DAVETV If you could look at only one thing on the Internet, DaveTV would be the obvious choice. What other so-called "website" lets you watch LATE SHOW Highlights, Comedy Clips, Slideshows, Stupid Trick clips and The Tony Mendez Show?
TOP TEN LIST You know it, you love it, you can't live without it: the revolutionary comedy bit that won Dave the Nobel Peace Prize. Check out the latest Top Ten List here.
TOP TEN ARCHIVES Old Top Ten Lists never die, they just get archived. The Top Ten Archives is searchable by date and keyword. Also, please note that the word "archives" contains the word "chives."
TOP TEN CONTEST So you think you're as funny as Dave's writers? Or maybe you just enjoy wasting time at work? See if you've got the chops to win a great prize in our weekly Top Ten Contest.
TOP TEN SEARCH Search Results.
TOP TEN SEARCH Search Results.
WAHOO GAZETTE LATE SHOW staffer Mike McIntee gives you a daily show summary and the behind-the-scenes lowdown with his daily Wahoo Gazette. So much juicy inside information that you'll say "Wahoo!"
THE WAHOO GAZETTE ARCHIVE Mike McIntee's popular Wahoo Gazette is archived here in the aptly- named Wahoo Gazette Archive. You can search by date, keyword, or show number, or even Dave's tie pattern (coming June 2012).
THE WAHOO GAZETTE ARCHIVE Mike McIntee's popular Wahoo Gazette is archived here in the aptly- named Wahoo Gazette Archive. You can search by date, keyword, or show number, or even Dave's tie pattern (coming June 2012).
John Cusack; and The All-American Rejects.
PLUS: Lance Armstrong; a Message from Bush 41; Harold
Larkin Helps New Yorkers Beat the Heat; George Clarkes
Tour de France Recap; a Top Ten List; the Late Show Sunblock
Challenge; and an Audience Member Puts Away The Late Show
Bear.
During the pre-show Q&A, a woman in
the audience asked if she could put away the LATE SHOW
bear. Dave looked over to the Executive Producer
Barbara Gaines who gave the sign that we could and
would do anything thats desired. Just then, the
signal is made for the beginning of the show and it looked like
Valerie would be putting away the LATE SHOW bear. Phone calls
were immediately made and people notified. Would
Valerie be putting away the LATE SHOW bear? We all
would find out a little bit into the show. Once Dave takes a
seat at the desk, we learn that Daves is on board to
send Valerie down to the den of the LATE SHOW bear. Biff leads
Valerie on her way. We will see her soon later.
Its a LATE SHOW tradition, fresh off his 7th
consecutive Tour de France championship, ladies and gentlemen,
here is Lance Armstrong! A fat guy in a
yellow jersey rides in on a 10-speed bike and up and through the
audience. Lance exits through the doors in the back of the
house. It looks like Lance wasted no time in enjoying
his retirement. Good for Lance! He deserves it!
Dave checks with Ms. Gaines, to see how Valerie is coming
along. Dave wants to make sure she signs a waiver before she
even gets near the LATE SHOW bear. And we should have the
tranquility darts loaded up and at the ready. Gaines gives the
were on it OK.
The
President took his mom to Georgia to help stump for his Social
Security agenda. Now, even this is causing him problems.
Last week while promoting his
failing Social Security package, President Bush referred to his
mother Barbara as his favorite senior
citizen. (cut to shot of
Bush, Sr.) Listen you spoiled brat, I
made you President. I helped you dodge Vietnam. And I even
let you talk me out of voting for John Kerry. Huge mistake by
the way. You better start showing Daddy a little love,
punk! Old Scholl Bush Dont mess
with Texas.
We sent out our
head carpenter Harold Larkin to help New Yorkers
keep cool in this dreadful heat. Dave tries to make the small
talk with Harold but Harold knows not to give him any toe-hold
in the conversation. Every question from Dave is answered with
one word from Harold, preferably a one-syllable word. I
dont know for sure but the way I see it is Harold know
he doesnt get paid extra for a LIVE chat, so why do
it? Again, Im just guessing. Beat the
Heat, with Harold Larkin. - sit on a 300
pound block of ice - stand in a fountain -
trade t-shirts - drink plenty of fluids - cut to
scene in bar drinking beer. - stand in a fountain
with the other guy - frozen peas down your
pants - soaked by a super soaker -
Frozen Fruit Whippy in your shoe - Mr. Dew over the
head - dancing in the fountain - shave
beard - and thats how Harold helped New
Yorkers beat the heat.
When the Harold remote
concludes, we go downstairs to talk to Valerie. Its
time to put away the LATE SHOW bear. Valerie uses her Houston
guile to force the Grizzly back into his lair. We are safe,
thanks to Valerie for putting away the LATE SHOW bear.
And before we go to commercial, Dave calls our friend
Lance Armstrong once again to come out and take a ride through
the Late Show audience.
GEORGE CLARKE'S TOUR DE
FRANCE RECAP GEORGE is wearing nothing but a tank
top t-shirt and boxer shorts: What a day, what a
day! Lance Armstrong continued his dominance by winning an
unprecedented seventh consecutive Tour de France. If this was
his final Tour de France as Armstrong has hinted, hes
secured his legacy as the greatest athlete the cycling world has
ever seen. For all the joy youve given us, Lance, I
speak for all cycling fans when I say
Merci.DAVE:
"Uh, George, why are you wearing your
underpants? GEORGE:
Oh, I took a public speaking course and they said if
youre nervous about giving a speech, you should do the
speech in your underpants. DAVE: Actually, George, I think
youre supposed to imagine the audience in their
underpants. GEORGE:Oh, I guess that would make more sense. Luckily
I have the abs to pull it off, huh Dave? DAVE: Yeah, George, were all
very lucky. George Clarke, ladies and gentlemen.
TOP TEN: GEORGE W. BUSH SOLUTIONS FOR GLOBAL
WARMING #7. Convene blue-ribbon
committee to explore innovative ways of ignoring the
problem. #5. I dunno --- tax cuts for the
rich. #3. Switch to Celsius so scorching 98
becomes frosty 37.
And before we go to commercial,
its one more visit from Lance Armstrong on his
bicycle.
JOHN CUSACK: John is a big
Chicago Cub fan. The last time he was here he told us about, or
was about to go to, Game 6 on the Cubs/Giants playoff series.
That was the game where Cub fan Steve Bartman
prevented Cub outfielder Moises Alou from catching
a foul ball. John is quite sure the Cubs will win it all this
year since hell be in Bulgaria shooting a movie
(outsourcing?) I wished Dave asked what he thought of the
Chicago White Sox.
John is also a bit of the weather
freak, a lover of big storms. He flew into the recent Hurricane
Ivan with winds reaching 160 mph. It must be a pretty sturdy
plane to fly through winds like that. Nope. It was a
propeller plane kept together with masking tape. Masking tape?
I pray he meant duct tape. Masking tape is only good for when
painting trim. Duct tape is good for every other use in the
world.
John said the eye of the storm measured 5 miles
around. Diameter? No, not the diameter; around the eye, the
circumference. So how big does that make the eye of the storm?
Dave and John did not bother to do the calculations but I love
stuff like this. Its my reassurance that my high
school years werent a total waste.
Enough
information was offered to find the answer to how far across was
the eye of the storm. John Cusack said it was 5 miles
around. The formula for the circumference of a circle is
C=2(pi)R. C = Circumference R=Radius Pi
= 3.14 C=2(pi)R C=5, as given by John
Cusack. 5=2(3.14)R. R=2.5/3.14 Radius
= .8 Diameter across the eye of the storm: 1.6 miles.
Thank you, Mr. Zebro.
John is also a fan of
helicopter snowboarding. A helicopter takes him to a glacier,
drops him off, and away he goes. He must be very good! John
says he is not. Its more attitude over
aptitude.
You can see John in his new film,
Must Love Dogs. It opens Friday.
LATE SHOW SUNBLOCK CHALLENGE - starring
Biff Henderson. Dave is totally unfamiliar with
this piece, but he decides to go ahead with it anyway.
Its time for the Late Show Sunblock
Challenge. - Behind the scrim is Biff
Henderson, blindfolded. - The models will squirt
sunblock into his hands - Biff will determine what
level of SPF is the lotion.
The models squirt. Biff
rubs his hands together with the sunblock. Just as he is about
to receive the answer through the atmosphere, Dave sneezes off
camera. Doesnt matter, Biff is so deep in thought he
cannot hear or sense anything else. Biff announces it is a
sunblock with an SPF of . . . 30. And it is! Biff is
right! And that is how we play, Late Show Sunblock
Challenge.
ACT 5:
Its time to announce the winner of the Late
Show I Dont Look Like John Lithgow Contest.
We received dozens of entries and the person who looks the least
like John Lithgow is Andrew Evangelista from Newark, Delaware.
Andrew, you won two tickets to see John Lithgow in
Dirty Rotten Scoundrels on Broadway and a
chance to go backstage to meet the man you dont look
like up close and personal. Congratulations Andrew,
youre the winner of the I Dont
Look Like John Lithgow Contest. This has been a Late
Show Announcement. Keep it real!
THE
ALL-AMERICAN REJECTS: From their CD, Move
Along, the Oklahoma rock band performed Dirty
Little Secret. Lots of action. Lots of sound.
Afterwards, Dave says he admired their peppiness.
And
that was our show for Monday July 25, 2005.
Wahoo
EXTRA! In my Friday recap
of the show, I included a couple Top Ten items that never made
the show. I was going off a copy from early in the day that
had changed by show time. Oops. Thatll happen
sometimes when I dont care.
This weekend my
girls performed in Alice in Wonderland. It was a
fine production from Stage Left Childrens Theater out
of Sparkill, New York. Very professionally done after nine
3-hour rehearsals. My Dominique had two pages of
dialogue with a solo song in the middle. She was the
caterpillar. Danielle was a Stinger Bee with a few
lines and a few chorus songs. My niece Christina
was the 3 of Spades. All performed with great poise. Lots of
fun. A great experience. Very cool. Kudos to them and to
the Stage Left Childrens Theater.
In drag
racing, do both cars ever make it all the way to the finish
line? One always seems to catch fire or blow an engine right
at the start. The race is always a let down.
From
Friday, July 22nds Wahoo Gazette:
From Deb Watson of Des
Moines, Iowa: There used to be a TV
show called Fractured Flickers. Done by the
Rocky & Bullwinkle folks. I hadn't
thought of that in years. I'll have to see if I can find it on
DVD. Funny, funny series. I think Hans Conried was the
host.
Wahoo
Reader Rebuttals: From Keith Horvath of
WDC
Your
flickering memory (as well as that of recent Wahoo reader)
incorrectly recalled Fractured Fairy Tales (by the Rocky and
Bullwinkle creators) as Fractured Flickers, not to be confused
with My Friend Flicka.
Tim Eberhardy of Cudahy, Wisconsin:
In your Friday
Wahoo, Deb Watson refers to
Fractured Flickers. She's got it wrong. It
was Fractured Fairytales.
Linda Porter of
Olney, Maryland
I
believe the bit referred to from the old Rocky and
Bullwinkle Show should be Fractured
Fairytales, not Fractured
Flickers. Just trying to keep the Gazette
straight!
And from
Sandra Muse of Murfreesboro,
Tennessee:
I'm the same
age as you I think (46) and I don't remember Fractured Flickers,
maybe because I was 5 years old when it was on TV, but here's an
interesting link. Sounds like a clever show that didn't get a
fair shot. www.dvdclassicscorner.net/fractured.htm
TA DA! Seems like the original posting
was correct. There was a Fractured Flickers from
the Rocky and Bullwinkle people. I think Deb
Watson of Des Moines deserves an apology.
Rich
Kauffman of Nappanee, Indiana writes:
In response to reader Deb
Watson's comment on Fractured Flickers in Friday's installment,
I have in my hands a catalog called "Betty's Attic,"
and they have a three-DVD set of all 26 episodes of this show.
676 minutes worth! They can be found on the web at
www.bettysattic.com. Hope this helps.
The people from Rocky and Bullwinkle
had both Fractured Flickers and Fractured
Fairy Tales. I, like most of you, remember
Fractured Fairy Tales more clearly. The whole
Bullwinkle crew was blessed with wonderful writing. My
favorite: Sherman and Peabody; and Col. McBragg.
John Cusack; and The All-American Rejects.
PLUS: Lance Armstrong; a Message from Bush 41; Harold
Larkin Helps New Yorkers Beat the Heat; George Clarkes
Tour de France Recap; a Top Ten List; the Late Show Sunblock
Challenge; and an Audience Member Puts Away The Late Show
Bear.
During the pre-show Q&A, a woman in
the audience asked if she could put away the LATE SHOW
bear. Dave looked over to the Executive Producer
Barbara Gaines who gave the sign that we could and
would do anything thats desired. Just then, the
signal is made for the beginning of the show and it looked like
Valerie would be putting away the LATE SHOW bear. Phone calls
were immediately made and people notified. Would
Valerie be putting away the LATE SHOW bear? We all
would find out a little bit into the show. Once Dave takes a
seat at the desk, we learn that Daves is on board to
send Valerie down to the den of the LATE SHOW bear. Biff leads
Valerie on her way. We will see her soon later.
Its a LATE SHOW tradition, fresh off his 7th
consecutive Tour de France championship, ladies and gentlemen,
here is Lance Armstrong! A fat guy in a
yellow jersey rides in on a 10-speed bike and up and through the
audience. Lance exits through the doors in the back of the
house. It looks like Lance wasted no time in enjoying
his retirement. Good for Lance! He deserves it!
Dave checks with Ms. Gaines, to see how Valerie is coming
along. Dave wants to make sure she signs a waiver before she
even gets near the LATE SHOW bear. And we should have the
tranquility darts loaded up and at the ready. Gaines gives the
were on it OK.
The
President took his mom to Georgia to help stump for his Social
Security agenda. Now, even this is causing him problems.
Last week while promoting his
failing Social Security package, President Bush referred to his
mother Barbara as his favorite senior
citizen. (cut to shot of
Bush, Sr.) Listen you spoiled brat, I
made you President. I helped you dodge Vietnam. And I even
let you talk me out of voting for John Kerry. Huge mistake by
the way. You better start showing Daddy a little love,
punk! Old Scholl Bush Dont mess
with Texas.
We sent out our
head carpenter Harold Larkin to help New Yorkers
keep cool in this dreadful heat. Dave tries to make the small
talk with Harold but Harold knows not to give him any toe-hold
in the conversation. Every question from Dave is answered with
one word from Harold, preferably a one-syllable word. I
dont know for sure but the way I see it is Harold know
he doesnt get paid extra for a LIVE chat, so why do
it? Again, Im just guessing. Beat the
Heat, with Harold Larkin. - sit on a 300
pound block of ice - stand in a fountain -
trade t-shirts - drink plenty of fluids - cut to
scene in bar drinking beer. - stand in a fountain
with the other guy - frozen peas down your
pants - soaked by a super soaker -
Frozen Fruit Whippy in your shoe - Mr. Dew over the
head - dancing in the fountain - shave
beard - and thats how Harold helped New
Yorkers beat the heat.
When the Harold remote
concludes, we go downstairs to talk to Valerie. Its
time to put away the LATE SHOW bear. Valerie uses her Houston
guile to force the Grizzly back into his lair. We are safe,
thanks to Valerie for putting away the LATE SHOW bear.
And before we go to commercial, Dave calls our friend
Lance Armstrong once again to come out and take a ride through
the Late Show audience.
GEORGE CLARKE'S TOUR DE
FRANCE RECAP GEORGE is wearing nothing but a tank
top t-shirt and boxer shorts: What a day, what a
day! Lance Armstrong continued his dominance by winning an
unprecedented seventh consecutive Tour de France. If this was
his final Tour de France as Armstrong has hinted, hes
secured his legacy as the greatest athlete the cycling world has
ever seen. For all the joy youve given us, Lance, I
speak for all cycling fans when I say
Merci.DAVE:
"Uh, George, why are you wearing your
underpants? GEORGE:
Oh, I took a public speaking course and they said if
youre nervous about giving a speech, you should do the
speech in your underpants. DAVE: Actually, George, I think
youre supposed to imagine the audience in their
underpants. GEORGE:Oh, I guess that would make more sense. Luckily
I have the abs to pull it off, huh Dave? DAVE: Yeah, George, were all
very lucky. George Clarke, ladies and gentlemen.
TOP TEN: GEORGE W. BUSH SOLUTIONS FOR GLOBAL
WARMING #7. Convene blue-ribbon
committee to explore innovative ways of ignoring the
problem. #5. I dunno --- tax cuts for the
rich. #3. Switch to Celsius so scorching 98
becomes frosty 37.
And before we go to commercial,
its one more visit from Lance Armstrong on his
bicycle.
JOHN CUSACK: John is a big
Chicago Cub fan. The last time he was here he told us about, or
was about to go to, Game 6 on the Cubs/Giants playoff series.
That was the game where Cub fan Steve Bartman
prevented Cub outfielder Moises Alou from catching
a foul ball. John is quite sure the Cubs will win it all this
year since hell be in Bulgaria shooting a movie
(outsourcing?) I wished Dave asked what he thought of the
Chicago White Sox.
John is also a bit of the weather
freak, a lover of big storms. He flew into the recent Hurricane
Ivan with winds reaching 160 mph. It must be a pretty sturdy
plane to fly through winds like that. Nope. It was a
propeller plane kept together with masking tape. Masking tape?
I pray he meant duct tape. Masking tape is only good for when
painting trim. Duct tape is good for every other use in the
world.
John said the eye of the storm measured 5 miles
around. Diameter? No, not the diameter; around the eye, the
circumference. So how big does that make the eye of the storm?
Dave and John did not bother to do the calculations but I love
stuff like this. Its my reassurance that my high
school years werent a total waste.
Enough
information was offered to find the answer to how far across was
the eye of the storm. John Cusack said it was 5 miles
around. The formula for the circumference of a circle is
C=2(pi)R. C = Circumference R=Radius Pi
= 3.14 C=2(pi)R C=5, as given by John
Cusack. 5=2(3.14)R. R=2.5/3.14 Radius
= .8 Diameter across the eye of the storm: 1.6 miles.
Thank you, Mr. Zebro.
John is also a fan of
helicopter snowboarding. A helicopter takes him to a glacier,
drops him off, and away he goes. He must be very good! John
says he is not. Its more attitude over
aptitude.
You can see John in his new film,
Must Love Dogs. It opens Friday.
LATE SHOW SUNBLOCK CHALLENGE - starring
Biff Henderson. Dave is totally unfamiliar with
this piece, but he decides to go ahead with it anyway.
Its time for the Late Show Sunblock
Challenge. - Behind the scrim is Biff
Henderson, blindfolded. - The models will squirt
sunblock into his hands - Biff will determine what
level of SPF is the lotion.
The models squirt. Biff
rubs his hands together with the sunblock. Just as he is about
to receive the answer through the atmosphere, Dave sneezes off
camera. Doesnt matter, Biff is so deep in thought he
cannot hear or sense anything else. Biff announces it is a
sunblock with an SPF of . . . 30. And it is! Biff is
right! And that is how we play, Late Show Sunblock
Challenge.
ACT 5:
Its time to announce the winner of the Late
Show I Dont Look Like John Lithgow Contest.
We received dozens of entries and the person who looks the least
like John Lithgow is Andrew Evangelista from Newark, Delaware.
Andrew, you won two tickets to see John Lithgow in
Dirty Rotten Scoundrels on Broadway and a
chance to go backstage to meet the man you dont look
like up close and personal. Congratulations Andrew,
youre the winner of the I Dont
Look Like John Lithgow Contest. This has been a Late
Show Announcement. Keep it real!
THE
ALL-AMERICAN REJECTS: From their CD, Move
Along, the Oklahoma rock band performed Dirty
Little Secret. Lots of action. Lots of sound.
Afterwards, Dave says he admired their peppiness.
And
that was our show for Monday July 25, 2005.
Wahoo
EXTRA! In my Friday recap
of the show, I included a couple Top Ten items that never made
the show. I was going off a copy from early in the day that
had changed by show time. Oops. Thatll happen
sometimes when I dont care.
This weekend my
girls performed in Alice in Wonderland. It was a
fine production from Stage Left Childrens Theater out
of Sparkill, New York. Very professionally done after nine
3-hour rehearsals. My Dominique had two pages of
dialogue with a solo song in the middle. She was the
caterpillar. Danielle was a Stinger Bee with a few
lines and a few chorus songs. My niece Christina
was the 3 of Spades. All performed with great poise. Lots of
fun. A great experience. Very cool. Kudos to them and to
the Stage Left Childrens Theater.
In drag
racing, do both cars ever make it all the way to the finish
line? One always seems to catch fire or blow an engine right
at the start. The race is always a let down.
From
Friday, July 22nds Wahoo Gazette:
From Deb Watson of Des
Moines, Iowa: There used to be a TV
show called Fractured Flickers. Done by the
Rocky & Bullwinkle folks. I hadn't
thought of that in years. I'll have to see if I can find it on
DVD. Funny, funny series. I think Hans Conried was the
host.
Wahoo
Reader Rebuttals: From Keith Horvath of
WDC
Your
flickering memory (as well as that of recent Wahoo reader)
incorrectly recalled Fractured Fairy Tales (by the Rocky and
Bullwinkle creators) as Fractured Flickers, not to be confused
with My Friend Flicka.
Tim Eberhardy of Cudahy, Wisconsin:
In your Friday
Wahoo, Deb Watson refers to
Fractured Flickers. She's got it wrong. It
was Fractured Fairytales.
Linda Porter of
Olney, Maryland
I
believe the bit referred to from the old Rocky and
Bullwinkle Show should be Fractured
Fairytales, not Fractured
Flickers. Just trying to keep the Gazette
straight!
And from
Sandra Muse of Murfreesboro,
Tennessee:
I'm the same
age as you I think (46) and I don't remember Fractured Flickers,
maybe because I was 5 years old when it was on TV, but here's an
interesting link. Sounds like a clever show that didn't get a
fair shot. www.dvdclassicscorner.net/fractured.htm
TA DA! Seems like the original posting
was correct. There was a Fractured Flickers from
the Rocky and Bullwinkle people. I think Deb
Watson of Des Moines deserves an apology.
Rich
Kauffman of Nappanee, Indiana writes:
In response to reader Deb
Watson's comment on Fractured Flickers in Friday's installment,
I have in my hands a catalog called "Betty's Attic,"
and they have a three-DVD set of all 26 episodes of this show.
676 minutes worth! They can be found on the web at
www.bettysattic.com. Hope this helps.
The people from Rocky and Bullwinkle
had both Fractured Flickers and Fractured
Fairy Tales. I, like most of you, remember
Fractured Fairy Tales more clearly. The whole
Bullwinkle crew was blessed with wonderful writing. My
favorite: Sherman and Peabody; and Col. McBragg.