anti-Illegal Mining Operations Secretariat (NAIMOS) has stepped up its nationwide crackdown on illegal mining, seizing equipment and making arrests as part of intensified efforts to curb galamsey activities.

Security Threat Deepens as 94 Excavators Retrieved from Illegal Miners

March 25, 2026
Dust on Kasoa–Winneba Road Is Causing Health Fears Now

Dust on Kasoa–Winneba Road Is Causing Health Fears Now

March 25, 2026

ATL FM LIVE

ATL FM Live Streaming
Your browser does not support the audio element.

We serve you with the most credible and authentic news covering articles, campus, regional, national and international stories.

Follow Us

Browse by Category

  • Africa News
  • Agyanom Afarifo
  • Business
  • Cross Current
  • E-News
  • Featured
  • Foreign News
  • Foreign Sports
  • International
  • Lifestyle
  • Local News
  • Local Sports
  • Media
  • News
  • Opinions
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Sports Pai Mu Kan
  • Tech
  • Thursdays Sports
  • Uncategorized
  • Video

Recent News

Government Targets ‘No Bed Syndrome’ with New Health Tech System

Government Targets ‘No Bed Syndrome’ with New Health Tech System

March 25, 2026
Fuel Prices Reduced As Cedi Stability Keeps Costs Down

Fuel Prices Reduced As Cedi Stability Keeps Costs Down

March 25, 2026
  • Home
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • Media
  • CratesHub.com
  • Audio on Demand

© 2020 ATL FM NEWS - Your source of authentic news. Powered by ATL FM IT Dept

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
--Advertisements--

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • About us
  • Audio on Demand
  • Contact Us
  • Home
  • Privacy & Policy

© 2020 ATL FM NEWS - Your source of authentic news. Powered by ATL FM IT Dept