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David Hasselhoff: I Didn't Invent The Hoff

David Hasselhoff spoke to Yahoo! about his latest gig, not taking yourself too seriously, and, really, whatever else he wanted to talk about.

I was hoping you could explain this partnership with Clorox a little bit to me. The tone of this thing is a lot of fun. You know, my name is Hasselhoff, so I took the "hassel" out of the "hoff," and I [became] The Hoff. Now I'm taking the hassle out of cleaning and it’s a way to kind of interact with my fans and get in people’s faces in a fun way. There's has a new platform called Homejoy where you can actually order a maid. Actually, you can order topless maids out here in Hollywood, but they won’t let me do that. They sent me their ideas for the commercials and they’re kind of stupidly funny and overly crazy like my character The Hoff is. They don’t make any sense but they’re funny.

A lot of celebrities are doing the self-deprecating thing, but I feel like you were one of the first people who was willing to joke about yourself.When stuff comes out about you that sometimes can be devastating to your career, you either take it seriously or you slough it off and laugh at it and move forward. And I laughed at it because, 'Oh my God, they’re making this into such a big deal. Well, I’m going to make it into a big deal,' and so then it just spirals out of control. It’s like The Hoff, I didn’t invent The Hoff, The Hoff was invented by some secretaries in Australia and then they made all these jokes about, you know, Hasselhoff and "Hoffalicious" and "Hoff-crazy." And so I went down to Australia and they thought I would be offended and I wore a T-shirt that said "Don’t Hassle The Hoff." Bam! This brand has just taken off.Now are you really going to be cleaning people's homes? Yeah, I think that’s hysterical. I’ve done this before where I just knock on people's doors and they open the door and I go, "Hi! It's The Hoff! I’m here to help you clean. You want some help?" It's just really fun. I’ve been doing that basically all my life. I actually started when I was literally jogging in the Bahamas. A lady came out to get her mail and she said, "Oh, it's Knight Rider!" I said, "How are you? Got anything to drink in there? It's so hot here in the Bahamas." "Come on in, Knight Rider. Come on in!" Next thing I know, I’m in their house, her whole family comes home, the kids come home from school, it's just the loveliest family from the Bahamas and I ended up [going out that night] with the daughter to the blackest club ever. You know, I can get myself into any situation.Are you going to sing while you scrub? That's not a bad idea...

Yeah, give them a little jingle or something. That might make it fun. Maybe I can create the new Clorox jingle. [singing] Take the hassle out of cleaning when you pump and clean.

And then there are the royalties, so you'll be good to go for years.The royalties aren't important. The one thing in life I don't need are the royalties. The reason I do these things is because they’re fun, they’re entertaining, and they reach a wide audience. It’s funny, videos now, honest to God, I don’t think I’ve done any network videos. I’ve done now like 32 or 33 Internet ones and they just go wacko.

It's the future right? It's also the future of television. I have a film coming out called Killing Hasselhoff and that’ll probably go to Netflix and I have a TV series called Hoff the Record, it’s all going to be on the Internet and that’s what I want because then you can take your telephone, plug it into any television set around the world, and that's it. I live off my telephone, watching television series on the airplane.

If you could spring clean anything out of your career, what would it be?Well, there’s a lot of things I'd like to spring clean out of my personal life that have to do with women, but out of my career, no. I’ve made some notoriously bad choices that have always turned into hits. My last manager, I think we fired each other over [my decision to do] Piranha 3DD. I thought it was a hysterically bad movie and I said, "I have to be in this, it's so bad." And it turned out to be this huge hit. I got so many kids from Comic-Con going, "Man, I love that movie. I’ve watched it like five times." There's an audience out there for everything.

[Hollywood] wanted me to change the name Hasselhoff, but I kept the name because I took so much crap for it in high school and now Hasselhoff has made me a fortune. It’s just amazing that I kept it and, honest to God, I kept it because I thought, No, my mom and dad gave me this name, I’m not going to change my name, and I think I’ve gained a little payback now.

Source: Yahoo! News and Clorox Vine

David Hasselhoff, HomeJoy and Clorox: Hassle-Off Cleaning

Who wouldn't want their home cleaned by David Hasselhoff? David recently started advertising with the new Clorox cleaning supplies with the help of HomeJoy. It was part of a contest put on by HomeJoy last week, where you book a cleaning and three lucky winners get a visit from David Hasselhoff.Check out Clorox's site for the "Hassle-Off" campaign.

.@Homejoy cleaning surprise for the new @Clorox "Hassle Free" cleaners #HassleOffDay#adpic.twitter.com/orVbcRS3iX— David Hasselhoff (@DavidHasselhoff) March 23, 2015

Here are the luck winners:

So, this happened! @davidhasselhoff cleaned my apt w help from @homejoy and @Clorox! pic.twitter.com/sGwbkzxnP4 — Alex Levine (@alexklevine) March 23, 2015

Congrats #HassleOffDay winner, @hmason! We hope your flex is strong & your home is sparkly! @FastForwardLabs@Cloroxpic.twitter.com/s0Mfkk9KKl — HOMEJOY (@Homejoy) March 23, 2015

Congrats #HassleOffDay winner, @ralphieaversa! Were you starstruck by your sparkling home & @DavidHasselhoff? @Cloroxpic.twitter.com/te18d56OG0 — HOMEJOY (@Homejoy) March 23, 2015

Congrats #HassleOffDay winner, @alexklevine! Hope your home is smiling thx to Charline, @DavidHasselhoff & @Cloroxpic.twitter.com/83yuz7PSPf — HOMEJOY (@Homejoy) March 23, 2015

Source: HomeJoy

Clorox has enlisted David Hasselhoff, sexagenarian star of such 1980s TV shows as "Baywatch" and "Knight Rider," to front a social-media campaign behind a "Hassel-free" line products for millennials who rarely clean as diligently as their grandparents did.Mr. Hasselhoff stars in Vine videos and Pinterest cleaning guides, backed also by paid social media on Facebook and Twitter, to tout "convenient clean" products, said Rita Gorenberg, public relations and social media group manager for Clorox.Mr. Hasselhoff will also help solicit entries for a contest to conclude on "Hassle-Off Day" next week, in which Clorox will join Homejoy to provide house cleaning to three winners in New York City.

Read more at AdAge