What was Bob Barker's Net Worth and Salary?

Bob Barker was a legendary American TV game show host and animal activist who had a net worth of $0 at the time of his death. Bob famously vowed to "die broke" after donating all of his money to animal charities. He died on August 26, 2023, at the age of 99, having presumably fulfilled that promise.

At this peak, Bob's fortune topped $70 million. During his life, he donated at least $30 million, which we know about, to support animal charities and causes. For his entire life, Bob was an outspoken advocate for animal rights. He ended each episode of "The Price Is Right" with a plea for viewers to spay or neuter their pets. His most notable donations include $2.5 million given in 2012 to PETA, which in turn named its West Coast headquarters in his honor. He donated $25 million of his own money to establish the "DJ&T Foundation," which finances clinics that offer spaying and neutering services ("DJ" was a reference to his late wife Dorothy Jo, and "T" was a reference to his mother Matilda, who was known as "Tilly"). He donated $5 million to the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society to pay for an anti-whaling ship, which they christened the "S.S. Bob Barker."

Bob Barker was best known for being the longest-running host on the game show "The Price is Right." Bob hosted the show from 1972 to 2007. He has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, received the 1995 Daytime Emmy Lifetime Achievement Award, and was named the Greatest Game Show Host of All-Time by Time magazine. Before "The Price Is Right," Barker had already gained fame as the host of another game show, "Truth or Consequences," from 1956 to 1974.

Barker's distinctive and warm hosting style, coupled with his genuine rapport with contestants, contributed to the immense popularity of "The Price Is Right." The show itself became a cultural phenomenon, noted for its engaging mini-games and the enthusiasm of its audience. Under his hosting, the show received several Daytime Emmy Awards, and Barker himself won a staggering 19 Daytime Emmys for his hosting duties across different shows.

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Early Life

Robert William Barker was born in Darrington, Washinton, on December 12, 1923. He spent most of his time growing up on the Rosebud Indian Reservation in Mission, South Dakota and is listed as an official member of the Sioux tribe on the U.S. Indian Census Rolls, 1885-1940. He is one-eighth Sioux. His mother was a school teacher, and his father was an electrical high-line foreman.

Barker received a basketball scholarship to attend Drury College (now called Drury University) in Missouri. While there, he became a member of the Epsilon Beta chapter of Sigma Nu fraternity. During World War II, he left college and served as a fighter pilot in the US Navy, but before he got assigned to a seagoing squadron, the war ended. After the war, he returned to college and graduated with a degree in economics.

Career

While at college, Barker worked at the KTTS-FM radio station in Springfield. He then moved to Florida, where he worked as a news editor and announcer at WWPG 1340 AM in Palm Beach (now called WPBR in Lantana). Eventually, in 1950, he moved to California and was given his own radio show in Burbank named "The Bob Barker Show," which ran for six years. It was while he was hosting an audience participation show out in California that he was noticed by game show producer Ralph Edwards. Subsequently, Barker moved from radio to television and began hosting "Truth or Consequences" in 1956. He continued with the show until 1974.

In 1971, while he was still the host of "Truth or Consequences," he was selected to host an NBC pilot called "Simon Says." Then, in early 1972, CBS became interested in a revival of "The Price Is Right" that was being proposed by Mark Goodson and Bill Todman. The network agreed to pick it up on the condition that Barker was selected as the host. Thus, on September 4, 1972, Barker began hosting the new modernized version of "The Price Is Right" on CBS. He continued in this role until he announced his retirement from the show on October 31, 2006, and officially stepped down as host in 2007. His last episode, which aired on June 15, was taped earlier that month on June 6, 2007. After retiring from the show, Barker has made three return appearances: once in April 2009, to promote his new autobiography; once in December 2013, to celebrate his 90th birthday; and once in April 2015, for an April Fools' Day joke where he briefly took over hosting duties from the current host at the time, Drew Carey.

Price is Right Salary

For the last decade of his tenure on the show, Barker's annual salary was $10 million.

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(Photo by Mark Davis/Getty Images)

Other Work

Bob Barker made a memorable cameo in the movie "Happy Gilmore" (1996) alongside Adam Sandler. In the movie, Sandler and Barker get into a fistfight on a golf course. The fight ends when Barker knocks Sandler out with a punch to the face. Barker has claimed in past interviews that not a single day goes by without someone seeing him in public and referencing that scene from the movie.

Additionally, Barker and his wife Dorothy Jo were semi-regular panelists on the game shows "Tattletales" and "Match Game." He has appeared on talk shows like "Dinah!," "Larry King Live," "The Arsenio Hall Show," "The Rosie O'Donnell Show," "The Ellen DeGeneres Show," and "The Wayne Brady Show." He has appeared in commercials for brands like State Farm Insurance and also filmed an ad endorsing the Republican Party Congressional candidate David Jolly. He provided the voice of the character Bob Barnacle on the Nickelodeon animated series "SpongeBob SquarePants."

Barker's autobiography, "Priceless Memories," was published on April 6, 2009. It features stories and anecdotes from his 50-year career in television, as well as his early life. He was helped in writing the book by Digby Diehl, a former book review editor at the L.A. Times.

Personal Life

Bob was married to his high school sweetheart Dorothy Jo Gideon from 1945 until her death from lung cancer in 1981. Barker has never remarried, but he has been attached to several women, including one of the famous "Barker's Beauties," Dian Parkinson. That relationship lasted three years. His recent companion of nearly 40 years is his girlfriend, Nancy Burnet. The couple lives in a Spanish Colonial-style home in California that was built in 1929 and is worth around $2.3 million.

"Bob Barker Studio" at CBS Television City was named in his honor.

Real Estate

For over 50 years, Bob lived in the same home in the Hollywood Hills. The home, which is just 15 minutes from the studio where he filmed "The Price is Right," was listed for sale by his estate in March 2024 for a little under $3 million. Below is a video tour of the home from September 2021. Before being listed in 2024, the home was moderately renovated with new paint and fixtures. Bob's estate sold the home in April 2024 for $3.8 million, $800,000 over asking.

Animal Activism

Today, although officially retired, he remains active in his support for animal rights. Bob is an avid supporter of animal rights and used to end each show with a famous phrase: "Please remember to have your pets spayed or neutered."

Bob has participated in several protests against circuses for keeping animals trapped in cages and forcing them to perform tricks, often while under heavy sedation.

In 2010, Barker donated $5 million to the animal activist group Sea Shepherd Conservation Society. The money was used to purchase a ship, which is now used to intercept and interrupt Japanese whaling boats. The boat was named the "MY Bob Barker":

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S.S. Bob Barker (WILLIAM WEST/AFP via Getty Images)

The group named their other whaling interceptor after the late Simpsons producer Sam Simon, who donated hundreds of millions of dollars during his lifetime to various animal charities while also funding a vegan homeless food drive organization that feeds hundreds of people every week.

Bob Barker subsequently purchased a helicopter for the Sea Shepherd Society. He also donated $2.5 million to PETA to help build their Los Angeles headquarters, which is now called the "Bob Barker Building." In 2014, he spent $700,000 to move three elephants from a Toronto zoo to a wildlife preserve in California.