Episode Transcript
[00:00:00] Speaker A: Welcome back, dear friends of the silly. Today it brings us to Dumb birthday game from November 25, 1994. Everyone is in fine form here, so it's a good one to listen to while you're prepping your Thanksgiving dinner. This will be provocatively titled Two Virgins and a Doctor. The players. Angela in Holbrook, Hank from Baltimore, Maryland. Ann in Portland, Maine. Keith Shields, producing and playing in studio. Jack Hart in traffic. And a last minute entry, Mike Epstein from the newsroom. The birthdays Joe DiMaggio, John Kennedy Jr. Ricardo Montalban, Amy Grant, Catherine Crosby, Bucky Dent and John Larroquette. And one date in history. In what year did the first football play by Play radio broadcast occur? Episode 263 Two virgins and a doctor gently examines its way to your ears. In three, two and one.
[00:00:58] Speaker B: And you guess how old they are. And our conversation will be just so spirited and so hilarious that you'll say, I'm so glad I'm up at 11 minutes after 3 o' clock on a Friday morning. Thank you. Okay, here's some of the people playing the game now. Some of them I'll introduce you to all of them, including Angela in Holbrook. Good morning, Angela.
[00:01:20] Speaker C: Hi.
[00:01:21] Speaker B: Hi. Have you played the game with us before?
[00:01:23] Speaker C: No, I haven't.
[00:01:24] Speaker B: Oh, you're a virgin to the game, eh?
[00:01:27] Speaker C: Oh, yes.
[00:01:28] Speaker B: I love the way you say that when it's such fire in your voice.
[00:01:31] Speaker C: It's always nice to be a virgin again.
[00:01:33] Speaker B: Oh, I see. Okay. Anyway, I'm delighted to have you and I appreciate you calling. Okay, we have Hank, who is down in Baltimore, Maryland. Hi, Hank.
[00:01:43] Speaker D: Hi, Norm.
[00:01:44] Speaker B: Hi, Hank. Hey, Hank. Hi, Hank. They call you Hank the Hermit. Are you the same Hank the Hermit I married?
[00:01:49] Speaker D: Dorini Ronkin from Natick?
[00:01:52] Speaker B: Are you married to Rainey Ronkin?
[00:01:53] Speaker D: Rainey Ronkin from Natick.
[00:01:55] Speaker B: Oh, I see. But you and she's. And you took her down to Baltimore. You took her away from us.
[00:01:59] Speaker D: She's a nurse and she married me when I was an intern.
She came down here and we stayed.
[00:02:06] Speaker B: Oh, you're. You're a doctor now?
[00:02:08] Speaker D: No, what's left of one.
[00:02:10] Speaker B: What do you mean, what's left of one, eh?
[00:02:11] Speaker D: Well, I've gotten older. I'm. I'm putting it on.
[00:02:15] Speaker B: Oh, you're just a shell of the good looking young intern used to be.
[00:02:19] Speaker D: Shell.
[00:02:19] Speaker B: You've gone from Dr. Kildare to looking like Dr. Gillespie.
[00:02:23] Speaker D: Nothing like that.
[00:02:24] Speaker B: Okay, well, I'm delighted to talk with you. Thank you for being part of this wondrous moment.
[00:02:29] Speaker E: Thank you.
[00:02:29] Speaker D: For having me.
[00:02:30] Speaker B: Okay. Anne is in Portland, Maine, is with us also. Hi, Anne.
[00:02:34] Speaker C: Hi, Norm. And I'm also a first timer, so please be gentle.
[00:02:38] Speaker B: Well, be gentle. I will be kind. I will be kind. If this is your first time.
Otherwise, by the second time, I get just a little rougher. It depends.
Depends on your reaction. You know, you play it by ear.
I know it's funny. You can say anything and make it sound suggestive.
Would you please, Doctor, let me open your mouth. Let me. I've got a tongue depressor. I want to check you out.
Sounds like you're having throat trouble, Hank.
[00:03:07] Speaker D: All that's left of it. Oh, boy.
[00:03:10] Speaker B: There sound like there's nothing there.
What's there now? Don't tell me. I don't want to know.
Okay, we have, of course, Keith Shields, who is our producer.
[00:03:21] Speaker F: Hey, with all these virgins, are we gonna have a sacrifice?
[00:03:25] Speaker B: We may do that, yeah.
[00:03:26] Speaker C: Unfortunately, there aren't any volcanoes in the Northeast. I know. None of the Massachusetts either.
[00:03:31] Speaker B: However, we do have an altar.
[00:03:32] Speaker F: You just stick them in Chelsea or something like that.
[00:03:36] Speaker B: Is this the kind of witty stuff we can have for the next hour or so?
[00:03:39] Speaker C: It's about up to par.
[00:03:40] Speaker B: Oh, God, that's right. In fact, it's probably a little bit better than usual.
Okay. We also have the very lovely Jack Hart, who is very good at the game and has certainly played it a number of times and has got a mind like a steel trap. Just somebody very special.
[00:03:55] Speaker E: Well, you know, we may not have any volcano, but these two virgins are making me mighty hot.
[00:04:01] Speaker G: Whoa.
[00:04:02] Speaker B: Oh, God. That was something.
I'm getting excited myself.
[00:04:05] Speaker C: Calm your hormones.
[00:04:07] Speaker B: Yeah. Easy. Okay, here are the. Here's some of the people born of today. One is a hero. Talking about.
Did somebody just use the word hero?
I have a way of saying, speaking of heroes, and then I find out nobody's ever said that. Oh, we got Mike Epstein. You're gonna. You're gonna play the game with us, too, Mike?
[00:04:25] Speaker G: I guess so.
[00:04:26] Speaker B: Okay, though you can just make noise with the microphone. I've got your microphone on.
We do nothing.
Nothing here except being honest with people. Good. Mike Epstein is a producer here, too, except he's in early. Yes, because you will be doing the new stuff today. I will be in the newsroom.
[00:04:42] Speaker G: Really?
[00:04:42] Speaker B: This fine day, I shall be up in the attic, perhaps, making peanut butter sandwiches and walking around on the ceiling in my plunger shoes.
And here's. I have a bunch of pictures. Vic and Sade. Here's a picture of me in front of the Peoria, Illinois railroad station in 1912.
I have another picture. He'd go on and on like that. He was a very funny character. Do any of you people on the. You're all too young except the doctor who's falling apart right before our very ears. Who probably remembers any of that.
[00:05:17] Speaker C: Before my time.
[00:05:20] Speaker B: I love that. Before my time. I'm sure it was because it goes back a whole long lot of years. And doctor, you don't remember even though you're falling apart and probably around that. Or maybe you're just. Maybe you're only about 25 and you're falling apart.
Maybe that's the way it is being a doctor. Anyway, Today is Joe DiMaggio's birthday, November 25th. I don't need to tell you too much about Joe DiMaggio because he is such a living legend. He's of course with Baseball hall of Fame. His batting average was.325 over a 15 year career. Isn't that incredible? There's hardly anybody even hits.325 one season anymore.
[00:05:58] Speaker G: I mean you hit.285 for two seasons and all of a sudden you're demanding million dollar salaries.
[00:06:03] Speaker B: That's right. And you become the designated hitter. You're the big slugger up there. It's always funny seeing. Seeing the designated hit a hitting 212. And anyway, he has the distinction of becoming the first American League player to earn over $100,000 a year.
Kind of big bucks back then. He holds the hitting streak. And this is what I think most people remember most about him hit. He hit successfully in 56 straight games.
And I don't. Nobody's ever beaten that, have they? I don't think.
[00:06:32] Speaker G: I don't think.
[00:06:35] Speaker B: He was married to actress Marilyn Monroe for a short time.
And there's probably. He's pretty much a man that keeps to himself. But I would think that that whole era there to talk with him, frankly, just to sit down with Joe DiMaggio.
[00:06:49] Speaker F: Wouldn't you be talking with him normally, though?
[00:06:52] Speaker B: I beg your pardon? Oh, yeah, I do. I do a lot, yes. Oh, I mean I know all these stuff. That's why I say just to sit down and talk with him, I think would be an exciting. Is an exciting experience because I sit down with the greats and the near greats and I talk to them all time. But I'm thinking about you lay folk who don't get a chance to do that.
[00:07:10] Speaker G: I'm trying to think he. Does he have like a little restaurant of some kind in New York City. Am I thinking of another former ballplayer?
[00:07:18] Speaker C: Doesn't he have a restaurant in San Francisco?
[00:07:20] Speaker G: That might be the one. I'm not sure, but where I'm going with that is that if he does, we could contact that restaurant and through them, maybe arrange something so that we could actually get Chor Maggio with us to talk about Marilyn Monroe and anything else he wants us.
[00:07:36] Speaker B: That's right, too. He probably would open up to us, wouldn't he?
Pours guts out.
[00:07:42] Speaker G: Everyone pours their guts out to you.
[00:07:44] Speaker B: I know that I have a way of dragging information out of people because they feel like I really care.
[00:07:50] Speaker G: In fact, I was gonna call you up and just spill my guts out to you yesterday afternoon for no reason. I was that heady with. With. With turkey and champagne and everything else.
[00:08:00] Speaker B: Well, you have enough glasses of champagne and you are ready to call anybody before you guts out to him. Hi, is this. I don't care who you are.
Look, you know something.
Anyway, I think we get enough of those kind of calls on the programmers. It is. Okay, Angela, we'll start with you.
[00:08:17] Speaker C: Okay.
[00:08:18] Speaker B: Joe DiMaggio. How old do you think he is?
[00:08:20] Speaker C: About 75.
[00:08:22] Speaker E: Okay.
[00:08:23] Speaker B: And Hank?
[00:08:25] Speaker D: 67.
[00:08:26] Speaker B: 67, says Hank, pulling himself to his full height of 4 foot 11 inches and to the phone. Okay, 67.
[00:08:34] Speaker C: Ann, how about 71?
[00:08:38] Speaker B: About 71. You have such a nice voice, Ann. I think I'm falling desperately in love.
Portland isn't too far from here, is it? No, right up the pike.
[00:08:47] Speaker G: It's only a three hour drive.
[00:08:49] Speaker B: No, not in traffic.
[00:08:51] Speaker G: In traffic. In traffic.
[00:08:53] Speaker B: Oh. See, I live north of here also.
[00:08:54] Speaker G: That's true.
[00:08:55] Speaker B: So I get a head start. And you live north of here also.
[00:08:58] Speaker G: Even further north than you.
[00:08:59] Speaker B: That's right. You do. But I live right in Livermar. We can meet halfway.
[00:09:03] Speaker C: I'll drive to Portsmouth.
[00:09:04] Speaker B: Oh, Portsmouth. Okay. That'd be nice. We can have my daughter join us. Although that isn't exactly what I had in mind either. Okay. Keith, how old do you think Joe DiMaggio is?
[00:09:15] Speaker F: 74.
[00:09:16] Speaker B: 74 says Keith. Notice he's all business. 74.
[00:09:20] Speaker F: Very serious guy.
[00:09:21] Speaker B: Everybody's kidding around and he's. You're all business.
Okay, Jack?
[00:09:25] Speaker E: 75.
[00:09:26] Speaker B: Jack says 75.
[00:09:28] Speaker C: I said 75.
[00:09:29] Speaker B: No, that's okay. We're too.
If you can all say 75. We don't limit the age. You know, the. The specific age to any one person.
[00:09:37] Speaker C: He can be more original, though. I was hoping Jack would say 76.
[00:09:42] Speaker B: And then you'd say.
[00:09:44] Speaker C: That's the spirit.
[00:09:45] Speaker B: Okay, how about this? She sounds so adorable.
Everything she said, she could say. Nathan, you even think about calling me and I'll call the police and you'll be in jail, manacled.
[00:09:59] Speaker C: But I would never say that.
[00:10:01] Speaker B: No, I know that, but I would still laugh if you said that, because I think, isn't that cute? The way she said that. The way she's going to have me beaten. Totally.
Until I begin to look like Dr. Hank.
[00:10:13] Speaker D: Anyway, that's a sad, sad affair.
[00:10:17] Speaker B: I'm sorry. I didn't mean to hit a bad chord there. You sound like a nice man. I thought maybe I could just kid with you.
[00:10:22] Speaker D: But old.
[00:10:24] Speaker B: How old are you?
[00:10:25] Speaker D: 75 going on.
[00:10:28] Speaker B: 75 going on what?
[00:10:29] Speaker D: Like, who knows?
[00:10:32] Speaker B: Who knows what you going on?
[00:10:33] Speaker D: Maybe I'll make 76.
[00:10:35] Speaker B: That's right. Okay. Hey, that's okay.
Mike, what do you think?
[00:10:40] Speaker D: How old?
[00:10:42] Speaker B: Not the doctor, but Joe DiMaggio.
[00:10:44] Speaker G: I'm trying to think.
I'm thinking to myself, where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio? A nation turns its lonely eyes to you.
[00:10:54] Speaker B: Perhaps we can call Simon and. And Mr. Garfunkel and ask them what they think.
[00:10:59] Speaker G: I think that without getting into the spirit of things, I really do think he's 76 today.
[00:11:05] Speaker E: Oh, that is.
[00:11:05] Speaker G: That is the spirit. Yes.
[00:11:07] Speaker B: Yes. And that would. That would make you the leading guesser on this thing because he's eight. He's actually 80.
Really? Wow. Yeah, he's. He's 80 years old.
[00:11:17] Speaker G: Doesn't look.
[00:11:17] Speaker B: No, he. No, he keeps told. What do you say 76 is? Can you tell the difference between a guy who's 76 and a guy who's 80?
[00:11:24] Speaker G: I think it's the amount of wrinkles, the amounts of hair ones still out with their own hair.
[00:11:28] Speaker B: It's the attitude.
[00:11:29] Speaker E: It's the attitude.
[00:11:30] Speaker F: He's even older than Hank.
[00:11:31] Speaker B: That's right. There's a good attitude. That's right. If you have a good attitude, you can. You can be 80 and only look 76.
Okay, so you won that first round talking about, I don't know, talking about. I don't know what I'm talking about. John Kennedy Jr.
And say, I don't believe I have anything on him. You know, any specific sketches. I think, you know, he's the son, obviously, of the late President John F. Kennedy. He's always picked by everybody as the handsomest and sexiest man in the world.
[00:12:04] Speaker G: The sometimes significant other of Daryl Hannah, I think.
[00:12:08] Speaker B: Darryl Hannah. Is he still going with Daryl Hannah?
[00:12:10] Speaker E: I don't know.
[00:12:11] Speaker G: I haven't talked To Dary least she hasn't told me her.
Her significant other list.
[00:12:17] Speaker F: Actually in Current Affair they were talking about. Not that Current Affair is my main news source, but they said something about him having this new babe around.
[00:12:27] Speaker B: Yeah, I think that's true. I think he's got some. Somebody new. Good for him. It's kind of interesting, though. Like in the AP list of birthdays, it says Baseball hall of famer Joe DiMaggio and then the agent. And so at least give some kind of identification for Everybody, including Joe DiMaggio. I think everybody knew he was a Baseball hall of Famer, but under John F. Kennedy, Jr. Just says his name like everybody knows him or either that he doesn't do anything and nobody knows what it is he does.
He's a lawyer, is he not? He practices law in New York or someplace.
[00:13:01] Speaker E: I think he eventually passed away.
[00:13:02] Speaker G: Yeah, I was going to say he had to practice real hard to pass that bar.
[00:13:06] Speaker B: That's right, too. He did flunk it quite a few times. That's. That's quite true. Yeah.
[00:13:10] Speaker E: He's quit practicing. He's doing it for a living now.
[00:13:13] Speaker B: That's very good. As a matter of fact, Joe DiMaggio, in a private conversation with me the other day, said the very same joke.
[00:13:20] Speaker E: Is that right?
[00:13:20] Speaker B: Oh, yeah. Hey, Mike, we'll start with you. John F. Kennedy Jr. Is 36. 36, okay.
[00:13:30] Speaker E: And Jack, well, it was just a little teeny weeny kid at his father's funeral on that same.
[00:13:38] Speaker B: That's right. That's a good way. Good way to figure it. And that was 63.
[00:13:43] Speaker C: No helping.
[00:13:44] Speaker B: That's 31 years ago. I'm sorry.
[00:13:49] Speaker E: I'll say he's 34.
[00:13:52] Speaker B: You'll say he's 34. Okay. And the Keith with that kind of ammunition behind you, just blast away.
[00:13:59] Speaker F: Well, I think he was more four years old. I want to say 35.
[00:14:03] Speaker B: Okay, 35.
And Anne, what do you think?
[00:14:07] Speaker C: I'll say 35.
[00:14:09] Speaker B: 35 also. Okay. And Hank?
[00:14:12] Speaker D: I say 33.
[00:14:14] Speaker B: 33.
And what do you think, Angela?
[00:14:18] Speaker C: I'd say 32 and a half.
[00:14:21] Speaker B: We'll call. We'll round that out to 32, if you don't mind.
[00:14:24] Speaker C: Sure.
[00:14:25] Speaker B: Okay. He's. He's 34.
And Jack Hart said 34.
Very good with that figuring. But you all were very close. You all were the farthest guess away was. I was going to say, Angela, 32, but you said 32 and a half, so you were even not that far away.
[00:14:44] Speaker C: Gee, thanks.
[00:14:46] Speaker D: He's old enough to run to The Senate now?
[00:14:49] Speaker B: Yeah. What is it, 35 or 35?
[00:14:51] Speaker G: 35.
[00:14:52] Speaker B: And for the house, it's 30, I think, isn't it? And you can run for president at 35 also. That's right.
Yeah. It must be so nice to be too young to run for Senate or end up too young for anything.
How old do you have to be.
[00:15:05] Speaker G: To be a United States representative?
[00:15:08] Speaker B: 30, I believe. 30, I think.
[00:15:10] Speaker G: 25 or 30.
[00:15:11] Speaker F: I thought it might be 25.
[00:15:12] Speaker G: Yeah.
[00:15:12] Speaker B: Maybe 25 even.
[00:15:14] Speaker F: I could be a House rep then.
[00:15:16] Speaker B: You could be.
How old are you?
[00:15:18] Speaker F: 25. You're 25 right over the line.
[00:15:21] Speaker B: Did you. Are you. Did you just turn 25? No, I've been.
[00:15:24] Speaker F: I've been. I'm an experienced 25 year old.
[00:15:27] Speaker B: You've been around as the 25 year old.
Yeah. You look like. You look like you're savvy about being 25. Some people carry 25 as a kind of a burden and they don't know what to do with it. But you seem to know what to do with it. Why don't I shut up? Okay.
Ricardo Montalban.
[00:15:45] Speaker G: Ricardo Montalban.
[00:15:49] Speaker B: Yeah. I guess we've all had enough fun with this name. We can move along now.
It is a fun name. Did you ever see the Saturday Night Live thing where the.
[00:16:01] Speaker F: Senor Llamas or Senor Mantle ban.
[00:16:06] Speaker B: No, I have not seen that.
[00:16:07] Speaker D: No.
[00:16:07] Speaker F: I guess it wouldn't be funny.
[00:16:08] Speaker B: No, no. It's probably funny if you see it. Yeah. Other than that, it's really boring anyway. He has one of entertainment's longest successful marriages to Georgiana Young.
They've been married since 1944.
She. She is the sister of Loretta young.
He received four star reviews for his part in the 1982 Star Trek the Wrath of Khan and an emmy for the TV miniseries How the West Was Won.
He appeared as Mr. Rourke on TV's Fantasy island and has done Chrysler commercials. That's the way they list his achievements.
Probably made more from those Chrysler commercials than he did with all the other stuff combined.
[00:16:54] Speaker G: Probably.
[00:16:55] Speaker B: I mean, because that. You can make tons of money with commercials. I know1 Joe DiMaggia and I did the Mr. Mr. Coffee commercials. We made a ton. I remember this. I. Yeah, I bought him a new bat and a ball and everything new. He bought me a glove. We didn't care. We said, hey, we're in the. We're in the box.
Okay. Ricardo Montalban.
Well, you said Montalban. That almost sounds Jewish, doesn't it?
Hello, Mr. Mr. Montalban. But anyway, and we'll start with you. How old do you think Ricardo Montalban is?
[00:17:30] Speaker C: I wasn't really listening. When did you say they were married?
[00:17:34] Speaker B: Okay. 41. No, no, they were married actually. 1944.
[00:17:38] Speaker D: Oh, wow.
[00:17:38] Speaker B: 1944.
[00:17:40] Speaker C: Okay.
[00:17:45] Speaker B: And he was only 73 at the time.
I don't know why I said that. That doesn't make any sense. That's pretty stupid.
[00:17:54] Speaker C: All right.
[00:17:54] Speaker B: You sound so adorable. I'm trying to impress you by being witty, and it's coming out really stupid.
[00:17:59] Speaker C: So hard at it. I'm already impressed.
How about.
[00:18:06] Speaker B: I'm sorry, how much?
[00:18:07] Speaker C: 76.
[00:18:08] Speaker B: 76.
[00:18:09] Speaker G: That is the spirit.
[00:18:11] Speaker B: That's the kind of spirit that nobody seemed to have the spirit.
Okay, Angela, what do you say?
[00:18:19] Speaker C: I think it's about 78.
[00:18:21] Speaker B: 78. Okay.
[00:18:23] Speaker F: And Keith, estasiete?
[00:18:30] Speaker B: 70, huh?
[00:18:34] Speaker F: 77.
[00:18:35] Speaker B: 77. I was gonna. I was just working on it. I was gonna come up with a translation.
What do I look. Do I look ignorant or what? I don't look ignorant. Do. I would have known anyway.
Let's see, Mike, what do you say?
[00:18:51] Speaker G: Ricardo Montalban is now 70?
[00:18:57] Speaker B: Yes, he is 78 years old.
Somebody told me that he was somehow related to George Sanders.
I've never heard of the British. The guy with the British accent and that they sound alike.
Yeah. And that Motoban actually was not.
Well, it says here he's born in Mexico City, but he really wasn't Hispanic at all. That was you shaking the accent. No, I mean, that's what somebody told me. I don't know. Was he Irish?
I don't know. I think they did say that. I think you were the guy who told me.
Hey, Jack, how old do you think that this Senor Montalban is?
[00:19:37] Speaker E: And as he gets older, his skin gets more like fine Corinthian leather.
[00:19:48] Speaker B: 75. 75. Thought somebody would say. And he looks marvelous. I know. That was Fernando Lamas.
Hank, what do you say?
[00:19:57] Speaker D: I'm gonna try 79.
[00:19:59] Speaker B: Okay. Now, you're a doctor, so you should know. You should be able to judge ages of people simply by the coloring of their skin or their.
[00:20:07] Speaker D: You know, that's dermatologist. I'm not one of those.
[00:20:09] Speaker B: Oh, I'm sorry I insulted you. I. I know. I really hu. You with that.
What was your. What was your specialty?
[00:20:17] Speaker D: Mine?
[00:20:18] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:20:19] Speaker D: Pulmonary diseases.
[00:20:20] Speaker B: Oh, really? Yeah.
I can't think of too many pulmonary disease jokes. That is. That is a very sensitive area.
[00:20:29] Speaker D: Leave that alone.
[00:20:30] Speaker B: I will leave that alone too. You see, I have. I have asthmatic something. I'm I'm. Anyway.
[00:20:38] Speaker F: Took the air out of me.
[00:20:39] Speaker B: Yeah. That kind of finished me off for the rest of this game.
Well, teach me Amy. Amy Grant.
Oh, has a birthday.
[00:20:50] Speaker G: Well, before we talk about Amy, when we have.
[00:20:53] Speaker B: Oh, I'm sorry. We didn't figure it. Won this one. That's right. I'm sorry. He's 74. 74. So we had Jackson 75, and that's about it. Nobody said to 73.
And nobody said 74 out of the button. So Jack has now got two correct answers.
Yeah. And Mike has one as we go to Amy Grant.
Singer Amy Grant had a hit baby. A hit record called Baby Baby. And she used to do gospel songs at the beginning. Yeah, yeah, it was. It's kind of interesting. I don't know whether I should. Whether I should wait till she releases the news or I should say it, but she has converted to Judaism for me.
[00:21:37] Speaker G: Really?
[00:21:38] Speaker B: Oh, yeah. Yeah.
[00:21:39] Speaker G: You have that kind of an effect on.
[00:21:40] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah. She said, I don't care, but whatever you are, I want to be.
If you know how devout she is to her own religion, that sounds even more inane by the second. Anyway, let's start with. Let's see who we start with this. I'd like to start with you, Hank.
[00:21:55] Speaker D: Amy Grant. I have no. I don't know the lady at all. I'll say 39.
[00:22:00] Speaker B: Okay. 39. And I know that. I know everybody's waiting for me to do something about that 39.
But, you know, I don't feel like going, you know, you see through that 39.
So I won't.
Okay. Keith, what do you say?
[00:22:20] Speaker F: I think she's a little younger. I do like that song Baby, Baby, Baby, too.
[00:22:25] Speaker E: She's a lovely woman.
[00:22:27] Speaker B: Incidentally, I should tell you that that record came out. It was a hit in 1991, if that helps you guess a little bit.
[00:22:35] Speaker F: Oh, you know the song. Well, I would say 34.
[00:22:39] Speaker B: 34 says Keith.
Okay. And Jack, what do you say?
[00:22:50] Speaker E: 33.
[00:22:51] Speaker B: 33.
You really think these things true?
I'm not suggesting what you're right or wrong. I'm just by your sigh and the way you pause and the way you tie in dates and all that. You really do work it out. I think that I just admire. Even when you're wrong, you sound so intelligent.
[00:23:12] Speaker E: It's well practiced.
[00:23:14] Speaker B: It's lovely. Angela, are you impressed with Jack?
[00:23:17] Speaker C: Not really.
[00:23:19] Speaker B: Not at all.
[00:23:20] Speaker C: I'm kidding.
[00:23:21] Speaker B: Okay.
[00:23:23] Speaker C: I think Amy's about 28.
[00:23:25] Speaker B: 28. Okay. And then we have Ann. What do you say?
[00:23:29] Speaker C: I'm gonna say 33 also.
[00:23:31] Speaker B: 33 also. Okay.
[00:23:34] Speaker G: And Mike, I think she's a little on the younger side, but not.
Oh, baby Baby came out in 91.
[00:23:46] Speaker B: Baby baby caught up with the notion.
[00:23:51] Speaker D: Go with it, Vanda.
[00:23:53] Speaker G: I'm gonna say she's 29.
[00:23:56] Speaker B: 29, yes. Okay. Now, Amy Grant is 34. Oh my goodness. 34 years old on this date. Oh, she's pushing along the kid. And so Keith said that. Right on the butt. Good job. Good job. Okay. It's like the members, the staff members, Keith, Jack and Mike have been coming up with all the answers.
[00:24:19] Speaker C: They shouldn't allowed to play. They have all the answers.
[00:24:22] Speaker B: No, they actually don't. But if they win, they don't even win anything. Oh, good. See, the. The winnings, the junkie winnings. The worthless, tasteless, useless things are.
[00:24:31] Speaker E: Yes, we do.
[00:24:31] Speaker F: Yes.
[00:24:33] Speaker B: Okay. Cath. Catherine Crosby from Houston, Texas, actress and widow of Bing Crosby.
That's that one. Now, I don't. I suppose if I told you how old. Well, that wouldn't help you if I told you how old he was when he died because she was not his first wife. Right. And so she could be any age. He could have married somebody actually his own age. But the old guys usually don't when it's their second wife.
[00:24:57] Speaker E: She was about three when they got married.
[00:25:02] Speaker B: Yeah, she had to get permission from.
[00:25:03] Speaker D: Her nurse or something. Anyway, she became a nurse, didn't she?
[00:25:09] Speaker B: Did she become a nurse? I don't know. Was she?
Well, not since she is the widow of being cross banded. They did not get divorced and apparently she was. She was his wife right up to the time he died.
[00:25:20] Speaker G: But can't you still be. Be divorced and be someone's widow if you're.
[00:25:25] Speaker B: Well these days? No, not if they used to do.
[00:25:29] Speaker E: All the Christmas specials things and the.
[00:25:31] Speaker B: Bow Down Juice commercials together. Yeah.
[00:25:36] Speaker E: So I don't think there was any discord, you know, discordant harmony there.
[00:25:42] Speaker B: Any discordant harmony. That is so poetically put. That is so nice.
[00:25:47] Speaker G: These traffic people, they have a way with words.
[00:25:49] Speaker B: They do.
Words is their business, you know.
[00:25:52] Speaker C: Oh, yes, I particularly like tertiary.
[00:25:55] Speaker B: Tertiary.
I like some of the more pompous business terms like my portfolio, my portfolio runneth over and I shall walk in the footsteps of him.
Anyway.
Angela, we'll start with you. What do you. What do you say? How old do you think Katherine Crosby is on this very day?
[00:26:17] Speaker C: I think she was kind of young.
48.
[00:26:20] Speaker B: 48. Okay. And Hank, what do you think?
[00:26:23] Speaker D: 61.
[00:26:25] Speaker B: 61. All right. And Ann.
[00:26:29] Speaker C: 59.
[00:26:30] Speaker B: 59, Keith.
[00:26:34] Speaker F: 54.
[00:26:36] Speaker B: 54.
Okay. Jack, I'd have to say that she's about 62.
That's very good.
[00:26:48] Speaker C: And I want some orange juice now.
[00:26:54] Speaker B: Well, Mike, what do you think?
[00:26:57] Speaker G: I'm going to say 61.
[00:27:03] Speaker B: Okay.
She is.
61 is correct. That's right, Hank.
[00:27:10] Speaker A: Yes.
[00:27:11] Speaker B: And Mike don't know how they got those.
And you both got that. That's. That's very good. Yeah. So that's the only one who does not. Well. Or not. Yes. Angela and Ann are waiting to score. They're waiting for the strategic moments. The men's rally.
[00:27:28] Speaker C: You're supposed to be gentle with us.
[00:27:30] Speaker B: I am gentle. No, I'll say you're waiting for the right moment to score. I didn't say, gee, what is. What stinky stuff you're doing here? You don't have a single correct answer. What's wrong with you? I'm being gentle. I'm saying you're waiting to score because you're both just so lovely.
[00:27:44] Speaker C: Oh, gee, thank you.
[00:27:46] Speaker F: Two virgins are ready to score.
[00:27:48] Speaker C: Yeah, I'm not sure, you know, that's an awkward.
[00:27:52] Speaker B: Virgin itself. I thought you needed two words like virgin.
[00:27:56] Speaker E: Well, not if you're not. If you're looking to end that state.
[00:28:03] Speaker B: Anyway, Mike, Mike and Jack both have two correct answers a piece. And Keith and Hank, one apiece. As we go to Bucky Dent. Remember Bucky Dent, baseball player?
[00:28:15] Speaker F: I got a very interesting story about Bucky dental.
[00:28:18] Speaker B: We'd like to hear it.
[00:28:19] Speaker F: I'm a huge. I was a huge Yankees fan when I grew up. When I was growing up. And I sent away for a Bucky Dent autographed picture back in 1979 when they were really hot and I got back a goose gossage one.
[00:28:35] Speaker B: Is that right?
[00:28:36] Speaker F: No explanation.
[00:28:37] Speaker B: I just.
[00:28:38] Speaker F: For some reason I didn't even know who goose gossage was.
[00:28:40] Speaker B: I wanted a Bucky Dent one.
[00:28:41] Speaker F: It was my favorite.
Very disappointed 10 year old.
[00:28:45] Speaker G: Was Bucky the one who hit that, that infamous ball in the one game playoff with the Red Sox?
[00:28:52] Speaker B: Yes, yes, I was at that game.
And that was sickening. That was sickening to watch that.
Anyway, that's Bucky, that player with the, with the. Was. It was the Yankee shortstop.
And his, his birthday is today back in New York.
[00:29:07] Speaker F: You also did fur coat commercials.
[00:29:10] Speaker B: Oh, did he?
[00:29:10] Speaker D: Yes, he did.
[00:29:11] Speaker B: Yeah.
Hey, listen, Keith, why don't you go first?
How old do you think he is?
[00:29:17] Speaker F: 45.
[00:29:18] Speaker B: 45.
Okay.
And Angela.
[00:29:24] Speaker C: I'm losing my steam here.
50.
[00:29:29] Speaker B: Okay. And Mike, I think I think Bucky.
[00:29:33] Speaker G: Dent is Bucky den today.
Today Bucky Dent is.
[00:29:40] Speaker B: Well, now, doesn't sound like he's stalling at all, does it?
[00:29:45] Speaker G: 47.
[00:29:45] Speaker B: 47.
Okay, Jack, that's 15 years ago.
[00:29:51] Speaker E: 79.
So he's 15 years older than when he got the picture of goose gossage.
Yeah, see that would have to put him at 48.
[00:30:06] Speaker B: 48.
[00:30:07] Speaker C: Okay, and my answer exactly. 48.
[00:30:12] Speaker B: All right.
Okay, and what do you think, Hank?
[00:30:15] Speaker D: 46.
[00:30:16] Speaker B: 46. Okay.
Bucky Dent today is 43.
And I think that.
I think. I guess it's only right that Keith should be the closest since he got a goose gossip shirt or a cap or something.
[00:30:34] Speaker F: No, autograph picture.
[00:30:36] Speaker B: Oh, autographed picture, that's right.
Okay, that means that we have a three way tie with all the members of our staff here with the Keith, Jack and Mike.
And how about John Laroquette, who's a funny guy, goes from Night Court and is Crossroads, Is that the name of his current series?
[00:30:59] Speaker F: It's called the John Larroquette show.
[00:31:01] Speaker B: Okay. It says here, let's see, Born in New Orleans, Emmy winner, assistant d. A. Daniel Fielding on Night Court and a bus station manager on Crossroads. So that's a whole different show called Crossroads. Well, that's, that's what this says. But they may have changed. This book comes out about a year before we use it. I thought that.
[00:31:23] Speaker G: Yeah, I thought it was the John Larraquetti.
[00:31:25] Speaker E: Maybe that was going to be the original title.
[00:31:27] Speaker G: Exactly.
The working title as they say.
[00:31:30] Speaker B: But, but is this bus station manager? Yes, he is, yeah. Oh, okay. So the same thing then, except with a different title. That's right. He was on being interviewed by somebody. He said people who watched him on Night Court never knew what his name was. And now that he's got a show.
[00:31:44] Speaker D: With his name, he's always had the same name.
[00:31:48] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah. I don't have any, any sign here that he was born with a different name?
No, I believe, I believe John La Roquette was gained name he was born with.
That's my guess. And what we're going to do is check the city clerk down at New Orleans in the birth and rec and death records.
John Larroquette. Let's start with you, Mike. How old do you think he is?
[00:32:11] Speaker G: John Larquette? He's been around for a little while, hasn't he? I mean, before Night Court he was doing other stuff.
[00:32:17] Speaker E: I think he was a disc jockey.
[00:32:19] Speaker G: What is he really?
Okay, well that changes absolutely everything.
Gonna have to guess that this guy is 49 today.
[00:32:30] Speaker B: 49 years old today.
Okay.
[00:32:33] Speaker E: Jack, do you know I was in a movie in the same movie that he was in.
[00:32:38] Speaker B: Really? What was that?
[00:32:39] Speaker E: That was an extra in a movie called Second Sight.
[00:32:43] Speaker B: Did they film that here? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And. And you, you were. What did you do? Did you walk up and down the.
[00:32:49] Speaker E: Street and I was an extra. They had a plane that someone had stolen out of Logan Airport allegedly, and drove it through the Callahan Tunnel and drove in through Faneuil Hall. And in the Faneuil hall scene, everyone was to scatter. And I, I didn't exactly scatter. I kind of stood up and sat.
[00:33:08] Speaker B: Back down, kind of waved at the camera. Yes.
[00:33:16] Speaker C: That'S why the movie flopped, probably.
[00:33:17] Speaker B: Oh, yes, that would have been a funny scene, wouldn't it? To watch. And suddenly one of the characters is looking right at you and waving.
[00:33:29] Speaker E: Yeah, I went to go see it. I missed the early show. By the time I got to the second show, they had yanked it out of the bed.
Let's see. John Larroquette, Frank.
[00:33:39] Speaker B: They never bothered to play it beyond the second reel. Yes, that's right. Why waste the electricity of this little booth and stuff? Just.
Anyway, how old do you think he is, John larroquette?
[00:33:52] Speaker E: He is 48.
[00:33:54] Speaker B: 48. Okay. And Keith?
[00:34:00] Speaker F: 47.
[00:34:02] Speaker B: 47.
[00:34:06] Speaker C: And 49.
[00:34:09] Speaker B: And says 49. And Hank says 45.
What do you think, Angela?
[00:34:14] Speaker C: 46.
[00:34:15] Speaker B: Okay, we're now revealing the. The answer is 47.
And that was Keith. So Keith is now very good. I got one more thing for you that might. Yeah, he's very good. Yeah, I'll give you one more. And this is a date. Actually. That's the status, the year. I'd like to know the year this happened. It happened on this date now, November 25th. It was the first play by play description of a football game on radio between the University of Texas and Texas A and M.
It happened on this date, November 25th. Radio station WTAW of College Station, Texas, I assume that might have been a college radio station.
[00:35:05] Speaker F: College Station is a city that's thing halfway between Waco and Dallas.
[00:35:10] Speaker B: My, my.
[00:35:11] Speaker F: One of my best friend's family lives in College Station right now.
[00:35:13] Speaker B: Oh, really?
Okay, I see that.
Okay. And let's see if there's anything else I could give you information on because I've got tons of stuff here.
Now this says about the same thing. It was the first play by play description of a football game broadcast and it was between the University of Texas, Texas A and M. And it happened November 25th. But the idea for us is to find out what year would that have been? I think that's a rather intriguing thing.
Oh, they even beat KDK in Pittsburgh with a first like that.
Let's see. Angela, what do you think?
[00:35:54] Speaker C: I think that's a hard question.
[00:35:56] Speaker B: Okay.
[00:35:59] Speaker C: I don't know. 38.
[00:36:01] Speaker B: 1938.
[00:36:02] Speaker C: The best I can do.
[00:36:03] Speaker B: The first radio broadcast of a football game was in 1938.
[00:36:08] Speaker C: Eh, I have no idea. I'm too young to know things like that.
[00:36:13] Speaker B: Okay, how old? What year were you born?
[00:36:16] Speaker C: I was born in 65.
[00:36:19] Speaker B: Are we up to 65 yet? Is it already 1965?
You see, when you get to be my age, you lose track of time. And that was kind of a play on a little bit of humor there. Like, is it?
[00:36:30] Speaker C: Oh, yeah, yeah.
[00:36:31] Speaker B: Maybe you're too young to appreciate that, too, maybe, because I know I'm before your time.
In fact, when I was born, the earth was a molten lava.
[00:36:39] Speaker G: Wow.
[00:36:39] Speaker B: Oh, yeah. And the earth was not separated from the sky or the sky from the water or anything.
[00:36:44] Speaker C: Were you dodging dinosaurs?
[00:36:45] Speaker B: Oh, no, there was before.
Yeah. Actually, the dinosaurs were not on the Earth yet.
[00:36:51] Speaker D: Oh, oh.
[00:36:52] Speaker B: Oh, no, no.
[00:36:53] Speaker E: Matter of fact, when you started out in broadcasting, you used to stand on top of a rock and yell about.
[00:36:59] Speaker B: The size of it. That's right. And the scripts were all on stone tablets. Yeah, well, it took me a while to get that one out. Okay, Hank, what. What year?
[00:37:09] Speaker D: I think there were enough radios around to have a broadcast like that in about 1927.
[00:37:16] Speaker B: 1927.
[00:37:17] Speaker D: Before that, everybody had an ear set and crystal or one tube.
[00:37:26] Speaker B: Yeah, no, that's. That's quite true. By 27, I believe the beginnings of NBC were on. I think they were. The RCA had put up, was stringing together.
[00:37:36] Speaker F: Yeah, they were reading the blue station.
[00:37:38] Speaker B: Yeah. 1927, I think. I think. I think there might have been a business even before that.
But, Ann. And what do you think? First baseball football broadcast?
[00:37:48] Speaker C: Not much.
[00:37:52] Speaker B: It'd be funny to you.
[00:37:53] Speaker C: I'll say. 27.
[00:37:55] Speaker B: 1927. Okay. It'd be kind of interesting to hear, you know, if they were able to tape it. Obviously they were not. Yeah, but they could have. They could have recorded it on big discs, you know, cut discs and stuff. Be funny to see what their interpretation was, how different it would be the way they did that and the way they would do it today.
[00:38:13] Speaker E: I understand they did it in Latin.
[00:38:17] Speaker B: That far back, eh?
Okay, Keith, what year do you think that was?
[00:38:26] Speaker F: One of the first radio transmissions, I believe, was transmission of A yachting race. I just read this when I went to the Museum of Broadcast Journal or Broadcast Journalism. Yeah. In Chicago. But I know that has nothing to do with this question. Well, but I remember from going back my.
My books from Emerson. I think it's about 19.
I think it's even early. Like 17. 1917.
[00:38:52] Speaker B: 1917.
What year was the. Was the art race?
[00:38:56] Speaker F: It was like, early. It was like Marconi was doing it. So it was like, I think early 1900s.
[00:39:03] Speaker B: Okay.
[00:39:03] Speaker F: I think so.
[00:39:06] Speaker B: And Jack, what do you think?
[00:39:09] Speaker E: 23. 1923.
[00:39:12] Speaker B: 1923.
[00:39:14] Speaker G: And Mike, I was born in 65 also, so this is a little before my time, but I'm gonna guess 25.
[00:39:26] Speaker B: 1925.
Actually, the first football broadcast was even before my time. I suppose if I. If I said that originally, you would all come up with like, 18. 1834.
No, the year actually was 1920. 1920. You would think anybody even had crystal sets in 1920. But I guess maybe they were just beginning to do that.
I wonder if they could sell a sponsor. We have four listeners listening on crystal sets gathered in various sparsely populated places.
[00:40:00] Speaker E: They could sell the products individually.
[00:40:01] Speaker C: I think they all used Ovaltine.
[00:40:03] Speaker B: Yeah, they could. They could actually. They could actually have called up people, I guess. There was no. There are no phones then.
[00:40:11] Speaker E: Well, they could have said things like, harry, do you want to buy this gum?
[00:40:19] Speaker B: What does that mean?
[00:40:21] Speaker E: Well, if there were so few people listening, they could have personalized.
[00:40:23] Speaker B: Oh, oh, I see. We're talking about the sponsors. Yeah, I'm sorry, this is o'. Leary. We've got a vacuum cleaner for you.
Have we got a washing a wringer for you. Anyway, the first football broadcast, 1920, said that Keith Shields wins again. He said 19.
Wait a minute. Let me make sure this is right. No, this is.
I think we have a tie here.
Just one moment. Let me check my sheep.
[00:40:50] Speaker E: I was wearing a tie.
[00:40:51] Speaker D: Just shake your sheep.
[00:40:53] Speaker B: Check my sheep. Yes.
I write everything on the side of sheep. Wool really lasts. Wool is forever.
Yeah. No, Keith, Jack, are the two. Would be the two winners because they're both within three years of 1920.
Keith said 1917 and Jackson 1923. And I don't believe there's anybody any closer than that. And I'd say, no, they're not. And the game is closed.
You cannot appeal this decision.
I made it unilaterally, and I happen to be a friendly dictator.
So actually, Keith has run away with things. She's got three, four correct answers. That's very good.
[00:41:39] Speaker D: Wow.
[00:41:40] Speaker F: Best I've Ever done?
[00:41:41] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:41:41] Speaker D: Very good.
[00:41:41] Speaker B: Considering that you've been working here since a week ago last Friday without a moment's sleep.
[00:41:47] Speaker F: Basically, that's about it.
[00:41:49] Speaker B: Yeah. So I think. I think maybe we ought to consider putting you on that same kind of a schedule in the future. Because you operate a little bit better that way. When you're wide awake, you're impossible.
Okay.
Okay. And you did very well, Jack, also. You did. You got three correct answers.
[00:42:06] Speaker E: Thank you very much.
[00:42:07] Speaker B: Oh, it's our pleasure just to be in your presence more than enough. Isn't that right? Yeah.
And Mike had the two.
[00:42:16] Speaker G: It was a respectable showing, that I says.
[00:42:19] Speaker B: And the Hank, too, had the one.
Yes, one that's respectable. Very, very good, Hank.
[00:42:24] Speaker D: Yeah, not bad for an old man.
[00:42:27] Speaker G: Oh, you're only old in your mind.
[00:42:29] Speaker B: Yeah, you're dwelling on that old mind.
You're not old in the mind, eh?
[00:42:35] Speaker D: Oh, hell no. I'm painting.
[00:42:38] Speaker B: Your. Your mind actually is young. It's the rest of your body. You mean it's falling apart?
[00:42:42] Speaker D: No, I'm painting. I'm an artist now.
[00:42:44] Speaker B: Oh, are you? Oh, yes.
[00:42:46] Speaker F: Grandpa Moses.
[00:42:47] Speaker B: Yeah.
What do you paint?
[00:42:50] Speaker D: Oils. Watercolors?
[00:42:52] Speaker B: Yeah.
What? Mostly scenery or landscapes?
[00:42:58] Speaker D: Portraits.
[00:42:59] Speaker B: Yeah, scenery is kind of a layman's term. Landscape sounds much better.
[00:43:04] Speaker D: You can do off scenery, too.
[00:43:12] Speaker B: Yeah. Are landscapes different than scenery?
I never heard an honest say. I specialize in painting scene and drawing scenery.
[00:43:21] Speaker E: True.
[00:43:22] Speaker B: Some of that sounds kind of funny.
You do like bowls of fruit and little. Little bits of flower sticking out the top and stuff?
[00:43:29] Speaker D: Sometimes.
[00:43:31] Speaker B: Oh, that must be lovely.
[00:43:33] Speaker D: Sometimes.
[00:43:33] Speaker B: Okay.
Hey, thank you very much to all of you for playing the game. Hank, I appreciate you coming on with us all the way from Baltimore.
[00:43:40] Speaker D: I got a question for you.
[00:43:41] Speaker B: By all means, fire away.
[00:43:44] Speaker D: I worked for Westinghouse for a long time and I wanted to ask you about.
At one time they had long jeans and Whitmer watches that they were part owners of.
[00:43:54] Speaker B: Really?
[00:43:55] Speaker D: And now I hear the Whitmer ads up there, is that. Is that a Westinghouse investment?
[00:44:02] Speaker B: Well, I don't know.
[00:44:03] Speaker D: Look it up and put it out.
Is that a Westinghouse Is a Whitney owned Westinghouse.
[00:44:10] Speaker B: Oh, I see. You.
I heard you say that. No, I. I'm looking at the way it's posted here on our computer screen. It doesn't list the owner, just says Whitnauer and Longines.
It doesn't say who owns them. But that could be your homework, Hank. You can look it up and let us know.
[00:44:30] Speaker D: I'll try.
[00:44:31] Speaker B: You're a Good person.
Hey, thanks a lot for being with us, Hank and Angela, a pleasure to have you.
[00:44:38] Speaker C: Thank you.
[00:44:40] Speaker B: Bye bye.
[00:44:40] Speaker D: Bye, Ann.
[00:44:42] Speaker C: It's been a lot of fun.
[00:44:43] Speaker B: It's been.
[00:44:44] Speaker C: And I was very pleased with the response to it had to be you.
[00:44:47] Speaker B: Oh, that's right. You had asked about that. Yeah. Everybody in the world apparently wanted. Wanted to take a shot at that.
[00:44:53] Speaker C: Nice to throw out a non controversial subject.
[00:44:56] Speaker B: It is nice. Well, that's the only kind that we deal with during the night because I happen to be a bubble head.
[00:45:02] Speaker C: Not at all.
[00:45:03] Speaker B: Hey, thanks a lot.
[00:45:05] Speaker C: Thank you.
[00:45:06] Speaker B: And Jack.
[00:45:07] Speaker E: Yeah?
[00:45:08] Speaker B: You're okay in my book.
[00:45:10] Speaker E: Oh, thank you very much.
[00:45:11] Speaker B: Okay. And Pat, thank you. Thank both you guys too. I appreciate it. Thank you, Keith and Mike. And now your day begins. Your day is almost over.
[00:45:18] Speaker F: Thank God. Going to bed.
[00:45:20] Speaker B: That sounds good, doesn't it?
[00:45:22] Speaker A: I hope this episode stuffed you with laughter.
And that will begin and end my Thanksgiving jokes. Closing the vault not a moment too soon and leaving this world a little sillier than we found it for being a virgin again.
Dr. Hank the Hermit. Rainy Ronkin from Natick. Playing it by ear.
Sacrificing on an altar. Jack's steel trap mind plunger shoes for walking on the ceiling before my time. Greats, near greats. And you lay folk pouring one's guts out.
Meeting halfway.
76. That's the spirit. Good attitudes experienced 25 year olds. The wrath of Khan. Fantasy island. Rich Corinthian leather. Mr. Coffee, working hard to impress pulmonary disease jokes which I'm happy they avoided as it would have probably sucked the air out of the studio.
Wherever you are, I want to be Jack Benny. Sounding intelligent even though you're wrong. Discordant harmony Jack's Bing Crosby impression waiting to score Bucky Goose. Jack's Academy award nominated performance in the film Second Sight. WTAW in College Station, Texas. Having a crystal in one tube. You should probably see a doctor about that. Marconi yacht racing broadcasts the everlasting fabric wool Grandpa Moses. The exhausted high priest of sacrifice, Keith Shiels champagne. Mike Epstein. The volcanic Jack Hart. And the man who had heard countless confessions throughout his career, the reverend of the radio, Norm Nathan. I'm your producer, writer and editor, Tony Nesbitt.
[00:47:12] Speaker C: Nice to throw out a non controversial subject.
[00:47:14] Speaker B: It is nice. Well, that's the only kind that we deal with during the night because I happen to be a bubblehead.