Episode Transcript
[00:00:00] Speaker A: Welcome back all you lovers of the silly. The next three weeks will feature dumb birthday games from the same date in consecutive years.
Hang on, maybe the last week is off by a day, but you know I get high marks of trying.
Today is from November 24, 1993, and will be titled Bad Reception and Bad Jokes. The upcoming weeks will be November 24, 1994 and November 25, 1994. But I thought it was supposed to be 1995. At least that's what the dates on the cassette read. It can change once. My copious note taking while listening reveals a different date and or year.
Okay, so our players for this game, Elsa from Maine, Pete and Lawrence, Dorothy from Hyde Park. I'm playing in studio, but maybe not producing. Mike Epstein playing in studio and may be producing in. Jack Hart though is definitely in traffic. The Oscar Robertson, Pete Best, William F. Buckley Jr. Garson Kanin, John Lindsay and Stanley Livingston, I presume. And we get two dates in history. In what year did D.B. cooper jump out of a plane with more than $200,000?
And in what year did Don Kirshner's rock concert debut on the television? Episode 261, baby. Bad reception and bad Jokes winces its way to your ears in 3, 2, and 1.
[00:01:48] Speaker B: Hello. I am that person that pretty lady is singing about and I'm just so flattered.
Okay, hold on a minute. We'll do the lottery numbers and stuff and then we'll play the dbrick. And again, another all star panel.
A bunch of people I know you'll be just so pleased to meet. Thank you.
[00:02:11] Speaker C: You don't need skill.
[00:02:13] Speaker B: You don't have to be afraid.
[00:02:15] Speaker C: You just call home to play the dumb birthday game. Play the dumb, dumb birthday.
[00:02:26] Speaker B: Okay, we are playing the dumb birthday game. And I'm just not excited about that because my life, like I'm sure yours, comes alive during the dumb birthday game.
I think maybe I may be overdoing it just a little bit. Elsa, how you doing?
[00:02:41] Speaker C: Well, I'm being. Getting ready to be the dummy.
[00:02:45] Speaker B: Well, why do you say that? Don't take that negative attitude. You're a very bright lady. You're a smart lady, you have several degrees.
[00:02:51] Speaker C: That's right.
[00:02:52] Speaker B: You take care of a family. You're an incredibly good cook, you're a deep philosopher, and you're a psychologist that helps all the mentally unbalanced people of northern Maine.
So don't talk yourself down.
[00:03:04] Speaker C: Not Northern Maine, Southern Maine.
[00:03:06] Speaker B: Southern Maine. See, I. I'm mixed up.
[00:03:08] Speaker C: Bush country, but I'm not bushy tailed.
[00:03:12] Speaker B: I'M glad. Hey, now, you played this game with us before, then?
[00:03:16] Speaker C: No.
[00:03:16] Speaker B: Oh, you never have.
[00:03:18] Speaker C: First time.
[00:03:18] Speaker B: Oh, okay. Well, that's good. Welcome, Pete, I think is. You've played the game with us before, haven't you, Pete, there up there in Lawrence? Just so darn long ago, Norm. Just so darn long ago that. There you are back again. Well, good enough. And it's a darn nice to be on again. I imagine so. I imagine so. I imagine life for most people is pretty drab until this magic moment. Oh, very Mr. Nathan.
[00:03:42] Speaker C: Oh, how formal.
[00:03:43] Speaker B: I just grabbed.
Boy, are you gonna do this during the whole game, Pete?
Okay, we have. Dorothy is over in Hyde park and is with us today also. Hi.
[00:03:56] Speaker C: Hi.
How are you? Okay, I'm back again.
[00:04:00] Speaker B: That's right. You're the. You have. You're the fellow with the voice that keeps changing.
Is that you coughing or do you have a dog there? Sorry about that.
Oh, I see it, Sid. Pete, back again. Yes. Okay. Okay. Is this your first crack at the game, Dorothy?
[00:04:14] Speaker C: Well, no, I tried it. Oh, maybe six months ago.
[00:04:19] Speaker B: Yeah. Oh, so you're.
[00:04:20] Speaker C: And I figured as long as I didn't need skill or I didn't need a brain, I could give it another whirl.
[00:04:25] Speaker B: Yeah, that's true. Matter of fact, it's a handy.
What is. What did he say?
I'm not known for my bright remarks, but the other members of the panel.
One would be.
Hold on just a minute.
Would be Tony Nesbitt, who's here. I'm just that excited. Hi, Norm. I love the way you raise your hand, by the way, wave at you. That was really very, very nice. That's good. We also have.
Oh, Mike Epstein is with us. Oh, yes, another WBZ ace producer. Hello. How are you? I'm just fine, thank you.
[00:05:04] Speaker D: What a night this has been been.
Steve Allen and the dumb birthday game all in the same.
[00:05:10] Speaker B: All kind of rolling. It's almost like a dream. I notice you've been pinching yourself a lot right through the night. Just.
[00:05:14] Speaker D: I can't control it.
[00:05:15] Speaker B: He does that generally.
[00:05:16] Speaker D: Oh, stupid.
[00:05:18] Speaker B: Is that kind of some kind of. That's kind of a perversion he had.
[00:05:20] Speaker E: Yeah, I thought.
[00:05:21] Speaker B: I thought.
I thought he just pinched himself because he couldn't believe he was actually taking part in a night as festive as all of this.
[00:05:29] Speaker E: Oh, yeah, that helps. When the night is festive, then he gives him a reason to pinch himself, but otherwise it's some compulsive behavior of his.
[00:05:37] Speaker D: And on these other nights like this, I just like to pinch Tony.
[00:05:41] Speaker B: Oh, that's even. That's even.
[00:05:43] Speaker E: That's even more.
[00:05:45] Speaker B: That's even more interesting.
It's a grown. This is a grown married man calling kitchen coop.
[00:05:54] Speaker C: Those are the ones who do it.
[00:05:57] Speaker B: And of course, WBZ's ACE 24 hour traffic network reporters, Jack Clark and I.
[00:06:03] Speaker E: Have never seen said coochie co. No, I'm.
[00:06:07] Speaker B: I'm going. You're real manly.
Yeah.
[00:06:09] Speaker E: And I pinch myself, you know.
[00:06:12] Speaker B: You don't like that part of it. Yeah, yeah. Well, that's. You're a manly kind of pitching yourself person. Yeah. But Mike Epstein is obviously somewhat of a.
[00:06:21] Speaker E: But.
[00:06:21] Speaker B: Yeah, he said.
[00:06:22] Speaker E: He does it while he's saying Gucci.
[00:06:24] Speaker B: Cool.
I. I think. Why don't we get on with the silly, silly game. Okay.
Although.
Oh, yeah. Okay. Oscar Robertson. We're talking about people born on this date. And now It's Wednesday the 24th. Basketball player. Basketball player. He played guard position, but you know all this averaging 25.7 points per game.
Okay, here's some dates now. So this will help you hone in.
[00:06:50] Speaker E: On curious how you could score 0.7. That's what I always say.
[00:06:55] Speaker B: An average of 25.7.
[00:06:56] Speaker E: Yeah. When did he put that basket that he got a point seven on?
[00:07:00] Speaker B: Yeah, See?
Never mind. See, you obviously. You obviously have not dealt with figures.
Anyway, he was MVP in 1964.7.
No, 1964. The 1976 Oscar Robertson Federal court decision is credited with boosting free agency and causing player salaries to Soar in the NBA.
What year that was? 1975. 76.
Yeah. I get suckered into that one, didn't I? Okay, Oscar Robertson, we'll start with you. Elsa, how old do you think Oscar Robertson is? She's going to say, I never heard of him.
You have heard of him. I know you have.
[00:07:48] Speaker C: I don't. I don't know him.
53.
[00:07:52] Speaker B: 53. Okay. What do you think, Pete?
How about 55? 55. Okay. And Dorothy 47. And what do you think, Mike? 58.
[00:08:04] Speaker E: Tony, 64 is MP MVP, which means he was probably 32. 42.
[00:08:15] Speaker D: 52.7.
[00:08:16] Speaker E: 56.
[00:08:18] Speaker B: 56.
Okay. And that's a good way to figure though, the way you did that. It was very nice.
Jack Hart, what do you think? Oh, 50 FOA. 50 FOA.
Okay. Actually, he is 55. You were very close.
Just about all of you.
Pete hit it right on the bottom. Did you know that, Pete, or did you. Just guessing. I was just guessing.
That voice sounded guilty as all hell, didn't it?
I Was just guessing now. I didn't look it up. I don't know, I just was guessing. Oh, sure, okay. Well, anyway, you won that round and we go to Pete Best. Remember Pete Best of the Beatles? The original drummer before?
[00:09:00] Speaker E: What has he done since then? Everyone knows Pete Best is a baker, I believe.
Is he?
[00:09:06] Speaker B: I believe so. Who is he? Well, let me. Let me read what I have here. His name is Randolph Peter Best and he was born in Mardas, India. Did you know that? You probably did know that because you guys know a lot of stuff.
[00:09:18] Speaker C: Okay, what year?
[00:09:22] Speaker B: There's always one in every crowd.
Every crowd always has a person like that and I'm ashamed that it was you in this crowd, Elsa.
Okay, let's see. The Quarry Men performed at Pete's mother's Club. That's what the Beatles were known as originally, you know, that's the Quarry Men.
His mother's club was called the Casbah.
I don't know where the racy.
[00:09:50] Speaker E: I don't know, I suppose there's the.
[00:09:53] Speaker B: The Indian tie in there. Oh, that's true.
[00:09:55] Speaker D: I was going to ask you where was the Kasbah?
[00:09:57] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah. And doesn't say that. I sue those up in Liverpool where the rest of them came from.
After some months they had a dispute with their drummer and Pete sat in with them.
In August 1980, he became a Beatle. When the Beatles were on the verge of success following their first EMI recording session, Pete was told that he was being replaced by Ringo Starr.
The evening Ringo made his first Cavern appearance, a Pete Best fan gave George Harrison a black eye.
I'll follow this story.
I'm reading what it says here, taking.
[00:10:40] Speaker E: Notes Now, I don't know what all.
[00:10:42] Speaker B: Of it means, but in other words, he became a Beatle in 1960 after being with the Quarryman, later became the Beatles. Then when they were just about to reach their success, he was replaced by Ringo Starr. But those are some dates in there that might help you hone in on his age.
Pete Best today, it's kind of interesting.
He's married to Sharon Stone and they have a home just outside of Hollywood where they sell Indian artifacts. I don't. I mean Native American Indian artifacts mostly baskets that she weaves in between making motion pictures.
Anybody? Anybody believe any of that?
I don't know.
I thought I would get a chuckle out of you, otherwise I wouldn't have made it up.
Okay, Jack, Kai, what do you think? How old is Pete Best?
[00:11:34] Speaker E: Pete Best?
[00:11:36] Speaker B: It sounds like one of those.
[00:11:39] Speaker E: What do they call those?
[00:11:40] Speaker B: The Lone Ranger and Tonto things, you know.
Tonto. How come you picked Pete for this important assignment?
Pete Best?
Yes. Okay.
Try not to interrupt when I'm right in the middle of a really classy story. You know what I'm saying? When somebody's telling a joke and they're right or up to hit the punchline and they're just pausing for dramatic effect, it's kind of nice not to say anything at that point.
I got that out of the Steve Allen book. Make him laugh.
I wouldn't have known that. I wouldn't have known that myself. Pete. I would have probably acted stupid and thrown in a line there myself. Okay. Jack, how old is Pete Best?
[00:12:27] Speaker E: Pete best?
[00:12:28] Speaker B: Yes.
[00:12:31] Speaker E: 51.
[00:12:33] Speaker B: 51. Okay. Tony.
[00:12:42] Speaker E: You think before him there was a Pete better?
[00:12:46] Speaker B: Yeah. Yeah.
[00:12:49] Speaker E: Not so good.
[00:12:50] Speaker B: My Pete good, And then Pete better, and then Pete Best?
[00:12:53] Speaker E: Yeah.
[00:12:53] Speaker B: It might have been a sequence. Might have followed in line like that. Yes.
What would come after that?
That's this superlative, I suppose.
[00:13:02] Speaker E: Pete's superlative.
[00:13:03] Speaker B: Yeah. Pete. Pete.
Way above all the. I don't know why. Why are you asking this?
[00:13:09] Speaker E: Because.
[00:13:09] Speaker B: Why am I trying to answer?
Because I'm stupid, that's why.
Okay.
[00:13:15] Speaker E: He's 53.
[00:13:19] Speaker B: 53.
That sounded like Neil Chayette.
Neil Chayette. I'm 53.
I'm glad I said that.
[00:13:32] Speaker E: I'm overcome with emotion. It's hard for you to speak when I see you struggle, so I'm really.
[00:13:38] Speaker B: On a losing streak.
I am so pitiful.
[00:13:41] Speaker E: Get all kind of choked up when I'm watching this, and I.
[00:13:44] Speaker B: This is really awful.
I'll need the security guard to escort me to my car after this program is through.
He probably won't even want to escort you. You take your chances out there in the R R Wild world. You earned it. Fell.
[00:13:59] Speaker E: No, no, after. After's comic about last night's show, he'll escort you to the cop, believe me.
[00:14:04] Speaker B: Mike, what do you think?
Pete Best, how old is he? This very day.
[00:14:10] Speaker D: I think these two are, like, right in the. Right near where he is.
What did Jack say, 51?
[00:14:17] Speaker B: Yeah. And Tony said 53.
[00:14:19] Speaker D: And I'm gonna say 52.
[00:14:21] Speaker B: 52. Okay.
[00:14:22] Speaker E: They're right in that area now, too.
[00:14:25] Speaker B: And, Dorothy, what area do you want to pick?
[00:14:27] Speaker C: I want to pick 52 also.
[00:14:29] Speaker B: 52 also. Okay. And, Pete, I think I'm gonna stick with 55. See where that goes? 55. Okay. Well, that's right. You hit it with Oscar Robertson.
Elsa, what do you think?
[00:14:41] Speaker C: Well, I'll go a little higher. 56.
[00:14:43] Speaker B: 56. Okay, here's 52. 52 is correct.
Yeah. So we got. Dorothy said you said 52. Didn't you do.
And so did Mike and so did nobody else.
Nobody else, that's right. Jack said 51 and Tony said 53.
[00:15:01] Speaker E: So you're pretty close the last birthday by 1 2.
[00:15:04] Speaker B: Yeah, you're very close. You're very close there. Yeah.
[00:15:07] Speaker E: Nothing for being close, huh?
[00:15:08] Speaker B: So I guess what we should do.
[00:15:09] Speaker E: Is take our guesses and either add or subtract one.
[00:15:13] Speaker B: You could do that. Yeah.
[00:15:15] Speaker E: Try that the next time.
[00:15:16] Speaker B: We'll try that with William Buckley, Jr. That's William Buckley, Jr.
Who's probably one of the most effective people on television. Do you see why she talks that way at home?
[00:15:26] Speaker E: Oh, yeah.
[00:15:27] Speaker B: I was with the carrots, honey. I don't imitate it very well.
[00:15:30] Speaker E: Yes, you do.
[00:15:31] Speaker B: You do.
[00:15:31] Speaker C: Good.
[00:15:31] Speaker E: You do it. The one you're doing now is awful, but let's get you a better one.
[00:15:37] Speaker B: William Buckley. Come on.
[00:15:39] Speaker E: Bit of clench jaw. You're doing great.
[00:15:41] Speaker B: Back way. William, William.
[00:15:43] Speaker E: William.
[00:15:44] Speaker B: My name is William Buckley.
[00:15:46] Speaker E: No, that's not too good. That's kind of. What's his name from It's a Wonderful Life? Yeah, yeah, a little bit of that.
[00:15:52] Speaker B: That's Lionel Barrymore. Yeah, it's good we're coming into that season. I'll be able to do that again.
As a matter of fact, one of the networks had, you know, Wonderful Life on the other day. They started early.
Oh, you call me a withered old man. Frustrated old man. George Bailey. I got it. We can do it. Yeah, yeah.
[00:16:14] Speaker E: Okay, now clench it just some more. And you can be like F. F. Lee. I forgot his name already.
[00:16:21] Speaker B: Oh, William, William. William. No, no, no.
[00:16:23] Speaker E: What's the guy from It's a Wonderful Life? I forgot his name.
[00:16:25] Speaker B: Oh, Jimmy Stewart. Right, right.
No, George Bailey. Lionel.
[00:16:31] Speaker E: Wow.
[00:16:31] Speaker B: Well, that's what I just did. No, I don't, but I see. Okay, Pete, let's start. We'll start with you, Pete. What do you. How old do you think William Buckley Jr.
Is?
I'd say would be a Supermatus 62.
Who is that you were imitating? I'm trying to imitate William Buckley, Jr. Oh, I see.
[00:16:59] Speaker E: Very good.
[00:16:59] Speaker B: Oh, yeah. We should have recognized that.
Yeah. Norman, could you bring the car around, please?
[00:17:08] Speaker E: I see.
[00:17:11] Speaker B: Mike Epstein. What do you think?
William F. Buckley, Jr. William F. Wow, that was great. Mike. He did the middle, middle initial.
[00:17:19] Speaker D: I'm wondering if.
[00:17:20] Speaker E: Sounds just like him.
[00:17:22] Speaker D: I wonder how long ago William F. Sr. Might have been around.
[00:17:25] Speaker B: But we don't have that in our.
[00:17:26] Speaker D: In our notes.
[00:17:27] Speaker B: You think there was a senior? Must have been a senior. Yeah. I know that David Berdnight is taking this week off in order to celebrate William F. Buckley Jr's birthday with him in Japan. Yes. No. He's. He thinks he's a big fan of William F. Buckley, Jr.
I asked David one time if he thought he was maybe just a little too affected, though.
He didn't think so, you see, So I. I broke his nose.
Anyway, that was a ridiculous, smart thing to say.
[00:17:58] Speaker E: Yes.
[00:17:59] Speaker B: What do you think? How old do you think he is today?
[00:18:01] Speaker D: 67.
[00:18:03] Speaker B: 67.
Okay. And, Jack, what do you say? I would say that he was most.71.
Oh, that. That really stun, didn't it?
Oh, that sucked. That really sucked.
Oh, jeez.
Elsa, how old do you think?
Oh, if you imitate him, this is the end of our run.
[00:18:33] Speaker E: Give it a try.
[00:18:34] Speaker C: 69.
[00:18:35] Speaker B: 69.
Okay.
[00:18:39] Speaker C: And, Dorothy, let's try 63.
[00:18:42] Speaker B: What do you think, Tony?
[00:18:43] Speaker E: I'm going to have to say 66.
That's true, Norman.
[00:18:50] Speaker B: Yeah, that was pretty awful.
Okay, William F. Buckley, Jr. Is 68.
And let's see now. Elsa said 69, so that's a winner there.
And Mike said 67, so he's a winner.
[00:19:07] Speaker E: I didn't add one, Jack. I said 66. I should have added 167. I would. Unbelievable. I have somebody. See, I thought he was 70, say. Well, yeah, you were. Oh, you had subtract two.
[00:19:18] Speaker B: That's right. The jack said 71. Yeah.
[00:19:21] Speaker E: Oh, he said 71.
[00:19:22] Speaker B: He said 71, but he thought he was 70.
[00:19:25] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:19:25] Speaker B: Yeah. Okay. Okay. So that means that Dorothy has one, Pete won, Elsa won. But Mike has got two. Two victories so far.
As we go to Carson Kanan. Did he. Is he still alive?
Garson Kanan was married to.
To Ruth Gordon. That's right. And they live down here on the Cape. He's a very bright guy. He wrote a number of screenplays and movies and. And Broadway plays, one of which was the one that starred Judy Holiday, which is one of my favorites, was that she was a kind of a flight head who was the mistress of a flight. The flap. Yeah. Flight head.
[00:20:06] Speaker E: Is that.
[00:20:10] Speaker B: What is the name of that? She was an airhead. Yes, she was. And I was a teenager. She was a mistress to. To a.
A junk man who played by William Brock or in the movies by Paul Douglas.
[00:20:25] Speaker E: Which is almost as bad as trying to follow the Beat Beatles story about Ringo Starr getting a black guy because George Harrison punched a fan who Liked Pete. But whatever it was, I can't follow you here either.
[00:20:34] Speaker B: No, but what is the name? What is the name? It was a. It was a great play. It was made into a movie. William Holden. Paul Douglas and Judy Holiday.
[00:20:42] Speaker E: Oh, Brit and the Junk Man.
[00:20:44] Speaker B: The bubble head of the junk man. Yeah.
[00:20:46] Speaker C: I can't remember the name.
[00:20:49] Speaker B: They just. They. In fact, they redid that movie and that was just released within the past year with somebody else who got no, no good reviews and was practically just faded out of the theaters, I think almost as soon as it came in. It's just been a lot of remakes.
[00:21:04] Speaker E: Of movies this year.
[00:21:05] Speaker B: Yeah, that one. That one did not make it.
Anyway, it'll give. One of us will think of it.
[00:21:09] Speaker E: Somewhere along the line.
[00:21:10] Speaker B: Let's start with you, Tony. Ouch. Darson came. Oh, let me tell you.
[00:21:15] Speaker E: He's dead.
[00:21:16] Speaker B: Is he? He's dead. He may. I really don't know.
Well, he isn't that.
No, I know. Ruth Cordon is that sweet lady. And he was an interesting man. He's written a number of books, too. One was why do we have to retire at 65? And he had the history of why 65 is picked as that age.
[00:21:35] Speaker E: Can I ask you when he wrote that book?
[00:21:37] Speaker B: Yes, you can. He wrote that book probably about 20 years ago. 15, 20 years ago. And he wrote the play. I'm trying to think of further back than that. Okay.
[00:21:48] Speaker E: He was younger then.
[00:21:49] Speaker B: And you know Ruth Gordon. He was a little younger than Ruth Gordon. That's right.
[00:21:52] Speaker E: Oh, okay.
[00:21:55] Speaker B: And he was very devoted to her. I remember interviewing him when that. When that 65 year old book came out. But why we retire at that age and how unfair it was, how stupid it was to set that as a.
As the limit.
Oh, I don't know. Said it was set at a time when nobody ever lived to be 65, and so they said it that way so nobody would have to pay pensions, particularly to soldiers and people like that in the service. I'm sorry, how old did you guess how old? Here he is.
[00:22:26] Speaker E: No, no, I was.
Oh, why not?
[00:22:32] Speaker B: 76.
[00:22:33] Speaker E: That's the spirit.
[00:22:35] Speaker B: Okay, Dorothy, what do you say?
[00:22:38] Speaker C: I would say 80.
[00:22:40] Speaker B: 80, okay.
[00:22:42] Speaker E: I was going to say 80.
[00:22:45] Speaker B: And Jack, I know you got all of Carson Kanan's records. You're a big fan.
[00:22:50] Speaker E: I tap my toe to Carson canyon every night.
[00:22:55] Speaker B: 86. 86.
Let's see. Elsa.
[00:23:03] Speaker C: I think I'll take 77.
[00:23:06] Speaker B: And what do you think? Pete?
[00:23:09] Speaker E: That's the strip circle.
[00:23:11] Speaker B: What is. What is that?
[00:23:12] Speaker C: 85.
[00:23:13] Speaker B: 85. Okay.
And Mike.
[00:23:20] Speaker D: 84.
[00:23:23] Speaker B: Okay. Johnson, cana. Today is 81. 81. Let's see. Dorothy said 80.
I know what he said. 82. So.
Yes, Tony, you usually do well and so does Jack. And both of you are totally scoreless.
And that's about as unhappy as you can get with the wish.
[00:23:46] Speaker E: I suppose we would do.
If I get one, I'm happy. But I don't feel good about this game. And next thing you'll be going to dates, which you know is my favorite part of the game.
[00:23:55] Speaker B: Well, we just have one date. We have a couple more birthdays before we get to that. One of whom is John Lindsay. Still a chance. Remember the former mayor of New York? Good looking guy. He was like a movie star.
[00:24:05] Speaker E: The same things about you.
[00:24:08] Speaker B: True.
Do you know, Elsa, how old did John Lindsay? Let me, let me, let me see what it says about him. No, there's no clue. Just says, former New York City mayor John Lindsay.
He was an interesting, very interesting man. Very much.
[00:24:27] Speaker C: Good looking. Handsome.
[00:24:29] Speaker B: Yes, he was. He was a.
Everybody thought he'd be a presidential candidate at one time. He never got to that.
[00:24:36] Speaker C: Something stupid. I forgot what it was.
[00:24:38] Speaker B: I don't remember that. He also became quite ill at one point, which that might have prevented him, although I'm not sure how would you think.
[00:24:49] Speaker C: I'll make him 76.
[00:24:52] Speaker B: That's the spirit.
And what do you think, Pete?
I'll say 77.
[00:25:00] Speaker E: That's the strip.
[00:25:05] Speaker B: And Dorothy?
[00:25:06] Speaker C: I'll say 74.
[00:25:07] Speaker E: That's nothing.
[00:25:11] Speaker D: And Mike, I'm gonna stick with 76.
[00:25:16] Speaker E: Not to spare.
[00:25:17] Speaker B: I'll be quite quiet, you guys.
It's true we're trying to giggle a little bit on this program, but I think we also. I think we're emotionally unbalanced.
I think the WBC staff psych psychiatrist will be in this in a moment with his wife.
[00:25:33] Speaker E: Speaking of people who are emotionally unbalanced, it's that psychiatrist.
[00:25:37] Speaker B: Oh, he is imbalanced. That's true.
I saw him the other day.
[00:25:41] Speaker E: That's why they hired him.
[00:25:42] Speaker B: That's right. He was hitting his knee with a hammer and it didn't fly up or anything.
[00:25:48] Speaker E: What, the hammer?
[00:25:49] Speaker B: No, the hammer or his knee, either one. He couldn't remember which was supposed to fly up. As a matter of fact, he said to me, he said, norm, he said, I have a car that is in such rotten shape that I accidentally hit a horse the other day and they shot the car.
And I said, what kind of a psychiatrist are you anyway? And he said, not a very good One. That's why I don't have business.
That's why I drive old cars. She said. Norm Nathan, ladies and gentlemen.
[00:26:16] Speaker E: Let's hear it from.
[00:26:18] Speaker B: Okay, Tony, what do you think? How old is whoever we're talking about?
[00:26:26] Speaker E: Former good looking guy. Mayor.
[00:26:28] Speaker B: He may still be a good looking guy. That's a former good looking guy. Okay, maybe good looking, former mayor.
[00:26:33] Speaker E: All right, what was he?
[00:26:35] Speaker B: Mayor. When was he mayor? Yeah, see, I should have told that at the very beginning.
But then now you know. But now, see, now you get an unfair advantage of it. Besides, I'm not really exactly sure. I would say during the 50s, I believe. Does that sound right to you guys?
Somewhere in the 50s, I believe.
78.
[00:26:58] Speaker E: That was going to be my answer anyway.
[00:26:59] Speaker B: 78.
[00:27:00] Speaker E: Whether you told me. Even if you told me the day he was born, I was going to get 78 anyway.
[00:27:05] Speaker B: Okay.
You producers are so pigheaded.
Jack, what do you think?
[00:27:12] Speaker E: 81.
[00:27:14] Speaker B: He's sure. Okay. Of course, actually, he's a lot younger than I. I would have guessed he would be. He's.
Listen to the groaning.
Oh, the only one not groaning is John Lindsay. He's 72 today.
Yeah, I thought he would be older than that. He's 72. Was he in his 30s or something when he was married? Yeah, he was quite young. Yeah.
[00:27:38] Speaker E: And good looking.
[00:27:39] Speaker B: And good looking. Yes, he had it all. Good looks. The head of a large metropolitan city. A man destined one day, he thought, to become president of these United States. Yet what happened to him? We'll hear about that right after this.
Stay with us. Okay, anyway, Dorothy got that. She said 74. She's closest. And she now has leaped.
[00:28:05] Speaker E: I mean figuratively leapt or leaped.
[00:28:10] Speaker B: Leapt into the lead or leaped into the.
[00:28:12] Speaker E: Well, who knows?
[00:28:13] Speaker B: Anyway, she's gonna.
Her banner is risen and it's waving over all of our heads because of her lead.
Oh, Jesus.
[00:28:27] Speaker C: I don't think I can stand it.
[00:28:31] Speaker B: I hope nobody's taping this and gonna lock in a room.
[00:28:35] Speaker E: My banner was raised and waving like that. I got arrested.
[00:28:39] Speaker B: Okay. Do you know Stanley Livingston, I presume.
[00:28:47] Speaker E: It's one of the brothers of my three sons.
[00:28:49] Speaker B: That's correct. He was cheating.
[00:28:51] Speaker C: Chip.
[00:28:53] Speaker E: The younger one.
[00:28:54] Speaker B: Oh, the older one.
[00:28:55] Speaker E: Now the young one was Ernie. Oh, of course, with the glasses.
[00:28:57] Speaker B: What was better about the middle one? What was who. What was she?
[00:29:00] Speaker E: Oh, well, that was. That was Chip. And then the older one was. Was Robbie. But before, Before William Frawley came along. When was. When it was William Frawley as bub. There was another brother.
[00:29:13] Speaker B: I Mean, William Frawley was one of Fred McMurray's kids?
[00:29:16] Speaker E: No, no, no, no. He was the original housekeeper, father in law.
[00:29:21] Speaker B: Oh, I see. I thought what a case of miscasting that would have been. I see. Okay.
[00:29:26] Speaker E: I'm kind of. I'm now very nervous because of Jack's knowledge of My three Sons.
[00:29:31] Speaker B: Okay, sure. I tell you what. Let's hold him till later on. See, in case he really does know it won't Kip walk everybody else to follow in his lead.
[00:29:39] Speaker E: Why don't you let him guess it first so I can guess the same thing? I'd like this.
[00:29:43] Speaker B: That's right. You. Neither one of you have anything, so.
Okay, we'll start with you, Jack.
[00:29:48] Speaker E: Thank you very much. I haven't had time to do the math.
Let's see, we get a lot of time here.
[00:29:54] Speaker B: I'll just sit back and perhaps I'm a tune or two and you figure the math. It's okay.
[00:29:58] Speaker E: I could say.
[00:30:09] Speaker B: No, no, I'm supposed to be humming. You're supposed to be guessing.
[00:30:12] Speaker E: Oh, I was figuring if I hummed the theme song to the show.
[00:30:15] Speaker B: Oh, I see. Oh, that was the. Was that what the. Was that what you were humming?
[00:30:18] Speaker E: Yeah.
Oh, my. How was that again? I forgot now.
That's what he does now.
[00:30:32] Speaker B: Cut that out right at the end.
[00:30:37] Speaker E: It was.
Right.
[00:30:39] Speaker B: Sure.
[00:30:40] Speaker E: Thank you very much. And the feet were tapping back and forth.
[00:30:42] Speaker B: Sure, sure.
[00:30:43] Speaker E: Brought to you by your friends in Battle Creek.
The name of the dog was Dog, wasn't it?
[00:30:50] Speaker B: No.
[00:30:50] Speaker E: What was the name of the dog?
[00:30:51] Speaker B: Scruff. Scraps.
Scumbag.
[00:30:57] Speaker E: Tramp.
[00:30:58] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:31:02] Speaker E: See, I'd say he was 44.
[00:31:05] Speaker B: 44. 44, says Jack Tony Nesbitt. What do you think?
[00:31:12] Speaker E: Oh, well, considering he's just a chip off the old block.
Thank you.
[00:31:22] Speaker B: 45. 45.
Okay, add the mic.
Mike Epstein.
[00:31:34] Speaker E: You thought Chip was the one in the middle, but it was an optical illusion.
[00:31:37] Speaker B: I. I've never.
[00:31:38] Speaker D: I gotta admit something. I've never watched My Three Sons.
[00:31:42] Speaker E: Oh, go on.
[00:31:43] Speaker D: No, it's absolutely true. I've never watched an entire episode of My Three Sons.
[00:31:49] Speaker B: Oh, it is higher.
[00:31:50] Speaker E: Episode?
[00:31:50] Speaker D: Well, I mean, I. I've seen it.
[00:31:52] Speaker B: Come on the air and then I've.
[00:31:53] Speaker D: Just very quickly switched it, so I. I really.
[00:31:57] Speaker B: I'm not.
[00:31:59] Speaker D: I'm gonna say 49.
[00:32:03] Speaker B: Well, that was. That was a tortured guess, wasn't it? I thought he was going to commit suicide somewhere during the middle of that.
Okay. How about you, Dorothy? What do you think?
[00:32:13] Speaker C: I'll take a shot at 42.
[00:32:15] Speaker B: 42. Okay.
[00:32:17] Speaker C: I was going to say it.
[00:32:19] Speaker B: You could still say it. Elsie, do you want to say that?
[00:32:21] Speaker C: Yeah, I would say 42. Go ahead.
[00:32:24] Speaker B: Okay. And Pete, what do you think?
I'll say 43. 43 is absolutely correct.
So you guys at 42 were very, very close.
I thought. I thought we were going to have a three way tie there with the Jackers at 44. But the Pete at the very last moment came running out on the field waving his arm arms and saying 43, which is good. We have one more. One more to go with this. Okay, this is a date.
This is. Remember D.B. cooper? Does that bring back a memories? D.B. cooper.
[00:32:57] Speaker E: Yes.
[00:32:59] Speaker B: Yeah. Man called. He called himself D.B. cooper. He was on a Northwest Airlines 727.
He had collected twenty two hundred thousand dollars he collected from the airline as ransom. And when they. When the plane was flying over Seattle, a wilderness in the Seattle area, he jumped out. He jumped out. He was. Had a parachute. Obviously he jumped and was never caught.
[00:33:25] Speaker E: Never found him.
[00:33:26] Speaker B: The money had been. Has been found spread over a wide area. I didn't know where they found all the money, did they. They found.
[00:33:31] Speaker E: I don't believe so, no.
[00:33:32] Speaker B: That would be hard to do anyways.
What's that?
I think they had him on ch. Unsolved Mysteries.
They're still looking for. Yeah, no, they are still definitely still looking for them. No, that's true. They definitely looking. No, as a matter of fact, I.
[00:33:46] Speaker E: Understand they're still looking for them.
[00:33:48] Speaker B: Oh my. Isn't there a bar in Seattle called D.B. cooper or some place?
[00:33:54] Speaker D: I think there's a place right up here in Nashua, New Hampshire called D.B.
[00:33:57] Speaker B: Cooper. That's right, it is. Nashville, New Hampshire. I always get those two cities mixed up.
Okay, the year. What was the year that that happened? That was a. That was quite a big story.
Guy with $200,000 ransom, then parachute out of a plane. It was a heck of a story.
Okay, the year was what. Let's start with.
Let me see. Let's start with you, Elsa.
[00:34:24] Speaker C: I have no idea who he is.
This will be a shot in the deck.
[00:34:29] Speaker B: Shot in the dark.
Yeah, that's good. Shot in the dark.
That sort of means like unknowing guess. 1949, you say? Is that what you said?
[00:34:43] Speaker E: Yeah, I think she's guessing an age.
[00:34:46] Speaker B: 1949. We're asking the years that you understand that.
Yeah, it happened on November 24th. And the. The. That was the what year it was. And what year do you think it was, Pete?
[00:34:58] Speaker E: Can I just say at 49 I'll tell you, those 727s, those are the best planes flying in 49, weren't they?
[00:35:08] Speaker B: 1978, is that what you're saying? Yeah, I don't think it was too far back.
Okay, 1978, that's true.
[00:35:15] Speaker E: If you know.
[00:35:16] Speaker B: If you know aviation and stuff, I suppose. You know when Northwest Airlines had 727s flying. Oh, sure, yeah.
No. Is that what you were suggesting?
[00:35:26] Speaker E: Well, no, she's. Well, just 727s in general. And when I also said 49, that was just kind of funny.
What do they have in 49? Just. Just 27s. Probably sevens.
[00:35:37] Speaker D: Sevens?
[00:35:37] Speaker E: Yeah, they just fly sevens back then.
Okay, that's. I mean, I don't know if Pan Am had whatever 78 of. That's.
[00:35:46] Speaker B: That's kind of. I don't either. Why am I even pursuing this, Norm? I have no idea.
[00:35:50] Speaker E: You asked, I guess, and I'm answering you.
[00:35:53] Speaker B: Dorothy, what do you think?
[00:35:55] Speaker C: I'll say 74.
[00:35:57] Speaker B: 1974. Okay. And, Mike, what do you think this is? Incidentally, before you guess, if you. If you win this round, you. You'll be tied with Dorothy. If you don't, then Dorothy comes out the winner. Well, I mean, regardless of how we do this last round here.
[00:36:17] Speaker E: Okay.
[00:36:18] Speaker B: I just wanted to put the pressure on you because I know you work best under those kind of circumstances.
[00:36:23] Speaker D: Now, I got a couple questions. Yes, he was on a 727.
[00:36:26] Speaker B: Yes. A northwest Airlines.
[00:36:28] Speaker D: And he jumped in over the. In the state of Washington, somewhere in the.
[00:36:32] Speaker B: Around. Around the Seattle area.
[00:36:33] Speaker E: And what's the name of the bus driver?
[00:36:35] Speaker B: The bus drivers.
Bus driver's name was Zachary.
[00:36:44] Speaker D: And where did the flat are you?
[00:36:45] Speaker B: Thought you'd catch me. So. I don't remember where the floor. Stop. Would you stop where Daigo.
[00:36:50] Speaker D: Oh, well, it's very important, but I'm gonna say 1972.
[00:37:00] Speaker B: You just. You sat silent. You just talked like a.
Stop.
I'm making that up. 1972, okay, Tony, what year do you.
[00:37:11] Speaker E: Think I remember what year they made the movie?
[00:37:16] Speaker B: We just took about three hours going through the rest of the.
Suddenly.
[00:37:20] Speaker E: I don't know if the movie came out, you know, two years after or 10 years. Oh, that's right.
[00:37:25] Speaker B: They did make a movie.
[00:37:26] Speaker E: They made a movie. They made a movie in this and one night. That was the late 70s, so it had to happen a couple years before.
At least you would hope so. Yeah, because if it happened after, then we know where he got the idea.
[00:37:40] Speaker B: That's right. It's like a guy reporting a fire that didn't happen till the next morning.
You'd be a little suspicious, especially if he held the insurance on the building.
[00:37:50] Speaker E: But you know what would happen if that happened?
[00:37:52] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:37:53] Speaker E: You know, Don batting would be there.
[00:37:54] Speaker B: Waiting for it to happen. That's right. I'm betting is right now he's had a fire that hasn't even happened yet.
That's right. In fact, he's. He's covering a trailer truck that hasn't even left its, its company yet.
[00:38:05] Speaker E: They're predicting it will overturn later on.
[00:38:07] Speaker B: Overturn? Yes, on a heavily traveled Route 2 in Concord.
But the driver will escape death or serious injury.
1970.
Oh, this is the critical part. Oh, it is 1970.
[00:38:28] Speaker E: I hate this when I have a whole decade to choose from.
Oh, God. Yeah. 75.
[00:38:40] Speaker B: 5, 5.
[00:38:43] Speaker E: 70.
[00:38:44] Speaker B: Coming out in such a shaky way. It started.
[00:38:50] Speaker E: I think, 78. What Pete said is when the movie came out. That's why.
[00:38:53] Speaker B: But, but you're saying 75.
[00:38:55] Speaker E: Yeah, but I'm tempted to say 78. But like I said, that's when the movie came out. So that's why I'm thinking it happened. Then they wouldn't have made the movie so quickly.
75.
[00:39:05] Speaker B: I'm just. You're tormented. I'm desperate.
[00:39:08] Speaker E: I'm desperate for one.
[00:39:09] Speaker B: That's right. And you know, this is the last one.
[00:39:11] Speaker E: I know.
[00:39:12] Speaker B: Oh, my. You know why I'm to trying. Tortured. Yeah. Unless Dorothy and Mike end up a tie. Then we have to go with one more.
Well, then maybe we don't.
[00:39:20] Speaker E: All right, then I'll pray for a tie. I'll pray for rain.
[00:39:24] Speaker B: Jack, what do you think?
[00:39:26] Speaker E: 1981.
[00:39:28] Speaker B: 1981? No.
No way. No, Jack, change it.
[00:39:35] Speaker D: I still have time, man.
[00:39:36] Speaker B: Change your answer, man.
[00:39:37] Speaker E: No, I, I, I feel a gut reaction a. Either that or what I had for sale.
[00:39:41] Speaker B: I was gonna say the year. Now, the year. This is kind of exciting. The year was 1971, and Mike said 1972, and nobody said 1970. So Mike just edges past you. Dorothy.
[00:40:01] Speaker C: Yeah. Give that gentleman a pink cigar.
[00:40:04] Speaker B: Thank you very much. Wait a minute. Wait. Wait a minute. Mike.
Well, Mike has three. Is it tied then? Wait a minute.
[00:40:11] Speaker E: Wait a minute.
[00:40:12] Speaker B: No, Mike has three correct answers. I thought that was his fourth win. No, it's three.
And Dorothy has three. So it is tied.
No good, huh? What do you mean, no good? No, Pete has two.
Elsa one has one. That's correct. And Tony Nesbitt and Jack Hart struck out. Terribly unreleased.
[00:40:33] Speaker E: Was it tied?
[00:40:34] Speaker B: They said it Was. Yes, it is time between Dorothy and Mike. That's right.
[00:40:38] Speaker E: You promised me a tiebreaker.
[00:40:40] Speaker B: Okay, a tiebreaker. Okay, a tiebreaker. I never promised.
Okay, let me see.
[00:40:47] Speaker E: I should have stayed.
[00:40:49] Speaker B: What about In Concert, which later became Don Kirschner's Rock Concert, premiered on ABC tv. Is this a very Quest Talk Forfeit John K.
Premiere? Yeah. First night guests included Alice Cooper, the Almonds, Chuck Berry, Poco, Seals and Crofts, and Myron from the Lawrence Wel Show. I can't think of his last.
I made up the Myron Florin card.
Is that a fair question? If we just forget that question. Yeah. Is that a fair question? Yeah. Okay. What year was that? Then it was. And again, the date was November 24th.
But what year? This is the.
[00:41:33] Speaker E: What was that on NBC?
[00:41:34] Speaker B: It was ABC tv. It was called In Concert, and that later became Don Kirshner's Rock Concert. But that came out of the west coast in it.
[00:41:42] Speaker E: One of his.
[00:41:44] Speaker B: I forget the names of the places he owned out the hill. There was one on the west coast, one on the East Coast.
Big Bowers, Big Rock. What?
[00:41:52] Speaker E: Fillmore? The Fillmore.
[00:41:53] Speaker B: Is that the. Is that the first time he was not. Was he connected with the Fillmore?
[00:41:56] Speaker E: No, Bill Graham. That was connected with.
[00:41:58] Speaker B: Oh, that's right. That's. Oh, yes. Oh, yes. Okay. Anyway, what year would that have been?
[00:42:03] Speaker E: I could never sit up and watch that.
[00:42:06] Speaker B: I remember always just.
[00:42:07] Speaker E: He wanted to get the staff to watch Don Kirsten no matter who was on, because it was, you know, filthy.
[00:42:13] Speaker B: Dirty rock and roll.
[00:42:14] Speaker E: And.
[00:42:14] Speaker B: Well, he would.
[00:42:15] Speaker A: Actually.
[00:42:16] Speaker E: You had to get through Love American Style to see that show.
[00:42:19] Speaker B: That's right.
[00:42:20] Speaker E: That's right.
[00:42:20] Speaker B: That's right. Okay, we'll start with you, Jack. What year do you think that was?
[00:42:24] Speaker E: Oh, let's see.
[00:42:25] Speaker B: 1970.
[00:42:30] Speaker E: The year the whole show started. Of the year, it became Don Kirshner's.
[00:42:33] Speaker B: No, In Concert, it became Don Kirschner's Rock Concert later on. But this is in its original form. It premiere was the first broadcast.
[00:42:41] Speaker E: Yeah. I have to say.
[00:42:42] Speaker B: 1971.
You almost sang that. That was really beautiful. 1971.
Do you suppose managers of other stations are listening and are thinking, boy, I wish we had that program on our station?
[00:43:05] Speaker E: Either that or the.
[00:43:08] Speaker B: They're saying, poor Westinghouse, they'll suffer through anything, won't they, huh?
Okay, Tony, what do you think? What year was that? And of course, this is.
[00:43:18] Speaker E: They're listening, saying, and with that programming, why do they still crush us in the ratings all the time?
[00:43:24] Speaker B: Why do people listen to that.
Nothing funny about either program. Both in bad taste.
[00:43:31] Speaker E: Anyway.
[00:43:31] Speaker B: 1919.
I think I'm going to turn the station off myself.
[00:43:41] Speaker D: 1972.
[00:43:48] Speaker B: Does it seem like we've been playing this thing since about three days ago and being like this is never going to end.
[00:43:55] Speaker E: Maybe we could ask that as a question.
[00:43:56] Speaker B: What?
[00:43:57] Speaker E: When did this game start?
That's right.
[00:44:00] Speaker B: Mike, what do you say?
[00:44:02] Speaker D: I like 72. I'm going to stick with that.
[00:44:05] Speaker B: You like 70.
[00:44:06] Speaker D: I like 72.
[00:44:07] Speaker B: That's right, because that's the year you. You said you gave her D.B. cooper, who actually jumped in 71.
But. Okay, 72.
[00:44:15] Speaker C: Dorothy, I think I'll have to go for 71 because I'm presuming it's rock music, isn't it?
I know nothing about it, so.
[00:44:24] Speaker B: So therefore it would be 19.
I see. Because rock music has been around since the mid-50s. Yes, I know, early-50s. But.
[00:44:31] Speaker E: But that kind of Persona stuff wasn't around until then.
[00:44:34] Speaker B: No, she's never heard of Don Kirsten, so she doesn't know that. Except you've heard everybody else so far. Guess in the 70s, so you figured that must be fairly close.
Is that true or false? And also, I noticed I put the.
I put the mirror up to the man's mouth and there was no steam on it. Therefore, I pronounce him dead.
Huh?
It's. It's a Dick Tracy crime stopper.
Pete, what do you say?
[00:45:02] Speaker E: I got your Dakota.
[00:45:06] Speaker B: 1972.
Okay.
[00:45:09] Speaker E: Wow.
[00:45:10] Speaker B: Okay. And what do you think, elsa?
[00:45:12] Speaker C: I'll say 70.
[00:45:14] Speaker B: You'll say 70. Okay. Well, you all. Oh, we're very, very close.
A 1972.
[00:45:20] Speaker E: Yes.
[00:45:21] Speaker A: Yes.
[00:45:22] Speaker C: He gets one.
[00:45:25] Speaker B: I've been vindicated.
[00:45:26] Speaker D: Thank God.
[00:45:28] Speaker B: Is this an emotional outburst? This rating points up three or four points, I think. Wow. Okay, so. So we have. We have.
We have three winners there. We have Pete, Mike and Tony. The Andrew Sisters.
[00:45:46] Speaker E: Let's sing it.
[00:45:47] Speaker B: 1972.
Do a Medley of your hit, starting with rum and Coca Cola. Okay. Let's see how we're doing here. I guess Mike now has.
Has gotten four correct answers. And so he comes out the winner.
[00:46:02] Speaker D: Thank you very much.
[00:46:03] Speaker B: And the only.
[00:46:03] Speaker E: Congratulations.
[00:46:04] Speaker B: The only. There. Only.
Only Jack.
What have you to say for yourself, Jack? You're the only one who didn't get anything. I shall weep until I am dehydrated.
Yes, that's right. That's right.
[00:46:21] Speaker E: And tomorrow we'll play them.
[00:46:24] Speaker B: And. That's right.
[00:46:24] Speaker E: We'll.
[00:46:25] Speaker B: We will come ready to play. And they put on their pants one leg at a time. I will. So we can. We could beat them.
[00:46:32] Speaker E: I will do an extra set of birthday ups today.
[00:46:35] Speaker C: I hope we know the answers next time.
[00:46:37] Speaker E: Just think it's pretty scary that Nor said that tomorrow we're. They're going to play it again. Can you believe that? Oh, what a sucker for punishment Norm is.
[00:46:45] Speaker C: Oh, look at all the fun you have.
[00:46:49] Speaker B: Elsa, I want to thank you very much for being part of this. Wonderful.
My first time and you've come through it. I enjoyed it and we were gentle.
[00:47:01] Speaker C: Okay.
[00:47:02] Speaker B: Thank you, Elsa and Pete, thank you very much. You did very well. You got three correct answers, which is excellent. I think being on it's just as much fun as listening.
I'm sorry, what is that playing is just as much fun as listening. Being on it is just as much fun as listening, if not more so being on it. Oh, being on it. I see. Okay. Well, we have enjoyed it having you, Pete. Thanks a lot. Okay.
[00:47:27] Speaker E: You know, I don't get any extra money for translating these calls for you. I. I should speak to management about.
[00:47:33] Speaker B: And Dorothy. Yes. You're a wondrous person.
[00:47:36] Speaker C: Oh, thank you. I think you're rather nice, too. And good night, fellas.
[00:47:40] Speaker E: Quite easy.
[00:47:42] Speaker B: Good night. Have a good holiday. And Jack, you're okay also. And thank you very much. We'll hear from your report in a few minutes. Oh, yeah.
[00:47:49] Speaker E: See you, Jack.
[00:47:49] Speaker B: See you later. Okay. He's now going up to checking with the police, looking out the window. He's doing all the things he has to do because he's only got it. The tensions on there now. He's just got to get a report together within the next five minutes or eight minutes.
[00:48:03] Speaker E: You know what he's going to do? He's going to pull the lats onto the waste basket and read that one.
[00:48:06] Speaker B: Don't say that. Don't say that.
And they're putting his job in jeopardy, the poor soul.
[00:48:12] Speaker E: I will use his carpet. So we'll just pull a pitch. Hey, Joanne, this is the Republican right there for him.
[00:48:17] Speaker B: Hey, Mike, thank you very much. You did very, very well. Thanks a lot. You saved me from having to send out a prize.
And that's. That's the way I look at things, you know, my own cheap way.
[00:48:27] Speaker E: But you still got a whole house full of books you're dying to get rid of, so.
[00:48:31] Speaker B: I do, actually, I do. Well, we sent out. We had a couple of winners over the weekend and I sent those out yesterday or to. Yeah, Tuesday.
So we're all calling up and maybe tomorrow we'll have a real Legitimate winner from. From one of our paddle people. Thank you, Tony Nesbitt. It was fun having you.
[00:48:49] Speaker E: Thank you, Norma. I. You don't know how it feels to get that one right at the end too. It's kind of like two outs, bottom of the night, down by a couple of runs and I'm up two strikes and he hits the home. That's what I feel like. Why don't you just shut me off in the middle of it? Someone's got to shut me up. Just do something to do, will you?
[00:49:06] Speaker A: Finally, Norm took my advice and clipped closing the vault and leaving this world a little sillier than we found it for the mentally unbalanced of Southern Maine. Steve Allen, who was a guest earlier that night. Pinching oneself and others. Randolph Best, the quarryman. Pete Better, the Lone Ranger in Tonto. Lionel Barrymore Buckley Jr. That mistress to a junk man. 76. That's the spirit. 77. That's the strip. 74.
That's nothing. Being young and good looking. Leapt or leaped, humming and guessing. Scumbag. The dog. D.B.
[00:49:45] Speaker B: Cooper.
[00:49:46] Speaker A: The 1949 Northwest Airlines 727. Working best under pressure. Zachary put Klupnik. Dick Tracy's crime Stoppers. Emotional outbursts. Translating the calls. The emotionally unbalanced WBZ staff psychiatrist who will remain nameless. The great Don batting Mike Coochie. Coop Epstein. The weepy and thirsty Jack Hart. And the man who had no problems raising and waving his banner, Norm Nathan. I'm the tormented Tony Nesbitt.
[00:50:20] Speaker B: He said that, Norm. He said, I have a car that is in such rotten shape that I accidentally hit a horse the other day and they shot the car.
And I said, what kind of a psychologist psychiatrist are you anyway? And he said, not a very good one. That's why I don't have business.
That's why I drive old cars. He said, Norm Nathan, ladies and gentlemen.
[00:50:38] Speaker E: Let'S hear it from.