- Appeared in all six Rocky movies as a fight commentator.
- In the 1960s, he was the sportscaster for KCRA, a local television station in Sacramento, California. He also was a goalie on the local ice hockey team.
- After his career as goalie failed, he became a truck driver (1954).
- Worked in the Los Angeles television market from 1968 to 1999.
- Longtime sports news broadcaster in Los Angeles, California.
- Hosted a children's cartoon show in Philadelphia in the late 1960s where he starred as Captain Philadelphia (WKBS - Kaiser Broadcasting - Channel 48). He was also the play-by-play announcer for the Philadelphia Flyers of the NHL during this time.
- Stu had one daughter, Kathleen, and two sons, Mick and K.C. He also had one daughter, Marcie, who died of epilepsy in the 1980s. He had one brother, Melville, who also traveled with him and his mother to Canada.
- He was awarded a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for Television at 6549 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California on May 25, 2007.
- Starred as "Skipper Stu" in a children's daily television cartoon show during the mid-to-late 1950s on a local Sacramento television station.
- His nephew Bruce Nahin was the co-founder of Chippendales Male Exotic Dance Review and is a movie producer with Continuum Pictures.
- Moved with his mother to Canada at the age of two.
- In what is the last-known film directed by Edward D. Wood Jr., the legendary cult auteur - of Plan 9 from Outer Space (1957) and Glen or Glenda (1953) fame - Stu's name and a cryptic sentiment appear in the North Hollywood location-shot footage. In The Young Marrieds (1972), protagonist Ben exits a strip club in daylight, and as the camera pans with his exit, a sign next to the door is visible in passing: Loser of the Week Stu Nahan and His Computer.
- Son of Minnette (Bernstein) and Ernest Nahin. His grandparents were all Russian Jewish immigrants.
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