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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).
Michael Douglas; Mark Knopfler and Emmylou Harris; and
the Piedmont Bird Callers. PLUS: a cold
open; something for an audience member, sexual behavior of
America's elderly; Great Moments in Presidential Speeches; Who
Asked for It; and up on the roof, a guy hitting golf
balls.
Hey! Itss a Cold Open! We see Dave with
our wardrobe supervisor, Sue Hum. She is
smoothing out Dave's suit. SUE: "Have you been
drinking, Dave?" DAVE: "Why the hell would you
ask that?" SUE: "You reek of
Tequila" DAVE: "Oh, well, then yes, I have
been drinking." SUE: "You poor dumb
bastard. And then the show opens with Paul and the
opening theme.
Following the monologue, Dave has a
Late Show Live on Letterman CD for a woman in the
audience. And who was that woman? That's right, Helen Thomas
. . . at least it looked like Helen Thomas.
Tonight on the show we have the Piedmont Bird
Callers. Dave wonders if we will perhaps hear a wren, a
bluebird, a blue jay, a robin, cardinal, loon, coot. . . . Paul
offers his rendition of a loon . . . . "lahooo. . . .
hoooooo . . . . hoooo . . . . nnn." I liked the
"nnnn" at the end.
And up on the roof of the
roof of the Ed Sullivan office building is the world
fastest golfer, David Ogron. David holds
the record for most golf balls hit in a 12-hour period: 6,971;
and in a 24-hour period: 10,392. Tonight he will try to
set the record for a 30-minute period, a record recently set at
1,010.
There was a new sex survey conducted and
reported in the Archives of Sexual Behavior. We
see a report on the results. Announcer: (over photos of
elderly couples in bed)
"According to
a new survey published in the Archives of Sexual Behavior,
elderly men tend to be more satisfied with their sex lives than
elderly woman. Overall, sex among the elderly, specifically
vigorous sex between couples in their late seventies . . . oh,
God, I'm gonna be sick . . ."
Buenos Noches, Amigos Dave once again, as he has done
recently, appeals to his Spanish-speaking friends by greeting
them with "Buenos Noches, Amigos." Dave then drinks
from his mug with the lifting-assistance of his pencil.
GREAT MOMENTS IN PRESIDENTIAL SPEECHES
We see FDR: "The only thing we have to fear is fear
itself." JFK: "Ask not what your country can
do for you, but what you can do for your country."
BUSH: "Where's the rally monkey?!"
WHO
ASKED FOR IT? We have members of the audience step
forward to ask Dave questions. It's similar to the pre-show
Q&A Dave conducts before the show. WHO ASKED
FOR IT #1. Jerry Orlando of East Syracuse, New York.
Dave asks Jerry if he is related to Tony Orlando. Jerry says he
isn't. Dave says, "Yeah, but I bet you had his
money!" Jerry thinks about Tony's current level of
celebrity and says, "No, I don't." What does
Jerry do for a living? He runs an old-fashioned movie theater
up near Syracuse. What is Jerry's favorite movie? Jerry says,
"Philadelphia Story." Jerry question:
"I'm in town on vacation and I'm trying to plan my week.
What's the forecast for tomorrow?" Dave isn't sure
so he asks if we could take a look. On Jerry's green
shirt appears a weather map one would see on a local news
program; you know, the weather report that usually takes up 9
minutes of the 22-minute news. A look at Jerry's shirt and it
looks like it should be nice this weekend. And who is
Jerry Orlando really? Why, he's our film coordinator,
Rick Scheckman, who we at the Late
Show like to call "Rick Scheckman." But who
is Jerry Orlando? I phoned Rick and he says it is a guy he
knows in Syracuse who runs a film festival.
Whenever we
do "Who Asked For It," the players involved are
Late Show staffers. Of course the staffer can't
say he or she works for the Late Show, so they have
to take on a new name and occupation. Many times Dave will try
to trip up the staffer by asking "involved" questions
about their "career." The staffer better have a
knowledge of what he purports to be. And the staffer better
remember who he says he is, the names of his children, and
anything else he says early in the conversation because Dave
will go back and ask, "I'm sorry, what did you say your
children's names were again?" What most staffers do is
pick out a close friend and become that person. This way if
Dave asks a question a second time, it's easy to remember what
you said the first time. If you choose to become your friend
"Pete" who is a plumber, you also take on Pete's wife,
children, and hometown. If Dave asks your wife's name, and
then asks again later, all you have to do is remember Pete and
his family structure. And you better know a lot about plumbing.
WHO ASKED FOR IT #2: Don McKinnon of
Westfield, New Jersey. . . the Garden State. Jersey is a
beautiful state once you get past the refineries. How are the
beaches? Don says they are lovely, although the people tend to
be a bit cheesy. Westfield, is it near the Delaware Water Gap?
And how about them Pine Barrens? Don backs off a bit and
admits to now knowing much about the Pine Barrens. DON'S
question: "I bought a piece of memorabilia in the
Late Show's eBay charity auction and I was
wondering if you could autograph it for me." DAVE:
"I don't think we've ever had an eBay charity auction. It
sounds like you might have fallen for a scam." DON:
(sadly disappointed) "Oh. So this isn't really your
heart?" (holds up a plastic bag with a heart in
it.) DAVE: "No, I don't think so. Sorry."
And who is Don McKinnon? He is writer Tom
Ruprecht. You recently saw Tom get a couple wisdom
teeth pulled. But who is Don McKinnon? He is Tom's friend who
now lives in Seattle. Westfield, New Jersey? Tom spent some
of his upbringing in Westfield. Tom offered me this bit of
Westfield trivia. The Rialto movie theater in Westfield is
featured in the opening credits of "Ed." And it was
in that movie theater that Tom Ruprecht once worked.
WHO ASKED FOR IT #3: Ed Van Lear. Dave goes
right for the question. ED: "'The Sopranos' has a gay
character. Does your show have a gay character?" DAVE:
"No, we don't think we need to go in that direction, but
thanks for your question." We cut to a lone George
Clarke on stage looking longingly in Dave's direction. We hear
his thoughts. George: "Oh, Dave, dear Dave. If
you only knew. And yet, it can never be . . . ah, the sweet
agony of forbidden love . . .maybe someday I'll get up the
courage to be true to myself and tell Dave of the turbulent
passions that rage within me. . . but when? When?"
DAVE: "George? You okay over there? You look sort of
funny." GEORGE: "Dave? Dave . . . I love
you." DAVE: "I know, George, we could hear
your thoughts." GEORGE: " . . . . . Ah, crap.
Never mind." Exits. Wooooooooo, now we know!
Know we know!
Who was Ed Van Lear? It was our
researcher Matt McCluskey. You recently saw Matt
in Staff Complaint Forum. But who is Ed Van Lear? Ed is
Matt's friend from college. Matt got off easy but if he was
asked, he was going to be a legal assistant.
WHO
ASKED FOR IT #4: Rosemary Licciarrdoni of Thornwood, New
York. Dave smiles at the name, seeing what no one else sees,
finding a common thread between Rose in Rosemary and thorn in
Thornwood. Dave asks if it is OK if he calls Rosemary
"Rose." Rosemary prefers "Ro" ---
"it's what everybody calls me." Ro is a
teacher's aide. RO's question: "I was just curious
if you were excited about Katie Couric coming to
CBS." DAVE: "Sure, I think we're all looking
forward to having her here." RO: "And you feel
good about handing the Late Show over to
her? DAVE: "Uhhh, I think you're confused. She's
taking over the CBS Evening News . . . not this show.
RO: "Really? So you're not retiring?" DAVE:
"No." RO: "You really should, you
miserable old givl.'"
And who is
Rosemary Licciarrdoni? She's our makeup artist, Michele
O'Callaghan. But who is Rosemary Licciarrdoni? I don't
know. I couldn't find Michele to find out.
And that
was Who Asked For It?
Before we go to commercial, we
once again go up to the roof to talk to David Ogron. He's set
to go. Assisting David is Scott "Speedy"
McKinney who has the responsibility of placing the balls
in the same spot every time so David can swing like a
machine. The 30-minute clock goes up . . . and the
counter stands at 0. And we begin. Like a windmill, David
begins to swing. Scott is right there to replace a ball every
1.8 seconds. The golf balls fly over the ledge of the Ed
Sullivan office building out onto . . . . I'm not sure.
PIEDMONT BIRD CALLERS: The winners of
Piedmont, California's 41st Annual High School Bird-Calling
Competition. #1. Derek DeRoche and Eric
Wheeler - 3rd place finishers. Derek is a freshman; Eric
a sophomore. What did they get for 3rd place? "A $10
gift certificate to a local ice cream store, a travel book, and
some flowers." Derek and Eric perform the Atlantic
Puffin. It sounded something like this:
"Wok wok wok wok, ghee ghee ghee, wok wok wok wok wok, ghee
ghee ghee ghee ghee wok." At the completion, Dave
says, "That was bull-djoy' and if we had enough time I
could prove it." Big laugh here. Did you hear
anything funnier than that today? No, you probably didn't.
It's why I watch the show, even if I didn't have to.
#2 Max Villet. He's wearing the same thing
as Eric Wheeler. Max came in 2nd place and won a book and a $20
gift certificate to a good burger place. What does Max like
one a burger? "Meat." Max is a senior in high
school and doesn't know yet where he plans to go to college. He
will be visiting Whittier and the University of Oregon. To
study what? "I don't know. That's why I'm going . . .
to find out." Max will performs the Rufescent
Tiger Heron. Max describes the Tiger Heron as having
long legs and an extra long bill to catch fish underwater. Max
then does a quick "snatch" impersonation of a Tiger
Heron catching a fish. Ooooh, an added visual feature we
weren't expecting. Nice job, Max. Max performs the
Rufescent Tiger Heron, which sounded something like this:
"Kwah kwah kwah kwah . . . . kwah kwah kwah . . . . kwah
kwah kwah kwah kwah . . . ugh ugh ugh." I hear
the same sound from people coming out of the Hello Deli.
Says Dave about Max as he takes a walk to the rear, "I
think any college would be happy to have you."
#3. Dana Han-Klein and Claire Menke: These
two senior gals won first place. Dana will spend the summer in
New York and attend NYU in the fall. Claire hopes to work in
France. For first place, they won a travel book, $50, and had
their names engraved on a trophy. They will perform the
dovekie. You can find these in Iceland and
Greenland. Abundant? Claire says, "Uhhh . . . .
sure." Dana and Claire perform the Dovekie and it
sounded something like this: . . . . . oh, darn. I don't
remember what it sounded like exactly. My apologies.
To finish up, the group of five from Piedmont perform
their birds in unison. It almost sounded like the CBS coverage
of The Masters.
MICHAEL DOUGLAS: Michael
enjoys the golf, and was introduced to the game by his dad,
Kirk, many years back. Michael was on the driving ranging
receiving instruction from his father. One shot somehow made a
u-turn and came right back. . . . and it got dear old dad right
in the dear old nuts. He marked it down as a birdie.
Michael's dad of course is the legendary Kirk
Douglas. For me, Kirk will always be Vincent Van Gogh.
I had to watch the film "Lust for Life" and read the
book in high school. It was one of the few books I read. . . .
that and "A Separate Peace." (Did Phineas really
jounce the tree branch on purpose?) Michael tells a
story of how his dad would challenge the kids to "Go ahead,
punch me in the stomach as hard as you can." After a
long time between challenges, Kirk didn't quite take the Douglas
boys' growth in strength. He played the "Go ahead, punch
me in the stomach as hard as you can" game once too often.
Kirk was dropped. . . . and the game was soon dropped as
well. Michael says his dad, who will turn 90 this
December, is about to complete his 11th novel.
What kind of kid was Michael? He says he was your
typical kid . . not a great student who stole cars in
Connecticut. Except of the G.L.A., that was me too. Michael
and his friends would hotwire the neighbor's car when they knew
he'd be away. This felony activity inspired him to take up
auto racing and you could see the love in Michael's eye when he
told tales of his driving. In the middle of the conversation,
Michael wonders if Dave's current hairstyle was designed after
Steve McQueen's hair in the film, "Bullit." Dave
says he'd take any comparison to Steve McQueen he could get.
Dave: "If I had Steve McQueen's anything,'
everyone could just kiss my ass." The
multi-talented Michael Douglas then does an impersonation of the
whirring sound of a race car. How is Michael's wife,
Catherine Zeta Jones? He says she is currently
shooting a film where she plays a chef, adding "If she
doesn't win an Academy Award for this . . . . it's probably the
greatest piece of acting . . . . she doesn't know how to boil
water." We see a clip of Michael's current film,
"The Sentinel." It's in theaters now.
ACT 5: David Ogron has broken the record!
Over 1,010 were hit in 30 minutes. Too bad it's unofficial. I
wouldn't be looking in the Guinness Book for David Ogron, golf
balls, and 30 minutes. But I'm told you will find his name
under golf balls, 24-hours and 12-hours.
Before music,
we see Michael Douglas on the roof hitting a couple golf balls.
MARK KNOPFLER AND EMMYLOU HARRIS: From their
new CD, "All the Roadrunning," Mark Knopfler and
Emmylou Harris performed "This Is Us." And this is a
CD I'll be picking up. It sounds like a good "raking the
lawn, cleaning the garage, painting the room" CD. It's a
good-listen.
And that was our show for Thursday,
April 27, 2006.
Wahoo
EXTRA! So I'm typing this
up and I went to capitalize an "I" but mistakenly hit
the control button and another button on my keyboard. What
button? I don't know, but suddenly, I get one of those
paragraph symbols at the start of every paragraph, and between
each word I get a dot. It makes everything difficult to read.
I then spent about a half-hour trying to undo my accidental do.
I still couldn't fix it. One slip of the finger should not
cause so much difficulty. I know I should ask for help but .
. . I hate asking people for help. But I may have to. So I
did. I asked our Late Show online guy, Walter.
What was the problem? He didn't help but he somehow gave me
the confidence to press the control button, the shift button,
and the * button. Believe me when I say I was plenty scared
that something terrible was going to happen. I pressed the
above buttons and . . . . IT WAS FIXED. Phew. How
did I make that mistake? Here's what happened. When I went
to capitalize an "I", I accidentally pressed the
Control button and the Shift button at the same time when all I
wanted to do was press the Shift button. When I went to press
the "I", I accidentally pressed the 8. Paragraph
symbols and dots appeared everywhere. And now I fixed it. It
only cost me 45 minutes of my life . . . but it gave me about
20 lines of nonsense in the Wahoo Gazette.
I'm reading an article about Fatty Arbuckle
the other day. He was an early 20th century entertainer who
was involved in a career-destroying scandal involving the death
of a woman named Virginia Rappe. After 3 trials, Fatty
Arbuckle was found "not guilty" but it was too late to
save his once-successful career. He caught a bum rap. And
then I wondered if that's where the term "bum rap" or
"bad rap" came from. So I did a bit of Googling.
Fatty Arbuckle: In 1921, a
young starlet became severely ill and died four days later.
Newspapers went wild with the story: popular silent-screen
comedian Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle had killed Virginia
Rappe with his weight while savagely raping her. Though the
newspapers of the day reveled in the gory, rumored details,
juries found little evidence that Arbuckle was in any way
connected with her death. In the third trial, which
began in March 1922, the defense again became pro-active.
Arbuckle testified, repeating his side of the story. The main
prosecution witness, Zey Prevon, had escaped house arrest and
left the country. For this trial, the jury deliberated for only
a couple of minutes and came back with a verdict of not
guilty.
I then Googled
"rap."
The term
rap, meaning a criminal charge--often a false one (i.e., bum
rap), is of uncertain origin. The term appears in the
phrase get the rap as early as 1865. In this sense it refers to
the punishment of a crime or action. The sense meaning the crime
itself dates to 1903 in publication--although it undoubtedly was
used in theives' cant earlier than this. In all likelihood the
term derives from the sense meaning a blow or strike. To take
the rap is to take the blow.
Close.
But not a match. A bad rap or a bum rap did not come from the
Arbuckle incident.
But do you know the origin of
"Your name is mud"? It has to do with the Lincoln
assassination.
Michael Douglas; Mark Knopfler and Emmylou Harris; and
the Piedmont Bird Callers. PLUS: a cold
open; something for an audience member, sexual behavior of
America's elderly; Great Moments in Presidential Speeches; Who
Asked for It; and up on the roof, a guy hitting golf
balls.
Hey! Itss a Cold Open! We see Dave with
our wardrobe supervisor, Sue Hum. She is
smoothing out Dave's suit. SUE: "Have you been
drinking, Dave?" DAVE: "Why the hell would you
ask that?" SUE: "You reek of
Tequila" DAVE: "Oh, well, then yes, I have
been drinking." SUE: "You poor dumb
bastard. And then the show opens with Paul and the
opening theme.
Following the monologue, Dave has a
Late Show Live on Letterman CD for a woman in the
audience. And who was that woman? That's right, Helen Thomas
. . . at least it looked like Helen Thomas.
Tonight on the show we have the Piedmont Bird
Callers. Dave wonders if we will perhaps hear a wren, a
bluebird, a blue jay, a robin, cardinal, loon, coot. . . . Paul
offers his rendition of a loon . . . . "lahooo. . . .
hoooooo . . . . hoooo . . . . nnn." I liked the
"nnnn" at the end.
And up on the roof of the
roof of the Ed Sullivan office building is the world
fastest golfer, David Ogron. David holds
the record for most golf balls hit in a 12-hour period: 6,971;
and in a 24-hour period: 10,392. Tonight he will try to
set the record for a 30-minute period, a record recently set at
1,010.
There was a new sex survey conducted and
reported in the Archives of Sexual Behavior. We
see a report on the results. Announcer: (over photos of
elderly couples in bed)
"According to
a new survey published in the Archives of Sexual Behavior,
elderly men tend to be more satisfied with their sex lives than
elderly woman. Overall, sex among the elderly, specifically
vigorous sex between couples in their late seventies . . . oh,
God, I'm gonna be sick . . ."
Buenos Noches, Amigos Dave once again, as he has done
recently, appeals to his Spanish-speaking friends by greeting
them with "Buenos Noches, Amigos." Dave then drinks
from his mug with the lifting-assistance of his pencil.
GREAT MOMENTS IN PRESIDENTIAL SPEECHES
We see FDR: "The only thing we have to fear is fear
itself." JFK: "Ask not what your country can
do for you, but what you can do for your country."
BUSH: "Where's the rally monkey?!"
WHO
ASKED FOR IT? We have members of the audience step
forward to ask Dave questions. It's similar to the pre-show
Q&A Dave conducts before the show. WHO ASKED
FOR IT #1. Jerry Orlando of East Syracuse, New York.
Dave asks Jerry if he is related to Tony Orlando. Jerry says he
isn't. Dave says, "Yeah, but I bet you had his
money!" Jerry thinks about Tony's current level of
celebrity and says, "No, I don't." What does
Jerry do for a living? He runs an old-fashioned movie theater
up near Syracuse. What is Jerry's favorite movie? Jerry says,
"Philadelphia Story." Jerry question:
"I'm in town on vacation and I'm trying to plan my week.
What's the forecast for tomorrow?" Dave isn't sure
so he asks if we could take a look. On Jerry's green
shirt appears a weather map one would see on a local news
program; you know, the weather report that usually takes up 9
minutes of the 22-minute news. A look at Jerry's shirt and it
looks like it should be nice this weekend. And who is
Jerry Orlando really? Why, he's our film coordinator,
Rick Scheckman, who we at the Late
Show like to call "Rick Scheckman." But who
is Jerry Orlando? I phoned Rick and he says it is a guy he
knows in Syracuse who runs a film festival.
Whenever we
do "Who Asked For It," the players involved are
Late Show staffers. Of course the staffer can't
say he or she works for the Late Show, so they have
to take on a new name and occupation. Many times Dave will try
to trip up the staffer by asking "involved" questions
about their "career." The staffer better have a
knowledge of what he purports to be. And the staffer better
remember who he says he is, the names of his children, and
anything else he says early in the conversation because Dave
will go back and ask, "I'm sorry, what did you say your
children's names were again?" What most staffers do is
pick out a close friend and become that person. This way if
Dave asks a question a second time, it's easy to remember what
you said the first time. If you choose to become your friend
"Pete" who is a plumber, you also take on Pete's wife,
children, and hometown. If Dave asks your wife's name, and
then asks again later, all you have to do is remember Pete and
his family structure. And you better know a lot about plumbing.
WHO ASKED FOR IT #2: Don McKinnon of
Westfield, New Jersey. . . the Garden State. Jersey is a
beautiful state once you get past the refineries. How are the
beaches? Don says they are lovely, although the people tend to
be a bit cheesy. Westfield, is it near the Delaware Water Gap?
And how about them Pine Barrens? Don backs off a bit and
admits to now knowing much about the Pine Barrens. DON'S
question: "I bought a piece of memorabilia in the
Late Show's eBay charity auction and I was
wondering if you could autograph it for me." DAVE:
"I don't think we've ever had an eBay charity auction. It
sounds like you might have fallen for a scam." DON:
(sadly disappointed) "Oh. So this isn't really your
heart?" (holds up a plastic bag with a heart in
it.) DAVE: "No, I don't think so. Sorry."
And who is Don McKinnon? He is writer Tom
Ruprecht. You recently saw Tom get a couple wisdom
teeth pulled. But who is Don McKinnon? He is Tom's friend who
now lives in Seattle. Westfield, New Jersey? Tom spent some
of his upbringing in Westfield. Tom offered me this bit of
Westfield trivia. The Rialto movie theater in Westfield is
featured in the opening credits of "Ed." And it was
in that movie theater that Tom Ruprecht once worked.
WHO ASKED FOR IT #3: Ed Van Lear. Dave goes
right for the question. ED: "'The Sopranos' has a gay
character. Does your show have a gay character?" DAVE:
"No, we don't think we need to go in that direction, but
thanks for your question." We cut to a lone George
Clarke on stage looking longingly in Dave's direction. We hear
his thoughts. George: "Oh, Dave, dear Dave. If
you only knew. And yet, it can never be . . . ah, the sweet
agony of forbidden love . . .maybe someday I'll get up the
courage to be true to myself and tell Dave of the turbulent
passions that rage within me. . . but when? When?"
DAVE: "George? You okay over there? You look sort of
funny." GEORGE: "Dave? Dave . . . I love
you." DAVE: "I know, George, we could hear
your thoughts." GEORGE: " . . . . . Ah, crap.
Never mind." Exits. Wooooooooo, now we know!
Know we know!
Who was Ed Van Lear? It was our
researcher Matt McCluskey. You recently saw Matt
in Staff Complaint Forum. But who is Ed Van Lear? Ed is
Matt's friend from college. Matt got off easy but if he was
asked, he was going to be a legal assistant.
WHO
ASKED FOR IT #4: Rosemary Licciarrdoni of Thornwood, New
York. Dave smiles at the name, seeing what no one else sees,
finding a common thread between Rose in Rosemary and thorn in
Thornwood. Dave asks if it is OK if he calls Rosemary
"Rose." Rosemary prefers "Ro" ---
"it's what everybody calls me." Ro is a
teacher's aide. RO's question: "I was just curious
if you were excited about Katie Couric coming to
CBS." DAVE: "Sure, I think we're all looking
forward to having her here." RO: "And you feel
good about handing the Late Show over to
her? DAVE: "Uhhh, I think you're confused. She's
taking over the CBS Evening News . . . not this show.
RO: "Really? So you're not retiring?" DAVE:
"No." RO: "You really should, you
miserable old givl.'"
And who is
Rosemary Licciarrdoni? She's our makeup artist, Michele
O'Callaghan. But who is Rosemary Licciarrdoni? I don't
know. I couldn't find Michele to find out.
And that
was Who Asked For It?
Before we go to commercial, we
once again go up to the roof to talk to David Ogron. He's set
to go. Assisting David is Scott "Speedy"
McKinney who has the responsibility of placing the balls
in the same spot every time so David can swing like a
machine. The 30-minute clock goes up . . . and the
counter stands at 0. And we begin. Like a windmill, David
begins to swing. Scott is right there to replace a ball every
1.8 seconds. The golf balls fly over the ledge of the Ed
Sullivan office building out onto . . . . I'm not sure.
PIEDMONT BIRD CALLERS: The winners of
Piedmont, California's 41st Annual High School Bird-Calling
Competition. #1. Derek DeRoche and Eric
Wheeler - 3rd place finishers. Derek is a freshman; Eric
a sophomore. What did they get for 3rd place? "A $10
gift certificate to a local ice cream store, a travel book, and
some flowers." Derek and Eric perform the Atlantic
Puffin. It sounded something like this:
"Wok wok wok wok, ghee ghee ghee, wok wok wok wok wok, ghee
ghee ghee ghee ghee wok." At the completion, Dave
says, "That was bull-djoy' and if we had enough time I
could prove it." Big laugh here. Did you hear
anything funnier than that today? No, you probably didn't.
It's why I watch the show, even if I didn't have to.
#2 Max Villet. He's wearing the same thing
as Eric Wheeler. Max came in 2nd place and won a book and a $20
gift certificate to a good burger place. What does Max like
one a burger? "Meat." Max is a senior in high
school and doesn't know yet where he plans to go to college. He
will be visiting Whittier and the University of Oregon. To
study what? "I don't know. That's why I'm going . . .
to find out." Max will performs the Rufescent
Tiger Heron. Max describes the Tiger Heron as having
long legs and an extra long bill to catch fish underwater. Max
then does a quick "snatch" impersonation of a Tiger
Heron catching a fish. Ooooh, an added visual feature we
weren't expecting. Nice job, Max. Max performs the
Rufescent Tiger Heron, which sounded something like this:
"Kwah kwah kwah kwah . . . . kwah kwah kwah . . . . kwah
kwah kwah kwah kwah . . . ugh ugh ugh." I hear
the same sound from people coming out of the Hello Deli.
Says Dave about Max as he takes a walk to the rear, "I
think any college would be happy to have you."
#3. Dana Han-Klein and Claire Menke: These
two senior gals won first place. Dana will spend the summer in
New York and attend NYU in the fall. Claire hopes to work in
France. For first place, they won a travel book, $50, and had
their names engraved on a trophy. They will perform the
dovekie. You can find these in Iceland and
Greenland. Abundant? Claire says, "Uhhh . . . .
sure." Dana and Claire perform the Dovekie and it
sounded something like this: . . . . . oh, darn. I don't
remember what it sounded like exactly. My apologies.
To finish up, the group of five from Piedmont perform
their birds in unison. It almost sounded like the CBS coverage
of The Masters.
MICHAEL DOUGLAS: Michael
enjoys the golf, and was introduced to the game by his dad,
Kirk, many years back. Michael was on the driving ranging
receiving instruction from his father. One shot somehow made a
u-turn and came right back. . . . and it got dear old dad right
in the dear old nuts. He marked it down as a birdie.
Michael's dad of course is the legendary Kirk
Douglas. For me, Kirk will always be Vincent Van Gogh.
I had to watch the film "Lust for Life" and read the
book in high school. It was one of the few books I read. . . .
that and "A Separate Peace." (Did Phineas really
jounce the tree branch on purpose?) Michael tells a
story of how his dad would challenge the kids to "Go ahead,
punch me in the stomach as hard as you can." After a
long time between challenges, Kirk didn't quite take the Douglas
boys' growth in strength. He played the "Go ahead, punch
me in the stomach as hard as you can" game once too often.
Kirk was dropped. . . . and the game was soon dropped as
well. Michael says his dad, who will turn 90 this
December, is about to complete his 11th novel.
What kind of kid was Michael? He says he was your
typical kid . . not a great student who stole cars in
Connecticut. Except of the G.L.A., that was me too. Michael
and his friends would hotwire the neighbor's car when they knew
he'd be away. This felony activity inspired him to take up
auto racing and you could see the love in Michael's eye when he
told tales of his driving. In the middle of the conversation,
Michael wonders if Dave's current hairstyle was designed after
Steve McQueen's hair in the film, "Bullit." Dave
says he'd take any comparison to Steve McQueen he could get.
Dave: "If I had Steve McQueen's anything,'
everyone could just kiss my ass." The
multi-talented Michael Douglas then does an impersonation of the
whirring sound of a race car. How is Michael's wife,
Catherine Zeta Jones? He says she is currently
shooting a film where she plays a chef, adding "If she
doesn't win an Academy Award for this . . . . it's probably the
greatest piece of acting . . . . she doesn't know how to boil
water." We see a clip of Michael's current film,
"The Sentinel." It's in theaters now.
ACT 5: David Ogron has broken the record!
Over 1,010 were hit in 30 minutes. Too bad it's unofficial. I
wouldn't be looking in the Guinness Book for David Ogron, golf
balls, and 30 minutes. But I'm told you will find his name
under golf balls, 24-hours and 12-hours.
Before music,
we see Michael Douglas on the roof hitting a couple golf balls.
MARK KNOPFLER AND EMMYLOU HARRIS: From their
new CD, "All the Roadrunning," Mark Knopfler and
Emmylou Harris performed "This Is Us." And this is a
CD I'll be picking up. It sounds like a good "raking the
lawn, cleaning the garage, painting the room" CD. It's a
good-listen.
And that was our show for Thursday,
April 27, 2006.
Wahoo
EXTRA! So I'm typing this
up and I went to capitalize an "I" but mistakenly hit
the control button and another button on my keyboard. What
button? I don't know, but suddenly, I get one of those
paragraph symbols at the start of every paragraph, and between
each word I get a dot. It makes everything difficult to read.
I then spent about a half-hour trying to undo my accidental do.
I still couldn't fix it. One slip of the finger should not
cause so much difficulty. I know I should ask for help but .
. . I hate asking people for help. But I may have to. So I
did. I asked our Late Show online guy, Walter.
What was the problem? He didn't help but he somehow gave me
the confidence to press the control button, the shift button,
and the * button. Believe me when I say I was plenty scared
that something terrible was going to happen. I pressed the
above buttons and . . . . IT WAS FIXED. Phew. How
did I make that mistake? Here's what happened. When I went
to capitalize an "I", I accidentally pressed the
Control button and the Shift button at the same time when all I
wanted to do was press the Shift button. When I went to press
the "I", I accidentally pressed the 8. Paragraph
symbols and dots appeared everywhere. And now I fixed it. It
only cost me 45 minutes of my life . . . but it gave me about
20 lines of nonsense in the Wahoo Gazette.
I'm reading an article about Fatty Arbuckle
the other day. He was an early 20th century entertainer who
was involved in a career-destroying scandal involving the death
of a woman named Virginia Rappe. After 3 trials, Fatty
Arbuckle was found "not guilty" but it was too late to
save his once-successful career. He caught a bum rap. And
then I wondered if that's where the term "bum rap" or
"bad rap" came from. So I did a bit of Googling.
Fatty Arbuckle: In 1921, a
young starlet became severely ill and died four days later.
Newspapers went wild with the story: popular silent-screen
comedian Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle had killed Virginia
Rappe with his weight while savagely raping her. Though the
newspapers of the day reveled in the gory, rumored details,
juries found little evidence that Arbuckle was in any way
connected with her death. In the third trial, which
began in March 1922, the defense again became pro-active.
Arbuckle testified, repeating his side of the story. The main
prosecution witness, Zey Prevon, had escaped house arrest and
left the country. For this trial, the jury deliberated for only
a couple of minutes and came back with a verdict of not
guilty.
I then Googled
"rap."
The term
rap, meaning a criminal charge--often a false one (i.e., bum
rap), is of uncertain origin. The term appears in the
phrase get the rap as early as 1865. In this sense it refers to
the punishment of a crime or action. The sense meaning the crime
itself dates to 1903 in publication--although it undoubtedly was
used in theives' cant earlier than this. In all likelihood the
term derives from the sense meaning a blow or strike. To take
the rap is to take the blow.
Close.
But not a match. A bad rap or a bum rap did not come from the
Arbuckle incident.
But do you know the origin of
"Your name is mud"? It has to do with the Lincoln
assassination.