Les Nessman

Les Nessman is a fictional character on the television situation comedy WKRP in Cincinnati (1978-82) played by Richard Sanders. He reprised his role in the sequel series, The New WKRP in Cincinnati.

Les is the ludicrously incompetent news director of WKRP. Knowing next to nothing about sports, he makes several glaring errors, for example mispronouncing golfer Chi Chi Rodriguez's name as "Chy Chy Rod-ri-gweeze" and calling a swimming event "breast stroking." Les is a five-time winner of the fictitious Ohio radio news trophy, the "Buckeye Newshawk Award," the coveted "Silver Sow Award" (for excellence in farm news, particularly hog reports), and the "Copper Cob Award" (also for farm broadcasting). His "finest" on-air moment occurs in the episode "Turkeys Away", where he reports on a disastrous station promotion using many of the same phrases as Herbert Morrison describing the 1937 Hindenburg disaster. This scene from "Turkeys Away" is widely acknowledged to be one of the funniest moments in television history.

Les longs to "move up" to a higher-paying job as a TV newsman, and in one episode he shows a video tape to his station friends of himself reporting the news; unfortunately for Les, the tape is so cheaply and badly made, that Nessman runs out quite embarrassed. In another episode, Les shows Venus Flytrap how he has been dying his skin black - a parody of John Howard Griffin's Black Like Me.

The small, balding, bespectacled man always wears a bow tie and always has a bandage somewhere on his person, a running gag that began with his first appearance (when he actually needed it).

Les works in the WKRP bullpen, a big room with desks for several of the employees. Les believes that as the news director, he should have his own private office, so he puts masking tape on the floor around his desk indicating where walls would be if he had his own office. He insists that anyone who approaches his desk must knock at an imaginary door and wait for permission to come in. He mimes opening and closing a door whenever he sits down at or leaves his desk; once he even took out a set of keys to lock the nonexistent door. All of his colleagues respect his insistence on maintaining his own private space, and play along with his "walls" charade. Mr. Carlson even "knocks" by clicking his heels together. (Andy Travis once tapped his foot against the floor for the sound effect.) In the second episode of "Filthy Pictures", Andy is shown with a credit card, trying to open Les' imaginary door with it. In one episode, Les dates a pushy news "groupie" who moves into his apartment and takes over his life. He only gets the nerve to break up with her when she dares to call his walls "silly" and removes the masking tape from the floor &mdash; Les can put up with a lot of abuse, but he will not stand for someone disrespecting his walls.

Les was raised by his mother and stepfather (whom he thought was his biological father). In the episode "Secret of Dayton Heights", he fails a security check for a press conference because his real father had belonged to the Communist party. He is shocked, inasmuch as he himself is virulently anti-Communist, an attitude instilled in him by his embittered mother (also played by Sanders). He goes to visit his real father, who is working as a barber in Northern Kentucky, and finds that he isn't such a bad guy.

In "Never Leave Me, Lucille," an episode during the first season, Les says that his favorite author is Antoine de Saint-Exupéry.

A reference to Les Nessman is made by Eminem in the song "As the World Turns".