Jimmy Dean wrote an autobiography in 2004, called Thirty Years of Sausage, Fifty Years of Ham: Jimmy Dean's Own Story. In the book, Dean talks about Rowlf and his relationship with Jim Henson. He also reiterates the fact that during the show's run, his manager told him that he could get Dean forty percent ownership of Muppets Inc. However, Dean turned it down, saying that he didn't feel he had earned any kind of ownership of Henson's creations.
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| - Jimmy Dean wrote an autobiography in 2004, called Thirty Years of Sausage, Fifty Years of Ham: Jimmy Dean's Own Story. In the book, Dean talks about Rowlf and his relationship with Jim Henson. He also reiterates the fact that during the show's run, his manager told him that he could get Dean forty percent ownership of Muppets Inc. However, Dean turned it down, saying that he didn't feel he had earned any kind of ownership of Henson's creations.
- Jimmy Dean, aka Grave Robber 1, is a corpse that can be found directly above the Camp Overlook teleporter on a little hill. The teleporter & Jimmy's corpse are northwest of Champion Harbour in the Orobas Fjords. Search his body for a scroll and a piece of a seal required for the Grave Robbers quest. You can also read his diary, which is found on the ground near his corpse.
- Jimmy Ray Dean (August 10, 1928 – June 13, 2010) was an American country music singer, television host, actor and businessman. Although he may be best known today as the creator of the Jimmy Dean sausage brand, he became a national television personality starting in 1957, rising to fame for his 1961 country crossover hit "Big Bad John" and his television series, The Jimmy Dean Show, which also gave puppeteer Jim Henson his first national media exposure. His acting career included a supporting role as Willard Whyte in the 1971 James Bond movie, Diamonds Are Forever. He lived near Richmond, Virginia, and was nominated for the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2010, although he was formally inducted posthumously.
- For several years beginning in 1991, the Jimmy Dean offered special baseball card sets through mail-in orders via its breakfast food items. The card sets were not licensed by Major League Baseball and thus have no team names of logos, even the team logos on shirts and hats airbrushed away.
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| - Jimmy Dean wrote an autobiography in 2004, called Thirty Years of Sausage, Fifty Years of Ham: Jimmy Dean's Own Story. In the book, Dean talks about Rowlf and his relationship with Jim Henson. He also reiterates the fact that during the show's run, his manager told him that he could get Dean forty percent ownership of Muppets Inc. However, Dean turned it down, saying that he didn't feel he had earned any kind of ownership of Henson's creations.
- Jimmy Dean, aka Grave Robber 1, is a corpse that can be found directly above the Camp Overlook teleporter on a little hill. The teleporter & Jimmy's corpse are northwest of Champion Harbour in the Orobas Fjords. Search his body for a scroll and a piece of a seal required for the Grave Robbers quest. You can also read his diary, which is found on the ground near his corpse.
- Jimmy Ray Dean (August 10, 1928 – June 13, 2010) was an American country music singer, television host, actor and businessman. Although he may be best known today as the creator of the Jimmy Dean sausage brand, he became a national television personality starting in 1957, rising to fame for his 1961 country crossover hit "Big Bad John" and his television series, The Jimmy Dean Show, which also gave puppeteer Jim Henson his first national media exposure. His acting career included a supporting role as Willard Whyte in the 1971 James Bond movie, Diamonds Are Forever. He lived near Richmond, Virginia, and was nominated for the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2010, although he was formally inducted posthumously.
- For several years beginning in 1991, the Jimmy Dean offered special baseball card sets through mail-in orders via its breakfast food items. The card sets were not licensed by Major League Baseball and thus have no team names of logos, even the team logos on shirts and hats airbrushed away.
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