Terry Bradshaw is mostly known for his 14-year career as the quarterback of the Pittsburgh Steelers and his four Super Bowl victories during that time. And more recently as an NFL television analyst.
But what many younger fans maybe don't know is that Bradshaw also had a singing and acting career.
The former Louisiana Tech QB recorded six albums of country/western and gospel music.
Bradshaw's cover of the hit "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry" charted in the top 20 in 1976 and two other singles, "The Last Word In Lonesome Is Me" and "Until You," also charted.
The NFL on FOX studio host posted a live video of himself singing on stage, and impressed fans, who maybe didn't know about his past lives.
Bradshaw might have more time for music once he retires from FOX, which he plans to do when he turns 80.
"I told my wife before I left the room a while ago, I'm sitting there... I said, 'I've got two years left at FOX. I'm 76,'" he said at Super Bowl 59 in New Orleans earlier this season.
He added: "I said, 'If we can get to the next Super Bowl, I'll be 80. That's... I think that's time.' 80 years old, that's pushing it!"
On the acting front, Bradshaw has had a ton of cameo appearances in several television shows as himself, including "Brotherly Love," "Everybody Loves Raymond," "Married... with Children," "Modern Family," "The Larry Sanders Show," and "The League."
He also did an episode of "Malcolm in the Middle" where he played the trashy coach of a women's hockey team.
Bradshaw has also appeared in the 1978 film "Hooper" with Burt Reynolds and the 1981 film "Cannonball Run," also with Reynolds in 1981. In 1980, he appeared in the second installment of the "Smokey and the Bandit" franchise.
In 2001, the Shreveport, Louisiana native became the first NFL player to ever receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.