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Darrell Hammond

Darrell Clayton Hammond (conceived October 8, 1955) is an American performer, stand-up comic and impressionist. He was a normal cast part on Saturday Night Live from 1995 to 2009. Upon his flight, Hammond, at age 53, was the most established thrown part in the show's history. Hammond showed up than some other cast part and mimicked in excess of 107 superstars, with Bill Clinton as his most regular impression. Hammond held the record for most pantomimes by a SNL cast part with 107, until the point that he was outperformed by Kenan Thompson on May 3, 2014. As of December 10, 2011, he had showed up on the show eight times since leaving the cast.[needs update] On September 19, 2014, Hammond was reported as the new commentator of SNL, supplanting Don Pardo, who had passed on the month before.In May 2015, he started depicting Colonel Sanders in TV ads for Kentucky Fried Chicken, in spite of the fact that he was supplanted by Norm Macdonald, additionally a previous SNL cast part,...

Colonel Sanders


Colonel Harland David Sanders[a] (September 9, 1890 – December 16, 1980) was an American specialist, best known for establishing fast food chicken eatery network Kentucky Fried Chicken (now known as KFC) and later going about as the organization's image diplomat and image. His name and picture are still images of the organization. The title 'colonel' was privileged – a Kentucky colonel – not the military rank.

Sanders held various employments in his initial life, for example, steam motor stoker, protection sales representative and filling station administrator. He started offering fricasseed chicken from his roadside eatery in North Corbin, Kentucky, amid the Great Depression. Amid that time Sanders built up his "mystery formula" and his licensed strategy for cooking chicken in a weight fryer. Sanders perceived the capability of the eatery diversifying idea, and the main KFC establishment opened in Utah in 1952. At the point when his unique eatery shut, he committed himself full-time to diversifying his seared chicken all through the nation.

The organization's quick development over the United States and abroad wound up overpowering for Sanders. In 1964, at that point 73 years of age, he sold the organization to a gathering of financial specialists drove by John Y. Dark colored, Jr. what's more, Jack C. Massey for $2 million ($15.8 million today). In any case, he held control of activities in Canada, and he turned into a salaried brand envoy for Kentucky Fried Chicken. In his later years, he turned out to be profoundly reproachful of the nourishment served by KFC eateries, as he trusted they had sliced expenses and enabled quality to fall apart.

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