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Legendary comedian Steve Bleustein joined me and discussed his autobiography Memoir of a Nobody; watching Howdy Doody & Peter Pan; going to Emerson College w/ Henry Winkler; Dave Madden & Albert Hammond taking him to try out stand up at the Comedy Store; Sammy Shore saying he has the sound; his work at The Groundlings with Tracy & Laraine Newman and Jack Soo; Tom Dreeson; being on The Merv Griffin Show with Laraine and getting ribbed about a nose job; Liz Torres; Brady Bunch Variety Hour; working with Rip Taylor and Ronnie Graham; writing for Loman & Barkley; a bit making a stick a star; Fred & Mary Willard and their holiday parties; being the last surviving member of the Ace Trucking Company; Fred hating elevators; Cracking Up; meeting Farrah Fawcett; Florence Henderson; Comedy Central ruins comedy boom; how to become a proficient comedian; comics get on TV too early; new comics are too filthy; he likes John Mulaney & Wanda Sykes; working on A Year at the Top with Mickey Rooney & Gabe Dell; Gabe can't remember lines; The Rabbit Test; opening in Vegas; doing a pilot with Tina Turner; Gabe Kaplan presents him as a new comic to watch; the Playboy Pajama Party nightmare; having dogs; becoming famous for Make Me Laugh; Gallagher; Bob Saget; Norm Crosby's Comedy Shop
The Kraft Music Hall. May 01, 1941. NBC net. Sponsored by: Kraft Miracle Whip, Kraft Malted Milk. The first tune is, "With A Twist Of The Wrist." Guest Pat O'Brien makes his ninth appearance on the show, as a third base businessman. Bing interviews a paratrooper. Bob Burns reads a letter from Grandma and plays, "Dance Of The Hours" on his bazooka!. Bing Crosby, Bob Burns, John Scott Trotter and His Orchestra, The Music Maids, Ken Carpenter (announcer), Connie Boswell, Pat O'Brien, Josephine Tuminia (soprano). Howdy Doody. August 16, 1952. NBC net. Sustaining. 7:30 A.M. Not a television show, this broadcast originates from "The Howdy Doody Circus." The topic of the program is "the sea." The president of the Kids is nominated and elected. Who is Mr. X? In addition to "Buffalo Bob," we hear "Phineas T. Bluster," "Dilly Dally," "The Flubadub," "The Flubadub, Jr.," Professor Hubert Fitchnoodle, Zabby (a two-headed man-from Mars), and of course, Howdy Doody. Buffalo Bob sings, "Anchors Away,""Yankee Doodle Dandy", Popeye the Sailor" and other songs. The members of the Peanut Gallery give their opinions. Bob Smith; Dayton Allen LADY ESTHER PLAYHOUSE (Mercury Theatre) January 19, 1942. CBS net. "My Little Boy". Sponsored by: Lady Esther. A delightful portrait of a father and his son. Welles is at his best!. Orson Welles, Carl Ewald (writer), Dix Davis, Ruth Warrick, Ray Collins. Freedom U.S.A. March 30, 1952. Program #15. ZIV Syndication. "Embargo On Santa Granada". Sponsored by: Commercials added locally. A revolution is taking place in Santa Granada. An embargo on trade is being considered in the Senate. The date is approximate. One savings bonds spot announcement (from a different time period) has been added during the first commercial break. Tyrone Power, Edwin C. Hill (narrator), Jimmy Wallington (announcer), David Rose (composer, conductor).The Witch's Tale. December 7, 1931. WOR, Newark, New Jersey, Air Features Syndicate syndication. "The Confession". Sponsored by: Kruschen Salt (weight reducer). 9:30 P.M. A Catholic priest is summoned to administer the last rites to a young Chinese wife about to be killed by a particularly gruesome Chinese torture. The script was previously used on "The Witch's Tale" on December 7, 1931 and subsequently on February 17, 1936. This program was also syndicated by "Group Broadcasters.". Alonzo Deen Cole (writer, producer, performer), Marie O'Flynn, Adelaide Fitz-Allen (as "Old Nancy").TIME:02:55:50.454SOURCES: Wikipedia and The RadioGoldindex.com
Robert James Keeshan (June 27, 1927 – January 23, 2004) was an American television producer and actor. He created and played the title role in the children's television program Captain Kangaroo, which ran from 1955 to 1984, the longest-running nationally broadcast children's television program of its day.[1][2] He also played the original Clarabell the Clown on the Howdy Doody television program. PICTURE: By John Mathew Smith & www.celebrity-photos.com from Laurel Maryland, USA - Bob Keeshan ( Capt. Kangaroo ), CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=76507020
On today's episode; the oldest mammalian ancestor is discovered, an update on the flight of the Parker Solar Probe, plus, on 'This Day in History', the show that would influence children's television for generations to come -- Howdy Doody. World's oldest mammalian ancestor discovered in Mallorca This dog-like predator is the oldest known mammal ancestor | Popular Science Early–middle Permian Mediterranean gorgonopsian suggests an equatorial origin of therapsids | Nature Communications TDIH: Norb's Corner: “It's Howdy Doody time!” TDIH: 1947: NBC Introduces Howdy Doody on 'Puppet Playhouse Presents' From Doodyville to Detroit: The History of Howdy Doody, a Legendary Show of the Golden Age of TV Contact the show - coolstuffcommute@gmail.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Stuart Pankin joined me to discuss his first TV role; watching Winky Dink & Howdy Doody; Pats v. Geno's; Dickinson College English major; early off-Broadway and Broadway roles; San Pedro Beach Bus; Next Stop, Greenwich Village; Scavenger Hunt; Barney Miller; Alex Henteloff; Magic on Love Island; No Soap, Radio; Not Necessarily the News; no trailer had to use bathroom; playing different character; winning a Cable Ace Award; The Pyramid; Markie Post; Night Court appearances; Cinemax Comedy Experiment; Family Ties; Nearly Departed; Stephen Furst; playing Orthodox Jews; Dinosaurs, last episode and issues of the day; Nick Freno; pilot that didn't make it; San Pedro Beach Bums considered lost media; Curb Your Enthusiasm; Public Interest; Girl Meets World; Sabrina Carpenter; Suite Life of Zach & Cody; being married for 50 Years.
National fruit cake day. Entertainment from 2018. 1st woman ordanined a Jewish Rabbi, Howdy Doody 1st national kids tv show, Pope John Paul II pardoned guy who shot him. Todays birthdays - Louis Pasteur, Marlene Dietrich, John Amos, Heather O'Rourke, Walker Hayes, Haley Williams, Shay Mooney. Carrie Fisher died.Intro - Pour some sugar on me - Def Leppard http://defleppard.com/Fruitcake - Fred Schneider & the SuperiorsThank u, next - Ariana GrandeSpeechles - Dan & ShayHowdy Doody TV themeBirthdays - In da cluv - 50 Cent http://50cent.com/Falling in love again - Marlene DietrichGood Times TV themeFancy like - Walker HayesAirplanes - BoB and Haley WilliamsTequila - Dan & ShayExit - It's not love - Dokken http://dokken.net/
On this edition of the Richard Crouse Show we meet musician, broadcaster, photographer, empresario, and author who joins me today to talk about his newest book “Rollin' Through the ‘70s. Weed, Woman and Song.” Born in Indiana, his recording career began in 1965 with a cover of jazz great Bobby Timmon's song “Moanin'” by his band The Chateaus. Since then, he was mentored by jazz legend Oscar Peterson, and worked with everyone from Janis Joplin and The Pointer Sisters to Linda Ronstadt and Howdy Doody. I've had a remarkable life, he says, and he joins me today to talk about Vietnam and his arrival in Canada, smoking hash and many other stories from his book “Rollin' Through the ‘70s. Weed, Woman and Song.” Then we get to know Christophe Lebold, a professor of literature, performance studies and rock culture from Strasbourg, France, joins me to talk about his book “Leonard Cohen: The Man Who Saw the Angels Fall.” It's an intriguing, massive, 543-page compendium that takes a deep metaphysical dive into the late Montrealer's world.
Howdy Doody Time 1952-08-16 Howdy Doody Time
Send us a textBetter late than never, just like the apocalypse; this weeks episplode explores the possibilities of powering small nations through the cremation of extremely weight challenged fatties. Fork lifts at the ready for this Presidential episode as Brian and Brian stoke up the oven and delve into the 47 carcinogenic herbs and spices that power the smallest brain of any Americaniaum president since Howdy Doody.On a heavier note Barry's diet has gone straight to hell. He is eating his own body parts now. Coming to a reality show soon... as soon as that fuck-knuckle Rupert Muddock pays his electricity bill.
Howdy Doody!Another episode with music by:Bart and The BratsDrunk MumsOriginal AngerShit ShowMala VistaIf you want your song played on the show, feel free to email izzysmut@gmail.comAlso, if you want to get me a cup of coffee, I would greatly appreciat...
National chewing gum day. Entertainment from 1996. Howdy Doodiy went off the air- Flintstones debuted, 1st time Ether was used, 1st execution by the Pilgrams. Todays birthdays - Buddy Rich, Angie Dickinson, Johnny Mathis, Frankie Lymon, Deborah Allen, Barry Williams, Fran Drescher, Marty Stuart, Jenna Elfman, T Pain. James dean died.Intro - Pour some sugar on me - Def Leppard http://defleppard.com/Choo'n gum - Teresa BrewerMacarena - Los Del RioLiving in a moment - Ty HerndonHowdy Doody Tv themeFlintstones TV themeBirthdays - In da club - 50 Cent http://50cent.com/Drum solo by Buddy RichChances are - Johnny MathisWhy do fools fall in love - Frankie Lymon & the TeenagersBaby I lied - Deborah AllenTime to change - Brady kidsHillbilly rock - Marty StuartI'm in love with a stripper - T PainExit - It's not love - Dokken http://dokken.net/
In this episode of Cloudlandia, Our stories highlighted agricultural aspects of central Florida and comparisons of population densities in the U.S. and Canada. We also reminisced on television's evolution from shows like Romper Room to the first color programs. We reflected on limited past options versus today's unlimited streaming and the importance of managing screen time given continual new choices. Additionally, the discussion explored social dynamics considering Dunbar's number theory contrasted against digital reach on platforms. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS Dean discusses the strategic advantages of living in Central Florida, particularly in Winter Haven, which is centrally located and offers easy access to both coasts. We delve into Winter Haven's rich agricultural heritage, highlighting cattle ranches, orange groves, and other rural aspects of Central Florida. There's an interesting comparison between the population densities in the U.S. and Canada, including reflections on Ontario's geographic size and its southern location relative to many U.S. cities. We take a nostalgic look at the evolution of television, from classic shows like "Romper Room" to the advent of color TV with hits like "The Price is Right," and how this contrasts with today's streaming culture. The episode includes reflections on how past limited screen choices have evolved into today's endless streaming possibilities, and the impact of this shift on modern screen time habits. We explore the concept of social reach and relationships in the digital age, discussing the Dunbar number and how platforms like TikTok and Instagram have changed the dynamics of personal connections. Insights are shared from the new book "Casting, Not Hiring," which introduces the VCR formula—Vision, Capability, and Reach—as a framework for modern success. Through real-life examples and personal stories, we emphasize the importance of aligning vision, capability, and reach to achieve significant accomplishments, using figures like Safali Shabari and Max Martin as case studies. The episode also discusses the importance of choosing the right tools and staying committed to ongoing exploration and self-improvement. Finally, the conversation underscores the necessity of conceptual ability to see how one can be useful to others and leverage their capabilities, vision, and reach for collaborative success. Links: WelcomeToCloudlandia.com StrategicCoach.com DeanJackson.com ListingAgentLifestyle.com TRANSCRIPT (AI transcript provided as supporting material and may contain errors) Dean: Mr Sullivan, mr Jackson, you got through Hurricane Week. Dan: Not quite Hurricane Week, Tropical Storm Week, but we did oh. Dean: Tropical Storm A notch down in the hierarchy. Dan: That's one of the good things about living in Winter Haven. It is actually a haven from winter. We are in the center. We are perched on high dry, sandy land, so there's no storm surges, nothing like that yeah, so you're a long way from the coast, aren't you? Well, I'm actually an hour and 15 minutes from either coast. We can get to either side and we can get to virtually almost every beach in two hours. Like it's such a centrally located, we're almost in the exact geographic center of peninsular Florida, so I can get to Jacksonville in three hours and Miami in three hours and pretty much everywhere you want to be within an hour. So it's good. Dean: So I have a question because I've been there. Where is the big cattle ranching country? Is that south of you or north? Dan: It's surrounding us, but sort of north and south in the central. If you think about the middle of Florida, basically aside from the Orlando-Tampa corridor which is like this swath that goes all the way across the state from Tampa to Cocoa Beach, that area is very developed but above and below that the center is much like the Australian outback in terms of the density of population. And north of I-4. In that area there is equestrian and rolling hills and there's a lot of equestrian properties there and ranches. South of that is where you'd find a lot of the cattle ranches, sod ranches, orange groves. All of that is in the center and then you get all the way down to the Everglades and then the Everglades is one of the big national parks, it's the Everglades. Dean: Yeah, alligators I was actually on something that was described as the biggest cattle ranch, not only in Florida, but one of the bigger ones in the United States. Yes, and we drove at least 20 miles on the ranch before we got to buildings. Dan: And it was interesting. Dean: It was interesting. They had a lot of pigs wandering around and I asked them were they in the pig business? And they said no. It's just that every week or so the trail hands would like something besides beef. Dan: Right, go out and wrestle them up a hog Right. Dean: Yeah, yeah, have a barbecue, have a. Dan: Yeah, well, you can actually not too far from here you can do hog hunting, where you can go and hunt hogs in the forest, yeah, all natural. Dean: It's not. So. It's not silicon valley that we're talking about here no, we're really not. Dan: We're talking about, you know, rural florida. This is why I know, yeah, you know you look at Florida and you know people talk about population density and stuff, but there's a lot of land in Florida that is undeveloped. I mean there's a whole south of I-4, there's another highway that goes all the way across the state, called Highway 60, and through Lake Wales, and it's very undeveloped. I mean there's really nothing. All the way from Tampa to Vero Beach is where it goes and it's virtually. It's the only place I've been in Florida where you can, on certain parts of it, look as far as you can see in any direction and see nothing. I mean it's that. And somebody has bought up like 80,000 acres around what's called Yeehaw Junction, which is where the Florida Turnpike intersects with Highway 60. Where the turnpike, the Florida turnpike, intersects with Highway 60. And you could see easily that you could duplicate the entire I-4 corridor, like Tampa and Orlando, along Highway 60 with plenty of room to spare. So I'm not worried about the you know population increase in Florida. Dean: Yeah, it's really interesting. Peter Zion and one of his frequent you know he has his. You know he has videos every three days. Yeah, and you. But he was talking about all the developed countries, which would be mostly European countries, and you know Australia, new, zealand. You know he said that the US is by far the country with the least population density. I agree with that. Dan: Most any state, even Ontario you look at as densely populated as the GTA is. Once you get beyond the GTA it's pretty sparse in Ontario. Dean: Oh yeah, oh yeah I mean, yeah, there's an interesting thing. Just to give you a sense of how big Ontario is. First of all, ontario is a province in Canada, for those listening, and it's roughly about from north to south it's about 1200 miles, and from east to west it's 1400 miles. It's actually it's as big as mainland. It's almost as big as mainland Europe Isn't that amazing Without Russia when I found out. Not counting Russia. Dan: I heard when I found out you could drive north from Toronto the entire distance from Toronto to Florida and still be in Ontario. That's pretty amazing. Dean: Yeah, that gives you a context for it and most people don't realize that Toronto itself is further south than almost 20% of the United States. Dan: People don't realize that Ontario dips down no below that. Dean: No, it wouldn't be that much, but it is south of Minneapolis, south of Seattle, I think, it's south of Portland, you know, and then it's quite a bit south. I think it's south of Boston, it's south of you know everything like that. Yeah, maine all of it. It's about as south as you can get actually, yeah, but I think it's the most populated large city in the world, furthest north large city in the world oh, wow I think it's further south. I think it's further north than moscow oh, wow interesting. Yeah, yeah and yeah, and it's getting bigger, it's getting bigger. Well, there you go. Dan: Well, everyone. I'm waiting with bated breath to hear the great air fryer experiment from the Four Seasons beaches. Dean: Has your air fryer arrived. Dan: Oh, it's on the counter. Dean: Okay, it's on the counter. It's on the counter, it's been plugged in, but it hasn't been used yet. Okay, okay, we sort of inch our way into these new technologies. Dan: I got it, just unpack it and set it there for a little bit and just kind of let it live with it. Dean: Well, it's been a week now and we haven't used it. Why don't we use it? So anyway, but it is sitting on the counter. It's a ninja. Is that the kind you have? Dan: I think I have a breville is the name of uh mine. But did you get the one then? Did you get the one that steven palter posted? I have no idea. Oh okay, that's uh. Dean: So, oh yeah, that's fab you have to appreciate how little I take into this sort of thing, exactly right. Dan: I love that. Dean: There will be a who who's between me and the air. Dan: That's right? Dean: Oh, dan, that's the best Any technology in the world. I can guarantee you there will be a who between me and the technology. And I said what do you think? And I look for people who really love interacting with technology. I want that person between me and the technology and I'll ask them what's it do? What's it do? Dan: I'll tell you what I'm working on. Dean: What will it do for the thing I'm working on? Yeah, yeah, I love that and I've been pretty constant on that. I mean, you know, I was constant on this when I was six years old. I just always let some other human investigate the new technology. Dan: Yeah, and yeah. Dean: So I've lived a disconnected life when it comes to technology. What explains that? Dan: Well, I was thinking, you know about you, and I was thinking how you have the gift of being kind of brought into an era where television wasn't even a thing Like your earliest childhood was electronic free, I thought. But were you like? So you were born in 1944. And so it was six years. Probably Do you remember when you got exposed to your first television. Dean: Yeah, I think I was maybe. Yeah, I think it was around 52. I mean I had seen it, I'd been in other people's houses right they had television, but actually having our own television, I think it's maybe eight years. I was eight, so you got all the way to you. Dan: Think about this. You got all the way to eight years without being exposed to anybody else's visual bombardment of electronic propaganda or otherwise. Right, your visual input into your mind was largely formed through your own imagination. Yeah, you. You had to work, you had to create these visual pictures in your mind. Yeah, did you guys, did you? Dean: listen to radio, and I was assisted by radio. Dan: I remember radio had a big impact on me. Dean: And yeah, oh yeah, sorry, sergeant King of the Yukon. And yeah, there was Amos and Andy. We listened to Amos and Andy, andy, we listened to Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy and then there was one that my siblings, my older siblings, listened to at night, which was called the dark museum, which scared the daylights out of me and the shadow. Dan: We listened to the shadow so was that the family activity no, no. Dean: Here you have to get the full impact okay, sorry sorry. Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men. The shadow knows. And then you had a 30 minute. 30 minute example of human evil. You know it was great but you had to do all the visuals. You know I, you were the visual director of all these radio programs. Dan: So was this? Everybody in the family gathered in the living room sitting on the couch listening to the radio like this. Is that what was going on? Dean: Yeah, there was sort of a. Yeah, there was sort of a dining room actually where you could listen. There were a number of radios. There was a radio in the kitchen, there was a radio, I think, someplace else, and it was a big house, a farmhouse, yeah, and I remember listening, imagining, you know, imagining. There was another series called Sky King, sky King, which became a TV station you know, and the Lone Ranger. We had the Lone Ranger. Dan: So there was a lot of variety, uh-huh and so, and then, in 1952, eight years old, you get your first television set. Dean: I think, so I think that would have been about then, yeah. Yeah, because I remember the first presidential election was 52. And I can remember that being on television. Who was the? Dan: president, was that Ike Eisenhower? Dean: Yeah, I like Ike, that was Eisenhower's first term. I like Ike. Dan: Now you know that's a really interesting thing. Do you remember, like your new routine when the television came? Were you watching TV every day from that period on? Or were your parents limiting the TV, or was everybody gathered around and limiting the TV, or was everybody around? Dean: and watch the TV. Yeah, I mean it was a frequent. It was a frequent activity once came in, that's all I can say I don't know, I don't know if I watched every day, but there you know, there were favorite shows. I think Arthur Godfrey was one of the early shows, the variety hour, and yeah, no, children's. I think there wasfrey was one of the early shows, the Variety Hour, and yeah, no, so Children's. I think there was Howdy Doody. Howdy Doody was. Dan: I think one of them Doody time. Dean: Yeah, and I think Soupy Sales was on and yeah. Dan: Yeah, I'm just thinking how. Yeah, I remember Romper Room. I just saw a video of Joe and I at the I Love Marketing event and I was saying we had all the people streaming from all over the world and I was doing a little Romper Room and about half the people in the audience knew about Romper Room and half didn't. Dean: That was kind of interesting. Dan: I remember I see Bobby and Johnny in their magic mirror. I used to hide behind the sofa so she wouldn't see me miss joan miss joan, miss joan. Yeah, so I was thinking about it was good, I mean I mean it was good, but it wasn't. Dean: It wasn't the major part, you know, of your you know it was only during weekdays, it was only at night and uh yeah, and on weekends I don't really there was. I don't know what the years were, but you know you got. You know, somewhere along the line you had jackie gleason and you had ed sullivan and you had other things like that, you know. But I wasn't. I can't say I was captivated because I was usually out. You know, I was outside, we lived in the country and I was out and I had really gotten hooked on reading. So I was doing a lot of reading back then. Yeah, interesting, but it is kind of what about yourself? Dan: I mean, you were born in the television age. I was born in the television age, you're right. And so every day, you know, I mean, yeah, tv was part of every day. And I was just the reason. The context for me thinking about this was thinking about how recent, you know, as each layering availability of content became unlocked kind of thing, our, you know, screen time has dramatically increased. And I was thinking all the way back to you. That's why I was thinking about you is, you know, literally your first six or eight years there were no screens, there were the only, you know, the cinema of the mind. That was your, that was your entertainment, your imagination. But I remember, so when I remember when we got our first color television right Around 19 or some early like that, and I remember the first show that I saw in color was the Price is Right with Bob Barker, and then All in the Family with Archie Bunker. That was, so you know, in the 70s. It was the Jefferson and Sanford and Sand and then all these. You know, the 70s, I think, was the golden era of television, you know, with all these shows becoming. You know, I remember Star Trek and you know all these, the Rockford Files and Starsky and Hutch, all the Love Boat, all these shows, these iconic shows in the seventies. But you only had, you know, basically the three networks was Canada, we had the CBC and TV Ontario. So those were the things and I remember as a kid, when the TV guide would arrive, we subscribed to the Saturday Star, the Toronto Star, that would arrive on Saturdays and that would have the TV guide in there, and I remember they would have it laid out like a you know a. Gantt chart, or whatever the time, the grid of times, to show you what was on. Dean: It was like a matrix. Dan: It was like a matrix you could see yeah, so it would list there were, you know. Dean: Every day had a matrix from yes till night 13 but you only had the three. You only had the three. Dan: There were 13 13 channels, yeah, to choose from three networks. And I remember the you know organizing my saturdays in the winter around the cartoons. You know like okay, so I would have a highlighter which was recently invented in that winter around the cartoons. You know like okay, so I would have a highlighter which was recently invented in that or newly introduced or whatever to our household, but I would have the highlighter and I would like highlight my. I would do my programming. You know I'm going to watch. I'm going to watch the Justice League at you know eight o'clock and then I'm going to watch the Justice League at you know eight o'clock, and then I'm going to watch Batman at nine, and then I'm going to watch Shazam and then Scooby-Doo, and then it was the we're all about why CBS or ABC's wide world of sports. That was like a big thing. And I remember now how much of my childhood was around synchronous and scheduled programming Because there was no other option. If you wanted to see that show, if you wanted to watch the Waltons that was on my mom's favorite show you had to watch that on Thursday nights or whenever the Waltons were on, you know, and Little House on the Prairie, and it was like your selection, your decisions were made. It wasn't like what should we watch tonight? Of the like now, infinite choices available to us, but we actually spend probably more as a percentage of our time not you, but collectively watching, consuming screen content. It's just been an observation. I've had some of these conversations. I'm getting really conscious of really being aware of my screen time and trying to be more discerning. Dean: I was just thinking now that you've got me thinking about it. I left home in 62 when I was 18. And I can't remember until I was 40 actually having a television during that 20 years or 22 years. I went 22 years and you know I don't remember. I remember people having televisions that I would go and watch things, sports things like that but, I went 22 years so, and then, of course, I haven't watched it in the last six years, so I've got pretty close to 40 years of my life when I didn't watch television Half, almost half my life. So I think it's never been a big deal for me. Dan: Right, think now like I look at kids now, like you think about the technological sophistication and facile nature of technology to eight-year-olds today, compared to Dan Sullivan at eight, you know is pretty amazing. But your experience in the outdoors to the average eight-year-old you know? Dean: it's so funny. I never see very rare. Dan: It's very rare, even in the 70s. Like growing up, you know the whole period of my childhood like from you know, six to 12. Six to 12. You don't see the same sort of pack of kids roaming around on the street that we saw when we were, when I was growing up anyway. I mean, you know, I grew up in the suburbs so we had like a very active, you know social ecosystem. We were outside all day, every day. You know social ecosystem. We were outside all day, every day you know, playing and making things up and riding our bikes and exploring the ravines and the sewers, and our parents never really knew where we were either. I mean we were. The idea was you got up and you had breakfast and you got out and you came home when you got hungry or when the streetlights came on at night. That's the deadline, you know I heard a comedian talking about that that it was so laissez-faire when we were growing up that they had to run ads on TV at night that said it's 1030. Do you know where your children are? Had to remind our parents that they had kids. Oh, so funny and true, you know. Dean: Yeah, it was really interesting, Really interesting. We in London we have our favorite hotel where we stay in London. Dan: And across. Dean: They've taken a whole old industrial area and they've completely transformed it. So they have a hotel and then they have condos and then they have shops and there's a courtyard in the middle and you cross one of the courtyards and there's a Japanese restaurant there. I remember being in there one night and there were six teenage girls, Japanese girls 16, 16, 17. And there were six of them at the table and each of them was on their phone during the entire meal. Dan: Yeah they're all talking in direct with other people. Yeah, so funny, right? Dean: They're not even there even when they're in the presence. It struck me that their world is actually inside the phone. Well, that's my point. Dan: That's the whole point of Cloudlandia. Cloudlandia is the real world. That's where we all live in. Cloudlandia. Dean: Not me. Dan: No, when I say we all, I mean society, everything. I have to have a permanent disclaimer. Dean: You're saying a large number, a large percentage, a large percentage, a large percentage, and Sullivan excluded A large percentage of people. Yeah, yeah. And it's honestly a different world. I mean, yeah, I can't make too many comments on it because I've never really experienced that you know. Dan: So we've got a young guy in our, in our go-go agent platform. He's a young realtor in Guelph, ontario. He's in his mid twenties, just getting started on his career and stuff. He's lived in Guelph his whole life and one of the strategies that we teach people. Dean: Nice city. Dan: Yeah, guelph is a is beautiful, yeah, so he's grown up there. You know, really, you know good looking young guy, very personable. I think he's got a big future. But one of the strategies that we encourage people is to gather their top 150 relationships, the people that if they saw them at the grocery store they'd recognize them by name and stop and have a conversation with them. Right, and the hardest thing, the funniest thing is he, after racking his brain, could only come up with 88 people on his list of 150 people. And I thought to myself like the population of Guelph must be 150,000 people right In the Guelph area I mean, it's pretty good size city. I thought you know you look at this right that there's a kid who has grown up largely in the internet world, right, like largely on in Cloudlandia, and that's the real thing. The reality is that if you go outside of his bedroom and walk around on the street, he only knows 88 mainland people and he's surrounded. I was teasing him that I said are you telling me that you've lived your entire 26 years in Guelph and all you know is 88 people and you're walking around surrounded by 149,920? Npc is a gaming term, dan for non-playing characters, because all of these online video games GTA or Grand Theft Auto and all these things that are kind of photorealistic things. All the people that walk around in the background are called non-playing characters or NPCs. Ground are called non-playing characters or NPCs. And I said that's really what you're telling me is, you've spent your whole life in Guelph and you only when you step outside your bedroom, know 88 people. That's a problem If you're in a business that is a mainland business. Mainland business right. Dean: All houses are 100% firmly planted on the mainland, as are the people that inhabit those homes. Dan: So it only makes sense that you need to get an outpost on the mainland, not in Cloudlandia, you know. Dean: Yeah, I was just thinking, I was just caring of my company company, my team members. There may be some new ones that I don't know, but I certainly know 100. And then my free zone program. I've got 105 in there and you know, some of them. I have to check the list to get their name, but you know I'd be over. I'd be over 150 with those two groups. Dan: Yeah, but there's. Dean: And then there'd easily be another 100 with the 10 times group, and then there would be 20 with Genius Network. Yeah, I'd probably be 300 or 400 anyway. Dan: And it's a really interesting thing. There's a lot of thing around that. Like Robin Dunbar, the evolutionary psychology anthropologist from Oxford, he is the one that coined that or discovered that information that the 150 is the magic number. You know, that's the number of relationships that we can manage where we recognize people and have, you know, a current status in their life kind of thing, in their life kind of thing. And that goes back to our first kind of days of playing the cooperation game where we would be tribal and have 150 people and that was a security thing. If you didn't know the people around you, that was a threat. Right, you had to know everybody. So, that's part of it. If it got to 150 150 what would happen is they would split up and go off and, you know, form other tribes. But that was. There's so many naturally occurring ways that that happens, but I just noticed you know how so much of it is for me personally. Like my Cloudlandia reach is a hundred times or more my mainland reach. Like if you just think about the number of people that I know or know me from in Cloudlandia it's way bigger than the number of people that know me in Winter Haven, florida, in my own backyard, you know. Dean: Yeah, well, it's very interesting. You know good FreeZone partner Peter or Stephen Poulter. You know, with TikTok he's got he's probably got 100,000 people who believe that he's their friend, he's their guide, he's their friend, yeah, yeah, but he wouldn't know any of them. Dan: Right, that's exactly right. Dean: So it's very. Taylor Swift probably has 100 million easy, probably more who know her? Dan: Mr Beast has 350 subscribers. You think about that. That's a measurable percentage of every person on the planet. When you think about that, almost that's, yeah, more than. Dean: It'll be interesting to see what he's like at 40. I wonder he's pushing 30. He's pushing 30, now right. Dan: Yeah, I think 26 or 7. Dean: Yeah, yeah, it'd be interesting to see what that does, because we only have really interactive relationships with a very small. I mean you talk about Dunbar's 150, but actually if you see who it is you hang out with, you know in the course of a year. I bet it's less than 15. Yeah, that's less, yeah, but yeah, yeah that's less, yeah, but yeah, I think, these numbers, you know, these huge numbers that come with quadlandia, do they mean anything? Do they actually mean anything, though, you know? Dan: um, well, I think that what I mean to that? Dean: do they have any? If you have that large of a reach, does it actually mean anything to you? Dan: It certainly from a monetary standpoint it does. From a relationship standpoint it's sort of a one-way thing, yeah, I was talking to one of our social media. Dean: We have a social media team here and I said can you bring me up to date? We have a social media team here and I says can you bring me up to date? I'm out there a lot every day, aren't I On Facebook and TikTok and Instagram and everything I said? I'm out there. And LinkedIn I'm out there a lot. And she says oh, yeah, every day there's probably about you know, five to ten new messages are going out from you and I said, that's interesting Because every once in a while I run into someone and someone says boy, I really liked your Instagram the other day and I said yeah, well, I aim to please. That's your whole thing, yeah, but I have no idea what's going out. Dan: And that's, you know, that's only going to be amplified when you take, when AI starts creating or, you know, repackaging a lot of the let's face it, you've got a lot of content out there. You've spoken a lot of words, You've been, you know, if we capture, everything you say basically is captured digitally right. Dean: Yep, Danny's got a lot to say. You do. Yeah that's right and you've got your. Dan: You've got the whole organization. You're the happiest. He's very expressive. Dean: Yeah, he's very expressive. You got a lot of milk, yeah, yeah. Well, anyway we're. I think we're going to start our next big book. We did the three with Ben Hardy, which have been a huge success. And I sent Ben a note. I said it was your idea to do these things, so without your initiative none of this would have happened. And of course you wrote the three books, so without your writing none of this would have happened and we've had really good results from hot leads coming in to coach from the books. It wouldn't have happened if you hadn't done that. But you know the publisher is giving us a call every month Say do you have a new book, do you need a new writer and everything. But we're ready to go. Dan: We're ready. Dean: And I think so it's going to be. I think it's going to be the one that we're doing with Jeff Madoff casting, not hiring. Yeah, it's a nice punchy, you know, it's another one of the punchy titles and so that will come out in coach form in the first week of September. Dan: So that'll be all printed. Dean: I think it went. I think it goes tomorrow to the printer and it'll be printed up. And you know, I don't know what it is, but I think a lot of people are fooling themselves about reach because they're lacking vision and capability. They think if you have reach, you've got something. But I think, if you don't have all three, you don't have. If you don't have all three, you don't have anything. Dan: Well, I think it's, if you have capability if you have capability. Dean: If you have capability but no vision, no reach, you have nothing. If you have vision but you have no capability and reach, you have nothing. You got to have all three. Dan: Yeah, you know it's very interesting. Chad Jenkins and I were talking, you know he's one of the bigger advocates for the VCR formula vision, capability, reach, about the you know the secret of that for people that you know whether we were to express them in capital V or lowercase v and capital C, lowercase c, capital R, lowercase r to see that where somebody self I see a lot of situations where people have a capital C capability that gets discovered and all of a sudden they're thrust into reach that they have no idea, no vision of what to do with. And it's very interesting. So someone that comes to mind. There's a woman, safali Shabari, who I met in Toronto through Giovanni. She was a guest or speaker at one of his Archangel events capital C capability for parenting and that kind of advice and she got discovered by, you know, Oprah and all the mainstream. So she was kind of thrust into the spotlight that was now shining a light on her capability, which brought her tremendous, acute onset reach that she really doesn't have, in my observation, a vision for how to navigate, you know, or what to do with that. They're an abundant reach asset with no vision. You know, to connect the two and I think that happens a lot. I think that happens a lot, that people get thrust into a spotlight and they, you know, have. And often you can have reach without capability too, and that's a problem too, and that's a problem. But if your reach is a result of somebody discovering your capability, that is a big. That's the formula I was. you know I've often talked about Max Martin as a role model you know the guy who's written all the number one songs on the radio that when I really started looking a little bit deeper into it, what I found out was that it was really through the reach of of Clive Davis that Max Martin's capability became. You know that he became Max Martin capability became. You know that he became Max Martin and because he was just a guy in Sweden producing great music, with a capital C capability of making pop songs, you know, and Clive Davis, when he discovered that he, as the president of Columbia Records and the founder of Arista and Jive Records, all of these subsidiaries, he had tremendous reach to both artists and their audiences. Visionary, to pair his artists with this Max Martin capability to create this capital VCR outcome of you know, all the success that Max Martin has had. And it was only through that pairing of a capital C capability with a capital R reach and a capital V vision then it all really became a big thing. Dean: This is my observation. Dan: This is all like live, you know developing, you know thoughts here around it, because I constantly. I run that filter constantly in background, filter constantly in background. But that VCR formula is, I think, a very relevant collaboration tool, that if people were really aware of their capabilities and had transparency to other people's vision, capabilities and reach, that's where the big connections happen, you know. Dean: Yeah, I think it requires a fair amount of conceptual capability that you can. You can sort of depersonalize your situation enough to understand what your capability would mean to somebody else. And you have to have a conceptual ability to see what reach would mean. For example, I was on a podcast on Friday. I was a guest of someone who is a key player in the land development industry across the United States and he's in COACH. So he asked me a lot of questions about coach and I went through and I explained. He's got 10 years in coach and he talked about what each of those concepts meant to him and everything else. And then his podcast is going to go out to 5,000 key players in the land development land development business in you know probably 25 or 30 states and everything else. And so at the end he says you know, I'm going to send this out and I'll send all the coach information, everything else. And I got off the call and I said that was easy. Dan: That was easy. Yes, that all you had to do was stay in your C lane of your capability. Dean: I just stayed in my lane and said what we had done. And then I talked about where I thought we would be with Coach when I was 100. I'm 80 and Coach was 100. And that's kind of a significant statement. It's not the sort of thing you would hear every day from an 80-year-old of what things were going to be like when they were 100 and much bigger at 100 than at 80. And it was really interesting, but that was like an hour middle house and you know I'm just talking, you know really good conversation, a lot of back and forth and you know, both of us asking the other questions and everything else and I said that's pretty cool that goes out immediately to five thousand. That's immediately goes out to five thousand people. Dan: Uh, yeah, yeah I mean that's pretty mean, you know, when you think about this, so of staying in your, in your lane of that's. Part of the great thing is that these things are largely plug and play, you know, like, and it happens. That's why I say a multiplier. You know, with the formula vision plus capability multiplied by reach, that reach is a multiplier. Dean: Well, they're actually. Yeah, I think what it is that two of them are addition, but the third one's a multiplier. Dan: Yes, that's exactly right. Dean: In other words, you can have vision plus reach multiplied by capability. You can have vision plus capability multiplied by capability. You can have vision and capability, vision plus capability multiplied by reach. You can have vision plus reach multiplied by yeah, yeah, yeah but, I, think it's like two of them are inside of our parentheses. You have, you know yeah, then the other that's multiplied by the third one. Dan: Yeah so it's very. Dean: I'm convinced it's three yes From the triple play. So I'm thinking about a tool right now where I said who's got the big idea, who's got the big idea, who's got the ready-to-use capability, who's got the ready-to-use capability? Dan: And who's? Dean: got the ready-to-use reach? Dan: Yes, you know that's fantastic. That would be a very useful tool. I think that's a really useful framework for collaboration. Yeah, it fits so well with our whole free zone operating system, you know? Dean: yeah, because we're surrounded by those those capabilities. Dan: Everybody's got a capability in the form of, uh, their self-multiplying company that they've already kind of established. To get to that point right, most people undervalue. They mostly undervalue their own capabilities and reach. They don't see them as assets in most cases. Dean: Well, even when they have vision, the vision isn't really useful to anyone else. It's only useful to them Right. Dan: Vision isn't really useful to anyone else. It's only useful to them, right yeah? Dean: I mean your vision has to have a lot of room for other people. Dan: That's what. So, chad and I've been talking about this there's the horizontal vision is within your own capability channel. You know they see vision, maybe within how to improve their capability, or internally. All their vision is within the walls of their own company. But where the real benefit comes is with horizontal vision. I said vertical vision is within your own company vision. I said vertical vision is within your own company. Horizontal vision is being able to see what your capabilities paired up with, recognizing someone else's vision that your capabilities could help or how someone else's reach could enhance your capabilities. You know all of those that vertical or the horizontal vision is where the collaborative creativity comes yeah, yeah, there's so much yeah I think you're right that there's, you know, articulating, the thinking tool that helps you recognize and assess what your unique probably unique ability fits within a capability right. That's a thing in your organizational unique ability and your unique teamwork all fit within that capability channel. Dean: Yeah, it was really funny. I was when was it Thursday? I think I was. When was it Thursday? I think I was invited into a workshop here in Toronto and it was the lead master's group. Okay, so the lead master's group is the lead group of all the people who are still at the signature level after 20, 25 years. Okay, and they haven't jumped to the 10 times. They haven't, you know. Their next group would be 10 times. Dan: And they're a long way. Dean: They're a long way off from free zone Anyway, but we're introducing the triple play straight across the program. This quarter. So everybody's getting the triple play. And there was a group, probably about 40, maybe 40 in the room and I would say, three got it, three got the triple play Understood, yeah. And they said, yeah, well, why would I do this? And I said well to differentiate yourself from everybody else. Yeah well, I'm not sure why I would do that and everything else, and so this is why I put the emphasis you have to have a conceptual ability that's apart from you. You're just seeing something that exists, that's big and it's powerful, but it exists outside of you. It's not you. Somebody else's capability exists outside of you. Somebody's vision exists outside of you. And somebody's reach exists outside of you. And you've got to be able to see this as a reality that exists in the world, whether you want to use it or not. These abilities, these capabilities, vision and reach is outside of yourself. Vision and reach is outside of yourself. And then you have to say if I'm going to use what other people have, how do I have to be useful to them, that they would be agreeable to that, and I think that takes a lot of conceptual ability to see how you could be useful to other people. Dan: Yeah, I agree with that, that's true. Dean: Yeah, I think there's. I mean, if you can only see within your own framework, you're not going to be VCRing anything. Dan: Right, exactly, you're only going to be trying to increase, you know, or improve your own limited vision within your own situation and working on your own capabilities, and only with your own reach. It's real. That's where it's like linear. That's linear, yeah, and you know exponential is plugging in to ready to implement reach, vision and technology or capability. Dean: It's really funny because huh, well, yeah, it's who, not how. But you have to see the who's as existing, completely independent of you. They just exist. They're out there, they're doing their thing and they're not going to be interested in you unless there's a big payoff. In other words, they have to see and it was very interesting because when I talked to like first year and strategic coach, you know first or let's say, signature level first or second and people will say well, you have such great people here at coach, how do you find great people? Dan: And I said you know where I live, you know I live in such and such place. Dean: We don't have great people like you find great people. And I I said you know where I live, you know I live in such and such place. We don't have great people like you have great people. And I said I suspect you do have great people, they're just not looking for you. Yeah right, how? How do you have to be such that other great people would be interested in you as an opportunity? Dan: Yeah, yeah, amazing you have to have something compelling you do you? Dean: have to have something compelling. Yeah, not convincing, but compelling. Dan: That's right, you know, shaped with a what's in it for them. Yeah, viewpoint, you know that's. I think Joe's book is amazing to set. I can't. It's one of those things that I can't believe nobody has written that book until now, you know. But just that whole idea of thinking about your vision, capabilities and reach from a what's in it for them perspective, with other people, what you can do for other people, it's almost one of those things that it's so powerful. Dean: That's true. That's true of all new things, though. Dan: Yeah. Dean: I can't believe somebody hasn't thought about this before. Uh-huh. Right right, right yeah. Dan: Oh man, that was. So there was George Carlin. He had a thing, a little you know comment where he was saying how the English language is so incredible that you'd think everything that's possible to say has already been said, you know. But he said I'm going to say things tonight here that have never been spoken in the history of the world. For instance, he said hey, marge, after I finish sticking this red hot poker in my eye, I'm going to go out and barbecue some steaks. Nobody's ever said those words in the history of the world. So it's not. Everything hasn't been said. I thought that was pretty funny actually. So there, yeah, Well we've spent an hour. Dean: We did a good hour, I think so. Dan: I always enjoy these conversations. Dean: Yeah, and. I'm going to, I think yeah you ought to zero in on the tools. You know that, yeah, and I'm going to. Dan: I think, yeah, you ought to zero in on the tool. Dean: You know that I'll give some thought to it, but this is your tool, not my tool. I'll give some thought to it. I love it, All right. Dan: Okay, talk to you next week. Bye. Dean: Okay, bye.
Norman Stiles and I discuss watching Howdy Doody and having a friend on Mr. Wizard; being a welfare worker and writing jokes for Allen & Rossi; writing for the Merv Griffin Show; getting into the Childrens Television Workshop and then Sesame Street; how Sesame Street is taped in chunks; creating Count von Count; Jim Henson not being around; the TV special Out to Lunch; working with Christopher Cerf; writing on the Muppet Show pilot; leaving to create When Things Were Rotten and why the series was cancelled; writing the Space Force pilot for Fred Willard; writing for The Captain and Tenille Show, Fernwood Tonight, and America Tonight; pitching a show for Aaron Spelling called Invisible Reporter; going back to Sesame Street; writing the "Death of Mr. Hooper" episode; the Sesame Street curriculum; guest stars including Phil Donahue; Between the Lions; and living in Hoboken.
Recorded On ( 8/9/24) Featuring : Jesse, Clayton, Archie and Delano. ++++LINKS++++ Email: smartsvillepodcast@gmail.com HomePage: Click to Visit Homepage (smartsville.podbean.com) Facebook: Facebook Page(https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100092156203122)
Send us a Text Message.Good morning, Captain! This week the Puppet Masters of None are back at it with another Ben and Will watch a puppet series for the first time. This time, the boys sit down and watch long-running children's television series, Captain Kangaroo. This beloved series that ran from the 1950s through the 1980s was a staple for many childhood memories of our parents' generation. How will this American morning classic stack up to modern scrutiny and the space to carol spectrum? Is it any better than Howdy Doody? Will Ben and Will ever appreciate a puppet series that was popular before the 1970s? You'll just have to listen to find out!Join the discussion on our discord! https://discord.gg/JDtWJrhPF6Follow us on twitter @PMoNPodcast and Instagram and Threads @puppetmastersofnoneFind out more about the puppet masters on our website: https://puppetmastersofnone.wixsite.com/puppetmastersofnoneOriginal Music Composed by Taetro. @Taetro https://www.taetro.com/
The Howdy Doody Show is one of those pieces of 1950s ephemera that has come to symbolize mid-century American childhood. For over a decade, every weeknight at 5pm, kids all across the country would sit down in front of their parents' tiny televisions and take in the wild west adventures of Buffalo Bob and his puppet sidekick Howdy Doody.The show was disproportionately important in the history of television. It was the first television program to reach 1,000 episodes, one of the first shows to broadcast in color, and it pioneered new ways of marketing products to children. But in the early days of the medium, especially when Howdy Doody first started, the world of television was strange. In many ways, the story of Howdy Doody is the story of the weird, wild-west days of early TV. A story in which programmers, advertisers, artists and money men were inventing everything as they went along. Starting with what to put on television in the first place.581- It's Howdy Doody Time!
Aubrey Solomon and I discussed being born in Canada; not watching TV since the 1960's; going to USC; his movie, The Klutz; working on the tv show The Art of Film; working on the TV show That's Hollywood and using his thesis on 20th Century Fox; he and his partner Steve Greenberg are asked to write a spec script about MLK & JFK; it gets to Jack Klugman; they pitch him an episode he likes; they get hired and moved up to story editors in the same season because they worked fast; Klugman ran the show; Dr. Asten and Sgt. Brill; Marc Taylor; Jack Klugman's brother would find a medical story in the news and get story credit; the writers would watch 60 Minutes for ideas; creating Quincy; his first name; John Astin wanted Dr. Asten's name spelled differently; writing the pilot tv film for Buck Rogers; Lazarus Syndrome; the "Ounce of Prevention" episode of Quincy; Beyond Westworld; Lou Shaw; Frank Lupo; The Fall Guy; Half Nelson; having to write a Quincy without Jack Klugman and a Rockford Files without James Garner; watching Jack Klugman fire a director; Blacke's Magic; Crazy Like a Fox; 40th Anniversary of Howdy Doody; his second book about Fox Studios; working on the Canadian series Danger Bay; 100 Years of the Hollywood Western; his mentor; Jack Haley, Jr.; his film, The Progeny; spending 20 years as a film editor; and writing the story for the fifth Ice Age movie.
Howdy Doody Time 19xx.xx.xx The Kipper Factory
Today we said Howdy Doody to Mighty Misc - originally hailing from Portland, he made a stop in Boston and is now living that Cleveland life. In this episode, we chat about the music scenes in these cities and how they compare to Cleveland, the nostalgia of old cartoons and what our ideal superpowers would be. We also created a new segment called, "Jurbz shows us something weird on YouTube"...so stick around for that.You don't want to MISC this episode - Mighty Misc does a killer performance with tracks from his December album "Boom Bap Derby" and some unreleased songs that may be on his next album "Malevolent Kitchen" (anticipated to drop this summer!). Thanks again, Mighty Misc! Check out his stuff here, follow him on Twitch, and make sure to follow him on IG to keep up with the latest!SONGS PERFORMED:Time BanditsGentleman ThiefDareDevilRap CyborgStrange FolksPssst we now have a Patreon! Subscribe for $5 a month to get exclusive content this year! https://www.patreon.com/LoCLEGrownPlease support LG by following to get the latest episodes, leave us a review and/or 5-star rating, and following us on Instagram!linktr.ee/loclegrown
The Snowflaking of White Privilege. If America is ever to become a pluralistic, multiracial democratic republic we must come to terms with racism and white privilege. Phil Ittner - Ukraine Update - The high price of losing Ukraine. Millions more Americans are getting affordable healthcare because of President Biden - while red states say no to hungry children. A quick summary of the Hunter Biden hearings. The Engoron bomb threat is "a pattern you can't ignore." See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
"Hey kids, what time is it? It's Howdy Doody time", --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/rocky-seale7/message
BIRDS AREN'T REAL! BIRDS AREN'T REAL! It's a pretty catchy chant. Angela takes the lead this week to go over its beginnings, background on the individual that started it, and the popularity with Gen Z-ers. While this is a little different than our other topics, it's definitely a good one to mention and take a look into. For Wacky World News, we grabbed the bull by its horns. Well we didn't but we do converse about the man who fitted his Crown Victoria to transport his bull, Howdy-Doody, from his home in Neligh to Norfolk Nebraska that was pulled over by the police. Please rate and review us on your podcast host of choice. Follow us on Instagram- @TWRD_Podcast Website/Merch- https://sites.google.com/view/twrdpodcast/home Email - Thewatersrundeeppodcast@gmail.com --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/christopher-waters8/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/christopher-waters8/support
We are back this episode with a guest host...JMo from Bootleggers and Baptists returns! He is here to talk about Con-Artists. Charles Ponzi, D.B. Cooper, and Frank Abagnale Jr. are the three covered in this episode. We found out Amanda does not appreciate D.B. Cooper's demands, and Chris hates Tom Hanks. Wacky Worlds News brings back our favorite Florida person topic regarding a baby alligator that was stolen for a woman's birthday pictures. Be sure to check out Bootleggers and Baptists' new EP "ASIDE" releasing on 10/28/23 everywhere you stream music! Birds Aren't Real writeup in case you can't find it: BIRDS AREN'T REAL! BIRDS AREN'T REAL! It's a pretty catchy chant. Angela takes the lead this week to go over its beginnings, background on the individual that started it, and the popularity with Gen Z-ers. While this is a little different than our other topics, it's definitely a good one to mention and take a look into. For Wacky World News, we grabbed the bull by its horns. Well we didn't but we do converse about the man who fitted his Crown Victoria to transport his bull, Howdy-Doody, from his home in Neligh to Norfolk Nebraska that was pulled over by the police. Please rate and review us on your podcast host of choice. Follow us on Instagram- @TWRD_Podcast Website/Merch- https://sites.google.com/view/twrdpodcast/home Email - Thewatersrundeeppodcast@gmail.com --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/christopher-waters8/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/christopher-waters8/support
Hey Kids! What time is it??? PUPPET MASTERS OF NONE REVIEW OF HOWDY DOODY! This week the PMoN gang did something that almost never happens. We sat down and watched a puppet show both Ben and Will had never seen. And boy was it...something. Join us as we give our fresh-eyed take on one of the most famous children's television shows to ever grace the airwaves: The Howdy Doody Show. How will this black and white classic stack up to modern scrutiny and the space to carol spectrum? You'll just have to listen to find out!
Since the dawn of history, children have loved puppets. Long before Kermit, Gonzo, Lamb Chop, Howdy Doody or even the violent 16th-century antics of Punch and Judy, kids worldwide have been delighted by small lumps of clay, wood and fabric being brought to life by master storytellers. Even with all the distractions of the modern world, puppeteers still manage to delight young and old alike… but there's a ghastly yin to this goofy yang: terrifying accounts of kids who've had harrowing encounters with small, inhuman, fully autonomous and evidently evil entities who've assumed the guise of beloved children's characters in order to stalk the youngest and most innocent among us… here are three true-life accounts of these deranged doll-like beings sent to us by those who experienced it. Count von Count is back ….. Count von Count Encounters:https://cryptonautpodcast.com/podcast/152-e-s-m-b-listener-stories-part-10/ https://cryptonautpodcast.com/podcast/203-e-s-m-b-listener-stories-part-17/ The Cryptonaut Podcast Patreon:https://www.patreon.com/cryptonautpodcast The Cryptonaut Podcast Merch Stores:Cryptonautmerch.com - Hellorspace.com Stay Connected with the Cryptonaut Podcast: Website - Twitter - Facebook - Instagram - YouTube
Chip Keyes joined me to discuss Chip being a nickname for William, his mother being a working woman during the war; watching Howdy Doody & The Mickey Mouse Club and wanting to be in to show business; watching Disney and westerns; getting his comedy from his mother's sharp tongue; the influence of The Dick Van Dyke Show; his love of Maverick and James Garner; writing his first sketch in eighth grade; Laugh In becomes a hit and he sees Second City as a way to make sketch performing a career; forming the Portable Circus; becoming a local hit on campus; doing a gig in Hartford; getting George Sherman to be a director; taking the troupe to New York and around the country; a sketch using the word "shit" gets press and a talking to from a Jesus freak; auditioning and not getting SNL; becoming a page; his original plan was to become a teacher; leaving the page program to move to L.A.; SCTV; getting a play produced; his partner, Jeffrey Lippa wants to be an actor; he makes a critical decision; wins on Match Game to give him time to figure out what he wants; goes back to NYC and host a kids show; makes good money doing commercials; Taxi inspires him and his brother Doug to write a spec script; a great note made his spec script better; writes 2 episodes of Sanford; Mort Lachman becomes a mentor; gets hired on Gimme a Break; writes "The Chief's Gay Evening"; does a pilot with George Kennedy; gets job on Valerie; moved to Perfect Strangers; going back to Valerie and being told to come up with stories that could work for Valerie or a replacement; Valerie Harper was tense and a control freak; hard to write for characters who were so nice; Jack Carter; O.J. Simpson; PORKO; Dennis Burkely; getting a GLAAD Award; Valerie condom episode; episode had a warning and was exiled to late night in his hometown; NBC asks for Fire Prevention week and MLK episodes; not liking the AIDS episode after he left; Willard Scott; Edie McClurg doing an episode after almost dying from giardia; Christine Ebersole; Judy Kahan; turning Mrs. Poole from mean to magical; not bringing back Judy Kahan for season 3; the Paris episodes and working on the Eiffel Tower; Jason Bateman and his father direct episodes; Arlene Golonka & Gerald Gordon; Shaky Ground; not being sure of Matt Frewer as title character; George Kennedy was offer only but still read, Frewer would not read; wishing he could have recast with Phil Hartman or George Wendt; "Matt takes"; Matt improvs with a black dildo in front of a young Jennifer Love Hewitt; working with Chris Demetral, Betty White and Marie Osmond; Reagan jokes; Nixon, Reagan, and Trump; writing two episodes of Two of a Kind for the Olsen Twins; the brothers go their separate ways for a while; write Star Patrol; cast Charles Rocket; line producer shoots out of sequence, network doesn't understand; pilot is rejected
From Canadian Thanksgiving to the #picklepizza phenomenon, no topic was off limits in the Walmart and Sam's Club Radio studio last week! Bo kicked things off with an intense round of Yes or No Way Bo, and Liam from Store 3267 in Omaha, Nebraska, finished strong. Later, Chris took on another Chris from Store 5445 in Erie, Pennsylvania, in a game of Take On Me. And things took a bovine turn when Kirby stumbled across the story of a joyriding bull named Howdy Doody in Stop the Press. What else? Chris broadcast live from Distribution Center 6094 in Bentonville, Arkansas, for National Truck Driver Appreciation Week, Dennis from Store 55 in Boonville, Arkansas, weighed in on trending pizza toppings and more. Tune in! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Braves break out, Acuña goes deep twice, Strider goes for Smoltz record, Shohei Otani under the knife, Dartmouth HC dies, Deion does the right thing about death threats until he makes it all about himself, a sure sign Bijan Robinson has made it when the national media starts mocking him, violence in the stands at NFL game leads to death, how Will Levis' former gf used him to get famous, you won't believe who Kim Kardashian is with now and he's an NFL WR, should Nick Chubb's horrific injury be shown on tv? Travis Kelce is delusional, Jack Nicklaus: Sportsman or Dumbass, the day Red Auerbach hung up on me, Tommy Nobis birthday, Guy Lafleur story involving alcoholic slurpees, Babe Ruth, Old Pete, Say Hey Kid, & The Mick stories, talk like a pirate, what Braves player was called Howdy Doody? plus Pete's Tweets, This Day in History, and Ripley's Believe it or not
Clarence and Wendy try to get Steve to talk. Helen and Gail Portie there too. John Dirk nothing to say. Steve eventually talks and PawPaw said Steve ate all the ice cream. Wendy ate some fresh green beans with parents. Steve watching Happy Days. PawPaw, Larry and Horace bought a big tractor. MawMaw already wrote a bunch of letters to Marilyn. MawMaw's garden is beautiful. Eddie and Gail not sure what they'll do. PawPaw bringing Uncle Nicky to the doctor. Quentin and Brent broke the bird feeder at the feed store. JD got a shot in his "hiny." Looking for new trailers. Looked at Jason's watermelon patch. Rode the escalators and Steve got a blue ice cream it's all over his face. Gail gives update that it's April 29, 1976. She doesn't know what they'll do for a new trailer. She's been collecting. Brent had an accident "but he'll survive." Brent misses everyone. Kids are driving her nuts. She got card from Hawaii. Quentin Evans talks a little bit and Jerolyn Sue Adolph. Quentin has no one to play baseball with him anymore. Carolyn was Lady Bug and switched to Howdy Doody. Wendy is Life Saver while Larry Fitzgerald is The Thing. Quentin is the Six Million Dollar Man. Carolyn Bergeron gets on and talks. She's having a terrible day and legs hurt. Kids were watching Scooby Doo and then she cleaned and washed. Got a CB and Horace said she should have something more original. Janie and Teddy got beautiful new Dodge Van. Kyle doesn't want to talk but rather act silly and eat cookies. He and Craig were trying to get a hold of Boney Maronie (MawMaw) and to receive from Craig, Big Foot. Wendy getting ready to move out. They think it's funny seeing everyone going in and out of old Scarabin trailer. Helen Mae and Carolyn only ones to go to church. Jerolyn and she are peeling carrots. Clarence concerned about swimming. Rachel got a new swimming pool and Quentin played all day with her. Wendy continues about how good Mr. Jack's pizza is. Banana pudding. BBQ. Jerolyn was happy that Bonnie got Primary President job. Uncle Bill says the guy PawPaw bought the tractor from stopped by... Lynn possibly. PawPaw took Nicky to doctor. Helen got her beans to go pick and five tomatoes ready. Said nobody wanted to talk but Wendy, Carolyn, Gail, Jerolyn and even PawPaw. Asking Marilyn to be careful with her grandkids. Steve and Quentin made a mess with the ice cream and MawMaw thought PawPaw was watching them. Went to go visit Yvonne and Emmett. Nicky got another shot in the knee. Then she and Clarence gathered their beans. Clarence says they've gotten a lot of work done. He said he's never raised such nice potatoes. Pleads with Marilyn and D.D. to take good care of their grandkids. He loves hearing our voices. Helen Mae said she talked for 30 minutes without recording and can't remember what she said. She had to send all of D.D.'s checks because they put "Louise" instead of "Louis." She's glad they put money in their account because MawMaw's already spent about half of it. She talks directly to Josh (says hi to come see MawMaw) and Jason (on watermelons) and she wishes Deron was there to pick some berries. MawMaw says good night due to a "hard day" coming. Wants to bring Sister Halstead some beans and work around the house, but gnats are so bad. Ate their breakfast and off to work in the garden but looks like a storm because there's a nice breeze going. Tractor fixed. Deron would enjoy it now. Everyone got cards from Marilyn while in Hawaii. Clarence is under the house waiting for her. Watered the tomatoes. Onions and carrots. Called Carolyn who's on vacation and cleaning her house including two days spent on her kitchen. Plays partial song (removed). Wendy will be moving next day. Helen has to go stuff peppers and get some things ready as she struggles to finish the tape. Hopes everyone is still happy and "not too lonesome." No rest for them; "always something going on." Trying to get rid of most of their garden so that Gail can put her trailer in place. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jason-scarabin/message
What did you pay for crack in 1999? How are we just learning about Howdy Doody the bull? Is anything better than Bridget's impression of a corporate office drone?For more content, including the unedited version of Dumpster Fire, BTS content, writing, photos, livestreams and a kick-ass community, subscribe at https://phetasy.com/Join our Substack: https://bridgetphetasy.substack.com/Dumpster Fire Podcast: https://dumpster-fire.captivate.fm/Buy PHETASY MERCH here: https://www.bridgetphetasy.com/ 0:00 - Introduction2:14 - What Is Happening8:05 - Beyond Parody11:36 - Russia So Russian13:38 - Encampment Of Morons19:53 - Weather21:02 - Seed 22:06 - Siri, Please Take My Life24:03 - Dumpster Diving27:33 - Breaking Bridget32:50 - Phetasy News35:55 - The Internet Is Glorious----------------------------------------------------------------------Thanks to our sponsors Seed!- Try Seed's breakthrough probiotic and prebiotic capsule for gastrointestinal and whole body health. Go to https://www.seed.com/dumpster/ and save 30% on your first month with the code "DUMPSTER"----------------------------------------------------------------------PHETASY IS a movement disguised as a company. We just want to make you laugh while the world burns. Buy PHETASY MERCH here: https://www.bridgetphetasy.com/For more content, including the unedited version of Dumpster Fire, BTS content, writing, photos, livestreams and a kick-ass community, subscribe at https://phetasy.com/Substack - https://bridgetphetasy.substack.com/Twitter - https://twitter.com/BridgetPhetasy Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/bridgetphetasy/ Podcast - Walk-Ins Welcome with Bridget Phetasy https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/walk-ins-welcome/id1437447846 https://open.spotify.com/show/7jbRU0qOjbxZJf9d49AHEhhttps://play.google.com/music/listen?u=0#/ps/I3gqggwe23u6mnsdgqynu447wva
Paulding County News Podcast Wednesday 6, 2023 Adopt From Dallas-Hiram Area Shelters: This article highlights the availability of adoptable pets in and around Dallas-Hiram for families looking to welcome a furry companion. It emphasizes the significant number of shelter animals, approximately 6 million annually in the United States, taken in by rescue organizations. Sadly, only around half of these animals, roughly 3.2 million, find homes each year. The article encourages readers to consider adopting a pet from local shelters and provides a list of available animals through Petfinder, catering to various preferences for cuddly or companionable pets. It also mentions that the list is generated using Petfinder data and invites local shelters to list their adoptable pets through Petfinder...........This from the Patch 7-year-old shot, killed at Lithonia gas station, father arrested In Lithonia, a tragic incident occurred at a gas station on Rock Chapel Road, resulting in the death of a 7-year-old boy. The DeKalb County Police Department responded to a shooting incident on September 4th at around 6:30 p.m. The boy's father, 42-year-old Dante Daugherty, has been arrested and is facing charges of two counts of cruelty to children in the 2nd degree and one count of 2nd-degree murder. Further details about the incident are currently unavailable, leaving the community and authorities with many questions surrounding this heartbreaking event..........This from Fox 5 5 teenagers killed in crash on I-85 in Gwinnett In Gwinnett County, a tragic car crash occurred at the junction of Interstate 85 and Ga. 316 near Pleasant Hill Road, resulting in five deaths and three injuries. The victims, all teenagers, have been identified as Katy Gaitan (17), Ashley Gaitan (16), Coral Lorenzo (17), Hung Nguyen (18), and Abner Santana (19). Three of them attended Lakeside High School in DeKalb County. The accident involved three vehicles, with one car going over a wall from Ga. 316 to I-85 South, colliding with a third car below around 3:45 a.m. The crash resulted in multiple ejections, and authorities are still investigating the cause of the incident, which remains unclear............This from WSBTV Dragon Con wraps up, raises more than $200K for cancer organization Dragon Con, a popular pop culture, fantasy, sci-fi, and gaming convention held in downtown Atlanta, concluded with over 70,000 attendees from around the world. The sold-out event featured various activities, including parties, workshops, panels, autograph sessions, gaming, and merchandise shopping. A public parade on Peachtree Street was also a highlight. The convention raised at least $200,000 for its designated charity, CURE Childhood Cancer, and has contributed over $1.23 million to charitable causes in the past decade. The next Dragon Con is scheduled for Labor Day weekend from August 29 to September 2 next year...........This from Fox 5 Weather: As we start to cool off this weekend, starting to come into that amazing fall season, we see the highs staying around the mid to high 80's with lows in the 60's. Go out and enjoy some fun summer activities before they are too cool to do it! #weatherreport #coolingoff #high70s #low80s #pleasestaycool #toohot #humidity #mostlysunny #outdooractivities #perfectweather Did you feel it? Earthquake shakes North Georgia border A 2.0 magnitude earthquake occurred in Morganton, a small city in the North Georgia mountains, near the state lines of Tennessee and North Carolina. The earthquake struck at around 4:15 p.m. on a Sunday afternoon. According to the USGS, for residents in the immediate area, it likely felt like a small sharp jolt followed by a few stronger sharp shakes. People further away may not have felt it at all, or if they did, it was described as a subtle gentle shake or two, especially noticeable when sitting still. In the past year, Georgia has experienced a total of 20 earthquakes............This from WSBTV UGA football staffer arrested on speeding and reckless driving charges Jarvis Jones, a former University of Georgia (UGA) football star linebacker and current UGA football staffer, was arrested on Friday night for speeding and reckless driving charges. The incident is part of a pattern within the UGA football program, which has faced scrutiny since a fatal crash in January involving a UGA player and staffer. Coach Kirby Smart acknowledged the ongoing issue, emphasizing the safety of players and the need to eliminate high-speed driving among team members. The program aims to prioritize harm reduction and produce not only successful athletes but also quality citizens who contribute positively to the community..................This from 11 Alive Weird news: Delta flight from Atlanta forced to return after passenger reportedly suffers diarrhea on plane: Delta Flight 194 from Atlanta to Barcelona had to make an emergency landing back in Atlanta due to an onboard medical issue. According to a radio snippet from the pilot, the issue involved a passenger who had diarrhea throughout the plane, leading to concerns about biohazard. The flight, which typically takes eight to nine hours, returned to Atlanta after only six hours in the air. Delta confirmed the emergency landing due to a medical issue but did not confirm the specific nature of the problem. They issued an apology to passengers for the delay and inconvenience caused by the incident..........This from Fox 5 Nebraska Police Issue Citation To Driver With Bull Riding Shotgun In Nebraska, police officers had an unusual traffic stop when they encountered a bull named "Howdy Doody" riding in a car along Route 275 near Norfolk. Officers initially responded to a report about a "vehicle with a cow inside" and were surprised to find a full-size Watusi bull owned by Lee Meyer. The officers addressed traffic violations related to the situation but gave Meyer a warning rather than a ticket. Howdy Doody is a local celebrity known for appearing at parades, but his fame hadn't reached Norfolk at the time of his unexpected ride, leading to some humorous confusion for Meyer's family..........This from Huff Post Here are some things you're talking about: Call us with your thoughts or story at 404.997-8655 From What's Happening in Paulding County: MsJuicy Bowman said “Ok I need some help for a single mother who is due with twin girls in December 27th but will probably have them early! I asked her if she was having a baby shower she said no because she has no one to show up! She has no family hardly any friends! She needs everything! She's renting a room and working her tail off trying to get all she needs! I want to throw her a baby shower in my home and am reaching out for donations to get these precious little angels what they need! If you want to donate or buy something for this family or even want to attend the baby shower please please let me know! They say It takes a village and she needs our help! “ Others commented: Gigi Bee “Let me know the date for the shower I'll do the cake!” Erika French “ I would love to come and donate something! I have 2 closings this month so I'd love to help!” Kanika Reeves “ I have 2 Chicco Zip I purchased in 2019. We haven't used them since 2020 and are good until 2026. They unzip so the padding can be cleaned.” Beth Brice “Can you make an Amazon wish list and post it? I would be happy to send something.” Fran Ford “I dont know her but would help give her a shower. She needs to know she isnt alone.” From the Paulding County Sheriffs office Facebook page: The Paulding County Sheriff's office posted to have a happy labor day on Monday. A lot of people thanked them and others hated on them here are the comments. Connie Blair Bullock “Thank you for your protection! Have a great day!” Nevin Young “I am guessing you don't have any weight standards on your department.” William Smith “Thank you for crushing our skulls in!” Thomas C Anthony “Try not to suplex anyone today” Austin Bryan “Happy Labor Day! Stay safe!” #facebook #pages #whatareyoutalkingabout #thisisyourstory #yourstory #yourcommunity #needsyourattention Events: September 8th and 9th at 6 pm is the Rockmart Pro Rodeo Bat attitudes game 1 is Thursday at 6:15 at Sara Babb Park field 3 This Saturday at 2PM dungeons and Dragon's adventure league at bucking goal brewing company Big Rich Brock Comedy will be at VFW post 5408 in Acworth September 9th at 7:30 #eventshappeningnearyou #weekendevents #weekdayevents #pauldingcountyuncensoredfacebookpage #whatyouaretalkingabout #whatsgoingoninpauldingcounty #events #loveevents #getyououtofthehouse #funforthefamily GBI: 29-year-old man dead and three others injured in Dublin shooting: A shooting in Dublin, Georgia, left one person dead and three others injured. The incident occurred at approximately 2 a.m. near the ACE Lounges on East Jackson Street. The deceased individual was identified as 29-year-old Richard Collins, while the conditions of the three injured individuals remain unknown. The investigation is ongoing, with no arrests made at this time. Authorities are seeking information related to the incident, and anyone with details can contact the GBI regional investigative office or the Dublin Police Department. Anonymous tips can also be submitted through various channels. The article also mentions the More Than A Number project designed to assist families affected by tragedy and trauma.............This from 13 WMAZ Interview: www.esogrepair.com www.chattahoochietech.edu www.cuofga.org www.daycosystems.com www.angie.atlcommunities.com www.powerselectricga.com See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Join the Fellas for their post Labor Day special as they road test some news games, talk about a bull named ‘Howdy Doody' and break down why a bunch of squares want to limit everyone to 2 beers a week.
Mike of Brew Crime and I are here with your “daily” BrewVerie Report for this month! We bring you news from all around the world. JT is out on assignment this time but he will be back for the next news report!This episode includes the tragic death of a manatee named Hugh (Justice for Hugh), Howdy Doody riding shotgun, pirates ready to collect your booty, being spotless in Tennessee, staying safe traveling while being LGBTQ+, bus 666 to Hel cancelled, Drake getting demanding in Vancouver, a tornado baby, and more!Follow us on the socials!•BREW CRIMETwitter: https://www.Twitter.com/BrewCrimeInstagram: https://www.Instagram.com/BrewCrimeFacebook: https://www.Facebook.com/BrewCrimeWebsite: https://www.BrewCrime.comContact: brewcrime@pacificbeerchat.com•REVERIE TRUE CRIMETwitter: https://www.Twitter.com/ReverieCrimePodInstagram: https://www.Instagram.com/ReverieTrueCrimeFacebook: https://www.Facebook.com/ReverieTrueCrimeTumblr: https://reverietruecrime.tumblr.comWebsite: https://reverietruecrime.wixsite.com/podcastContact: ReverieTrueCrime@gmail.comSOURCES:https://www.foxnews.com/us/nebraska-man-pulled-massive-bull-spotted-riding-shotgun-car-video-showshttps://www.cbc.ca/news/world/tennessee-zoo-spotless-baby-giraffe-1.6944640https://bc.ctvnews.ca/life-in-prison-no-parole-for-15-years-for-north-vancouver-mass-stabbing-killer-1.6542849https://www.cbc.ca/news/science/india-fourth-country-to-land-on-moon-1.6944716https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/windsor/essex-baby-tornado-dunmore-1.6950808https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/global-affairs-lgbt-unitedstates-warning-1.6950833https://vancouver.citynews.ca/2023/08/30/vancouver-drake-cactus-club-bellinis/https://abc7news.com/oakland-pirates-boat-thefts-jack-london-square-boats-crime/13714685/https://apnews.com/article/australia-brain-worm-parasite-python-faa209ec842076e445e813b471270b76 https://apnews.com/article/power-outage-new-jersey-fish-e2702e32ae38ee20f0295aebd95aae2ehttps://apnews.com/article/frog-lettuce-michigan-meijer-package-spinach-11ef701417c4ca8f7d77dc912cde468dhttps://www.huffpost.com/entry/hugh-manatee-death-high-intensity-sex_n_64c2ba75e4b03ad2b89756b9https://www.huffpost.com/entry/ap-eu-poland-bus-to-hel_n_6489db7ce4b025003ee18a7fhttps://www.upi.com/Odd_News/2023/08/22/bear-breaks-in-Lake-Tahoe-California/5411692735007/This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4442888/advertisement
Mike of Brew Crime and Paige of Reverie True Crime are here with your “daily” BrewVerie Report for this month! We bring you news from all around the world. JT is out on assignment this time but he will be back for the next news report! This episode includes the tragic death of a manatee named Hugh (Justice for Hugh), Howdy Doody riding shotgun, pirates ready to collect your booty, being spotless in Tennessee, staying safe traveling while being LGBTQ+, bus 666 to Hel cancelled, Drake getting demanding in Vancouver, a tornado baby, and more!Sourceshttps://www.foxnews.com/us/nebraska-man-pulled-massive-bull-spotted-riding-shotgun-car-video-showshttps://www.cbc.ca/news/world/tennessee-zoo-spotless-baby-giraffe-1.6944640https://bc.ctvnews.ca/life-in-prison-no-parole-for-15-years-for-north-vancouver-mass-stabbing-killer-1.6542849https://www.cbc.ca/news/science/india-fourth-country-to-land-on-moon-1.6944716https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/windsor/essex-baby-tornado-dunmore-1.6950808https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/global-affairs-lgbt-unitedstates-warning-1.6950833https://vancouver.citynews.ca/2023/08/30/vancouver-drake-cactus-club-bellinis/https://abc7news.com/oakland-pirates-boat-thefts-jack-london-square-boats-crime/13714685/https://apnews.com/article/australia-brain-worm-parasite-python-faa209ec842076e445e813b471270b76 https://apnews.com/article/power-outage-new-jersey-fish-e2702e32ae38ee20f0295aebd95aae2ehttps://apnews.com/article/frog-lettuce-michigan-meijer-package-spinach-11ef701417c4ca8f7d77dc912cde468dhttps://www.huffpost.com/entry/hugh-manatee-death-high-intensity-sex_n_64c2ba75e4b03ad2b89756b9https://www.huffpost.com/entry/ap-eu-poland-bus-to-hel_n_6489db7ce4b025003ee18a7fhttps://www.upi.com/Odd_News/2023/08/22/bear-breaks-in-Lake-Tahoe-California/5411692735007/This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/3268019/advertisement
Dan Wetzel, Ross Dellenger & SI's Pat Forde lead off a special Labor Day edition of the College Football Enquirer with thoughts on all the biggest games and stories to come out of Week 1.On Sunday night, the Florida State Seminoles faced off against the LSU Tigers in Orlando. The most anticipated matchup of Week 1 turned out to be a classic drubbing by the end of the game, as Florida State handled business, leaving Brian Kelly and company wondering what they need to do to bounce back from this early season loss.Big things are happening in Boulder as Coach Deion Sanders led the Buffaloes into battle against TCU to get their first win of the season. Travis Hunter & Shedeur Sanders proved that this Colorado team is here to compete after their dynamic performances in this major Week 1 upset.The SEC had a tough Week 1 as the conference ended up 1-3 vs Power Five opponents. Tennessee took the sole victory over Virginia, but Florida, South Carolina & LSU dropped their first games. The guys discuss how strong this conference will be this season top to bottom.Further north, the Big Ten looked sharp this weekend as Penn State, Ohio State & Michigan all picked up wins to open their seasons. The guys were impressed by Penn State's Drew Allar, had some concerns for Ohio State's Kyle McCord and mixed reviews for Michigan's tribute to Jim Harbaugh.To close out the podcast, the crew wraps up with a trio of segments: Innovative Plays of the Week, Small Sample Heisman & Say Something Nice.1:00 Florida State beats LSU16:15 Colorado & Coach Prime take down TCU29:30 The SEC went 1-3 vs P-5 opponents this weekend38:08 Latest from the Big Ten44:31 College football roundabout48:37 An update on Howdy Doody the bull52:05 The Innovative play of the week55:00 Small Sample Heisman1:01:30 Say Something NiceFollow Dan @DanWetzelFollow Pat @ByPatFordeFollow Ross @RossDellengerCheck out all the episodes of the College Football Enquirer and the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at Yahoo Sports PodcastsThere are risks involved with investing in ETFs, including possible loss of money. ETFs are subject to risks similar to those of stocks. Investments focus in a particular sector, such as technology, are subject to greater risks and are more greatly impacted by market volatility, than more diversified investments. Before investing carefully read and consider fund investment objectives, risks, charges, expenses and more in prospectus at invesco.com.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
The guys start the podcast welcoming back Connor and talking about taking his son to his first Loons match. They then discuss the MN State Fair, and the beers Tony & Dave tried. Then it's on to the nights beers, and a quick discussion about the Loons victory over Colorado. The Loons draw with San Jose is up next which includes the lineup, a quick goal from Pukki, San Jose answering back, tremendous goal keeping from DSC and a VAR decision that could have given the Loons a victory. The guys then make predictions about the upcoming match with NE, followed by some MN Soccer History. They finish the podcast with a funny story about a large bull going for a car ride in Nebraska.
Top Stories - Nebraska man drove his bull around, on his car. Washington rules for use of car horns, an update on Sen. Mitch McConnell's health, North Seattle Little League team returns home.//Guest: Lee Meyer, the owner of Howdy Doody, the car riding bull of Nebraska.//Steven A. Smith has thoughts on who the Democrats should run for President in 2024.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Head to https://tryfum.com/defranco and use code DEFRANCO to save an additional 10% off your order today. END OF SUMMER SALE! Get it before it's gone @ http://beautifulbastard.com P.S. use code "WORKSUCKSIKNOW" at checkout for a lil surprise to kick off your long weekend. Catch up on our latest PDS: https://youtu.be/GUSyoHbNBRs?si=eQ9_v3CFa8udRcUu Check out our daily newsletter! http://dailydip.co/pds Follow me on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/phillydefranco/?hl=en – ✩ TODAY'S STORIES ✩ – 0:00 - Family Vlogger Ruby Franke Arrested in Utah 04:18 - Chats in Andrew Tate's War Room Outline Tactics in Pursuing Dozens of Women 06:27 - WGA & SAG Strike Updates, Selena Gomez Accused of Scabbing 08:05 - Sponsored by Füm 09:02 - Quickie News Round-Up Feat. Howdy Doody the Bull 10:54 - Mitch McConnell Appears to Freeze While Talking to Reporters for the Second Time —————————— Produced by: Cory Ray Edited by: James Girardier, Maxx Enright, Julie Goldberg, Christian Meeks Art Department: William Crespo Writing/Research: Philip DeFranco, Brian Espinoza, Lili Stenn, Maddie Crichton, Star Pralle, Chris Tolve ———————————— #DeFranco #AndrewTate #SelenaGomez ————————————
Connor discusses the incredible story out of Norfolk of police pulling over a vehicle that had a bull named Howdy Doody riding shotgun!
Episode 178: “On a very special episode…” The trio discuss the Top 5 serious moments in American sitcom television, and various forms of Hash.· Learn the French definition/translation of ‘hash'· A terrifying musical robotic gorilla · Who was originally set to play the character of Archie Bunker in ALL IN THE FAMILY?· “It wasn't a noisy chicken!”· Actor Gordon Jump makes the list twice for serious episodes.· Which show was a spinoff from Maude?· What did Michael and Pam say to each other at the end of episode in which he departs THE OFFICE? · Does a Tom Hanks' character die while drunk driving?· Carroll O'Connor crying into a slipper? · “Oh no! George was blown-up in his car!”
Episode 177: “I'm just grateful to live in an age that has PB & J!” Jim, Joseph, and George debate the Top 5 movies in which everyone is a suspect. Also discussed are the best food duo combinations.· Which role was originally intended for Carrie Fisher but has to be offered to someone else when she went to rehab?· Everyone knows about the 3 endings to CLUE, but what about the 4th?· Learn Substitute Swearing Options· John Cleese & Mr. Bean turned down the same butler role in the mid-80s?· Which film exalted writer Truman Capote to Best New Star?· Which John Cusack movie filmed multiple endings to avoid leaks? · Which state(s) dialect did actor Daniel Craig base his detective Benoit Blanc on?· Daffy Duck and Donald Duck in the same movie; what's not to love?· Which film adaptation of her books did Agatha Christie approve of?
Episode 176: “We didn't land on Hickory Farms, Hickory Farms landed on us!” Jim, Joseph, and George offer their Top 5 Untrained Detectives and Best Food Court Eateries.· Cary Grant on a weekly TV series?· How to load up on mall samples when you're a broke teenager· George loses his sci-fi credentials with the Kingdom of the Spiders· Is Perry Mason a murderer?· How does Joseph offend the entire tattoo community?· What does Jim call resurrection pizza?· Pilgrims at the mall?· Which podcast host hard a TV crush on Jennifer Hart?· Water Baptism or Fried Apple Pie – which will Joseph choose? · George's unfulfilled love of the ‘Corndog girl'· The longest CCR grievance letter to dateCCR Special Report:Joseph goes to Puerto Rico for a fast food fried apple pie:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F3eJyZYSvDc
This week Ken welcomes fellow TV obsessive and the man behind the It's About TV site Mitchell Hadley to the show. Ken and Mitchell discuss Indiana, Ken's awful short term memory, growing up in Minnesota, Canadian TV, the Twin Cities, TV Guide's amazing writing, time capsules, futurism, the original source documents, why a period piece will never get it quite right, the golden age of television, sci fi, the benefits of television, how sugar is bad, making us further apart as a society, Howdy Doody, rethinking TV for kids, how crime shows can be instructional, politics on television, doom saying, Nixon getting TV right before he got it wrong, JFK, the 1968 Democratic Convention, Ronald Regan's origin story, the night James Brown saved Boston, The Year of the Sex Olympics, Bread and Circuses, the power of the Beverly Hillbillies, TV moving west from NY to LA, Edith Efron, the fake version of LA, essays, Gomer Pyle, a war show that never discusses a war, dragging TV into a more socially conscious world, allegory, Twilight Zone, how rules can be good sometimes, cringe, shades of grey, Barney Miller, true Broadcasting, Ed Sullivan, Stiller and Mira, Lawrence Welk, Vanilla Fudge, letting your guard down, Dick Cavet, reaction, the best way to interview people , worshiping the creed while forgetting the message, being superficial, things that are important to you, people who grew up watching TV making TV, MST3k, deconstruction, watching sports, '77 Sunset Strip, cookie cutter shows, commercials, TV regulating itself, The Family Hour, Donna Reed, legal dramas, spy shows, The Man from U.N.C.L.E., exposing new generations to shows, It's About TV, TV Guide as a serious historical document, revisiting shows from your youth that end up even BETTER, The Rifleman vs Branded, Rockford Files, Chuck Connors, The Prisoner, Patrick McGoohan, actors with drinking problems, Mitchell's book The Electronic Mirror and Atomic Bombs.
Hey kids, what time is it? Long before Sesame Street, Mister Rogers, or even Captain Kangaroo, there was Howdy Doody. Its creator was a young radio broadcaster nicknamed Buffalo Bob Smith. In this nostalgic and engaging 1990 interview, Smith tells the story of Howdy. And dispels a few myths. Get Howdy And Me by Buffalo Bob Smith You may also enjoy my interviews with Bob Keeshan and Art Linkletter For more vintage interviews with celebrities, leaders, and influencers, subscribe to Now I've Heard Everything on Spotify, Apple Podcasts. or wherever you listen to podcasts.
This is a VERY visual episode, we recommend WATCHING it the first time you check it out. Full video here! It's a Funbearable bonus, folks! The first episode of "DUDE LET'S BEAT...", Chuck's idea for the boys to play through some old school beat 'em ups. We have the lovable Howdy Doody lookalike Andrew Schiavone to join the jamboree to beat GROWL and VENDETTA! Big thanks to Brian Ruppert from Reviewing History for helping us film! Edited by Chuck Staton. Funbearable LIVE shows next week in RI (6/11) + NYC (6/12) and Andrew Schiavone is the NYC show! funbearablepod.com for tix + info! #retro #gaming #beatemup #arcade #comedy #games
Jack isn't the best at voices but man he did he not change that attribute.
Thursday – Jim updates us on his dog groomer battle. We discuss what it means to be a man. Do your parents have a retirement plan. Attorney Glenn Klausman with the Case of Improper Referrals for Colbert Court. The first Date Night Guide with Dani Meyering with date night ideas. Rauce Thoughts with a western theater Thursday. Plus, WOKE News, Trivia & Last Call.
Conflict is inevitable. People are messy. Lessons from decades of church leadership. RESOURCES 1. The Perilous Trinity Deep Dive Church of God General Conference Lawrenceville Church of God 18. Rex's Legacy / Music of Grace / The Loaf - Laura Varnadore Howdy Doody Barney & Friends (the purple dinosaur) UCA Conference UCA Facebook Group When A Word Is Worth A Thousand Complaints (and When It Isn't), Christianity Today, Dec. 21, 2020 9. The Biblical Unitarian Podcast - Dustin Smith 50. Church Plant - Will Barlow (Part 1) The Biblical Unitarian Podcast The Gospel Truth YouTube channel, Marlon Wilson Regional UCA Conferences You Can't Have Milk Without Manure - Handout (pdf file) EPISODE INDEX 00:01:10 - What Is The UCA? 00:02:58 - Interview 00:04:02 - Alan Intro 00:05:01 - Drawing The Line 00:06:14 - Lessons To Be Learned 00:07:43 - Relevance 00:10:05 - Nature of Conflict 00:12:50 - Lowered Expectations 00:15:20 - Self Esteem 00:17:10 - Howdy Doody 00:21:09 - The Dead Aren't Offended 00:22:25 - Father, Forgive 00:23:18 - How We React 00:24:40 - Not Mediating 00:25:36 - Assumptions 00:29:29 - Assume You're Not Perfect 00:30:30 - Not “You Or Them” 00:32:03 - Avoiding the Conflict 00:33:38 - Lighten Up 00:34:22 - Principal and Preference 00:35:19 - The People Who Like Conflict 00:37:41 - Leadership and Driving Away 00:39:28 - Tension Is Good 00:41:54 - Welcoming Conflict 00:44:20 - The Fan Principle 00:49:35 - Serving Outside Your Giftedness 00:51:51 - Specks And Beams 00:52:49 - Understanding our own Grace 00:55:58 - Health 00:58:31 - Next Time, Super Duper 00:59:59 - Events 01:00:38 - Mailbag 01:01:27 - Correction, CT Article 01:02:14 - Welcome 01:03:06 - Recent Debate 01:04:11 - Regional UCA Conferences FEEDBACK Share your voice or share your words. Include your first name and your state or country. Email recording to podcast@unitarianchristianalliance.org Click here to RECORD A MESSAGE Or call: 615-581-1158 LISTENING TIPS Pauses and pacing are hand crafted, artisan efforts. If your podcast app lets you remove silences, please don't. You will enjoy this better with the silences left in. ENGAGE The UCA Podcast email list! Large and enjoyable episode art, additional thoughts from the host, and notifications when there are delays. The UCA events listing. Keep up on what's coming up. Podcast twitter @UCApodcast - Episode announcements Official UCA twitter account @UnitarianChrist Podcast Webpage: https://podcast.unitarianchristianalliance.org
Howdy Doody peckerheads! This week the guys are joined by Brent Wolgamott. Brent is an open book and this episode gets fun quick when he shows the guys one of his openings just a minute or so into the show. We tackle stereotypes, play a round of "Top or Bottom", and learn some new terms. Brent finds out that Chris is his straight spirit animal. I can't do this episode justice in the summary so just enjoy the show.
Tom and Julie and Producer Brett create a raunchy parody t-shirt company called TFU (Totally Effed Up) and come up with their first designs. Available for purchase right now on TeePublic - see link below. Plus Tom prank calls Hollywood Toy & Costume prank again. Also Buffalo Bob's tight pants, Howdy Doody, Jim Jordan's disappearing ass, if Mitch McConnell was the lead singer of a band, Rick Caruso, Big Mouth Billy Bass, that time Billy Bob Thornton got so mad on that radio show, thick laptop jokes, Norad Not Nermal, CSI Miami cold opens, Public Domain Limited, Spahn Ranch Dressing, and more. TOTALLY EFFED UP T-SHIRTS:' https://www.teepublic.com/user/dttfu NORAD NOT NERMAL T-SHIRT: https://www.teepublic.com/t-shirt/36612323-nermal-not-norad JOIN FOREVER DOG PLUS FOR VIDEO EPISODES, AD-FREE EPISODES, & BONUS CONTENT: http://foreverdog.plus JOIN THE DOUBLE THREAT FAN GROUPS: *Discord https://discord.com/invite/PrcwsbuaJx *Reddit https://www.reddit.com/r/doublethreatfriends *Facebook https://www.facebook.com/groups/doublethreatfriends DOUBLE THREAT MERCH: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/double-threat SEND SUBMISSIONS TO: DoubleThreatPod@gmail.com FOLLOW DOUBLE THREAT: https://twitter.com/doublethreatpod https://www.instagram.com/doublethreatpod DOUBLE THREAT IS A FOREVER DOG PODCAST: https://foreverdogpodcasts.com/podcasts/double-threat Theme song by Mike Krol Artwork by Michael Kupperman Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices