Tom Green pays tribute to ‘legendary’ Alan Thicke as ‘entertainment icon’
TORONTO — Tom Green remembers watching Alan Thicke’s homegrown talk show as a kid in Pembroke, Ont., in the early 1980s.
Green was only about seven but was entranced with Thicke’s baritone-voiced charm, humour and ease with guests, he recalled Wednesday, a day after Thicke died of a heart attack in Los Angeles at age 69.
“It was one of the first shows that I remember watching that was in the format of something that I grew to love and wanted to emulate, seeing him sitting behind a desk and doing hilarious and funny interviews during the day on Canadian TV,” Green said in a phone interview.
“My show started as a public-access show and I was very inspired by his show that he produced called ‘Fernwood 2 Night,’ which was a hilarious parody of an independent, public-access show.”


