Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - Dave Thomas Encore
Episode Date: January 4, 2021In this repeat of a classic GGACP episode, Gilbert and Frank chat with one of their favorite performers, actor-writer-director DAVE THOMAS, who looks back on his years with Second City (and "SCTV"), h...is transition to dramatic series writing, his admiration for Bob Hope and his working relationships with Dan Aykroyd, Eugene Levy, Tom Poston and Martin Short. Also, Richard Harris gets rough, Buck Henry storms out, Gilbert cuts the rug with John Travolta and Mel Blanc plays Dave's dad. PLUS: "The New Show"! Yasser Arafat hits the links! Dave praises Al Jaffee! And the comedy stylings of Max von Sydow! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hey guys, Frank here. We are taking a little break after a long holiday and an even longer year with a classic episode.
This is the best of what we like to call the best of GGACP episodes.
One of our most popular guests to date has been SCTV performer Dave Thomas.
Hilarious guy, great impressionist.
And it's the 45th this year, this upcoming year, marks the 45th anniversary of the iconic sketch show SCTV.
So we thought this was a good excuse to bring back the Dave Thomas episode from a couple years ago.
We talked about everything, about the history of Second City and the history of the early days of SCTV.
We talked about the new show,
Lorne Michaels' ill-fated The New Show,
for those of you who remember.
The movie Strange Brew with the McKenzie brothers, classic.
He also talks about his relationship with Max von Sydow,
who we lost not too long ago.
We talk about Al Jaffe.
Dave trots out his great Bob Hope impression.
It's a terrific, memorable episode,
so we're going to repeat it in honor of this year.
Again, 1976 was the debut of SCTV,
so this is the 45th anniversary year coming up.
So enjoy Dave Thomas and this best of GGACP.
coming up. So enjoy Dave Thomas and this best of GGACP.
This is SCTV Channel 109 in Mellonville, Cable 6. Hi, I'm Gilbert Godfrey.
This is Gilbert Godfrey's amazing, colossal podcast with my... I was going to say with my roommate.
Go ahead.
Okay.
With my roommate. Go ahead. Okay. With my roommate.
With my life partner.
Frank Santo.
It's a Brando Wally Cox thing.
Frank Santo Padre.
We're once again shooting at Nutmeg with our engineer, Frank.
Are we shooting?
I think we're recording.
Fuck it all.
I made ten mistakes with three sentences.
Okay, our guest this week is a prolific and popular actor, writer, comedian, producer, and director,
and one of the most inventive and original comedy minds of his generation.
You've seen him in films that include Stripes, Rat Race, Coneheads,
Boris and Natasha, The Experts, Sesame Streets, Follow That Bird, and Strange Brew,
Bird, and Strange Brew, which he co-wrote and co-directed with his longtime friend and colleague, Rick Moranis.
You've also seen and heard his work on hit TV shows like The Simpsons, King of the Hill,
That 70s Show, Saturday Night Live, Weeds, Arrested Development, Primetime Glick, How I Met Your Mother, and Grace Under Fire.
He's also scripted episodes of critically acclaimed series like Bones and the Blacklist.
For five seasons, he was one of the writers and stars of the beloved fierce willing siblings, the McKenzie brothers. You want more from the guy? Fine. He's also won two primetime Emmys,
Primetime Emmys, a Sports Emmy, Bill Murray, Martin Short, John Cleese,
Steve Martin, Max von Seedau, and Richard Pryor, as well as former podcast guests Chevy Chase,
Chevy Chase, Buck Henry, Paul Dooley, David Steinberg, and Paul Schaefer.
Please welcome to the podcast a performer of multiple talents and a man who once played Bob Hope's nephew, Chester Hope,
our pal Dave Thomas.
Thank you very much.
What a long and drawn-out intro.
I just feel so old now.
Yeah.
I always feel like these intros should be followed with,
found dead in his Los Angeles apartment.
Yes.
Absolutely.
It's a little like this is your life dave without the
the school teachers showing up now now we started to talk about something before we went on the air
this yeah i don't know how long ago this is this is probably 20 years but uh there was a thing in
toronto which i only went to because I'm not a stand-up.
I did, you know, sketch comedy, but I was never a stand-up.
But I would get invited to stand-ups because a lot of people that ran these things didn't know I wasn't a stand-up. And if I could get a free plane ride somewhere and not really have to do anything or embarrass myself, then I would say yes.
So I said yes to this thing, and I said, but I can't go on the dais because I'm not a stand-up. Oh, don't worry.
We don't need you to go on the dais. So Joe Piscopo
was the host.
Joe Piscopo always made me laugh, and he
made me laugh for all the wrong reasons.
I remember when I did SNL as a guest host with Rick,
Piscopo was in the cast with Eddie Murphy.
There's a little restaurant,
just catty corner to the Brill building in New York,
an Italian place.
And it had a little kind of a vestibule where you go in before you get to the
restaurant and you can hang your coat.
There's photos of all the stars there.
And there's a photo of Joe Piscopo is Frank.
And then it's to Tony or whoever the owner of the restaurant was to Tony.
You are a kooky,
kooky guy.
Love Joe Piscopo.
And then in brackets,
almost Frank.
When I saw that, I almost threw up in the vest you're wearing.
So cut to Toronto.
You're there, Gilbert.
Yes.
I'm there.
I took a free plane ride.
Joe Piscopo's the MC. He starts by
taking a boombox and putting it on the desk.
And he goes, you know, wherever I go all over the world,
you know, people always come up to me and they say,
Joe, do your Frank.
So without any further ado, and he hits the boom box,
and you are the sunshine of my life, whatever it was he was singing.
And, you know, for about eight or ten bars, it's not bad.
But because Joe is never satisfied with something that's just good,
he has to go and make it just a pile of shit.
good he has to go and make it just a pile of shit a really horrible impersonation of frank and then other comedians got up then you get up and you go friends of earth i don't know what
what is friends of i guess i'm a friend of earth i don know. I mean, the way I see it is, you know, Earth, wherever it goes throughout the galaxy, people always say to Earth, Earth, do your Frank.
I'm paraphrasing it, but it was just boom, ba-da-boom, ba-da-ba.
You just nailed him so well.
And everybody on the dais just died.
So there's two kinds of comedy.
You know, they say, you know, there's the kind of comedy that's pointless and just kind of silly.
And then there's the kind of comedy that's really like, you know, a baseball bat.
And that was one of those baseball bat jokes that I love.
What's the other Gilbert story, Dave?
When we were on the phone, you said you had two Gilbert stories.
And I remember at the Friends of Earth, I think Jim Carey and Mike Myers were there too. And
Henny Youngman. Yep. But none of
them were anywhere near as memorable to me as the
Friends of Earth.
Joe Biscopo.
The other time we met, Gilbert, was
as you were listing all the crazy and insane things I've done, I directed a movie for Paramount.
And I inherited John Travolta as a cast member.
I didn't choose him as a director.
He came with the package.
And it was one of those things your agent said, no, Dave, you got to do this.
You want to be a director?
You're going to do this.
I wasn't even sure I wanted to be a director.
Anyway, I directed them.
And he needed a sidekick.
And you came in and read with Travolta as the sidekick in this movie called The Experts.
Oh, yes.
You have a memory of this, Gil?
I do.
It was a hilarious mismatch.
I wished God I had the tape.
It was just, there is no way that Gilbert Gottfried could be John Travolta's partner in this movie.
The way was it, God.
I remember flying out to L.A. to read for that.
And I found myself sitting next to Mike Nesmith from the Monkees.
Really?
Yeah.
And I take out the script, and I'm, like, leafing through it.
And he goes, what are you reading?
And I said, oh, it's this movie, The Experts.
It's about these Russian spies who kidnapped two Americans to teach them American hip culture.
And Mike Nesmith, without changing his facial expression, goes, sounds like a piece of shit.
goes, sounds like a piece of shit.
Well, that's what the audience thought, too.
So there you go.
Maybe Nez was not as stupid as we think.
But I did get a chance to dance with Travolta. Oh, yes, you did, didn't you?
And look who's talking, too.
Yes, I remember that.
And Dave introduced John to his wife on that film, to Kelly Preston.
Yes.
Yeah.
So something good came of it for him.
Oh, for sure.
Now, this is an interesting comment that you made, Dave,
when you're talking about the different kinds of comedy
when you're talking about Piscopo.
What did you mean when you said you think comedy is a disorder
as opposed to a talent?
I found that fascinating.
Well, you know, one of the things I've done over the years,
like I was the head writer for SCTV,
so I was the guy that would bring in the writers and hire the writers. And
that was my introduction to finding out what comedy writers and what comedy people were like,
because I'd never really thought about it. And as it turns out, if somebody walked in and they're
like a handsome looking jock, it's just like, okay, forget it. You know, this person isn't
going to be funny. The person, they have to be really short. They have to be really ugly. They have to be really fat or they have to have some kind of messed up childhood that caused them to be funny.
I don't believe being funny as a talent.
I think it's a disorder.
And I think that, you know, handsome people can be can develop or have a talent or be.
No, I don't think they can.
I'm sorry.
develop or have a talent or be no i don't think they can't i'm sorry i don't think it's possible to be really funny unless something wrong look all the people in
my cast in second city they were all messed up in some way and so and that's my theory it's like
that story when redford um they consider Redford for the graduate.
It's that story you mentioned on the show.
Yeah, it was like when they were making the graduate into a movie, the studio wanted Robert Redford.
And Mike Nichols met with Robert Redford and he said, have you ever not gotten laid?
And Robert Redford said, what do you mean?
And Mike Nichols said, that's it.
I'm getting the snot.
A similar principle.
That's great.
that's great and i i know whenever i see like you know a handsome guy or a really pretty girl there's a comedian i always am extra suspicious and you're usually right i bet yeah you know
listen to them for a little while and now there are plenty of exceptions too there are
a lot of homely and ugly and messed up people tell us about your dad introducing you to comedy dave and the uh and the stuff that he
used because your dad was a philosopher he wasn't in show business but he was a comedy buff yeah he
was yeah um we were i was born in canada but i we moved to uh durham when i was six north
carolina and um my dad was at duke and um so at at that age it started and it was like
andy griffith records before andy griffith did you know no time for
sergeants let alone mayberry um he was a stand-up and he had record and his jokes were like
they were like stuff that we did as family we would drive down to florida on u.s route one
and uh he did it with his hillbilly family. And,
you know,
there were jokes that he did that became kind of family jokes.
They were where,
you know,
he says,
you know,
we're driving along a U S a one.
And we saw this,
uh,
sign free picnic tables,
one mile.
I said,
let's stop and get us one.
And then he buttons it with,
we kind of wish we had waited till we was on the way back being as
it was made of concrete and all well okay there's those kind of andy those rural southern jokes and
yeah and then my parents were both british so then he would get goon show records and it was
introduction to you know spike melligan and
peter sellers my dad was a huge jonathan winners fan when he was very early in his career tom lair
oh great uh you know um spike jones musical stuff that he used to do so he was always playing these records and he would just be dying he would just
be laughing his ass off and the best thing you could do in our house is make dad laugh that would
be like that would be like you know the the prize uh-huh and so that's how i got into it, you know, was, you know, being kind of tutored and schooled with comedy and my dad being a real comedy buff.
And so, yeah, that's it, really.
That's the end of my story.
But you went into advertising first, which Gilbert and I found kind of fascinating.
I didn't do that because I was an ad man you know that i just wanted to be an ad man
i was in godspell oh that's right and after godspell i couldn't get a job as an actor that
was my first gig and i went around and the only thing i got was a commercial for ontario hydro
where i played a guy mos no dialogue who pushed a sailboat into a high – it was for Ontario Hydro.
I pushed a sailboat into some overhead wires and got electrocuted.
And that was my one job after Godspell.
A year went by and I didn't get a job, and I thought, screw this.
I'm not going to be a waiter who says he's in showbiz.
So I had been editor of the student paper.
I went back to
my college and I made up a bunch of fake ads. And then I went to the Yellow Pages in the Toronto
phone book and I just started phoning ad agencies alphabetically and going, trying to get interviews.
And by the time I got to the M's at McCann Erickson, I got hired. That's great. And then inside there, it became like a whole ad career
because I got lucky. I did some spots and I was really, you know, um, audacious, I guess, you
know, ballsy. Like I don't ever say you can't do anything. You know, if they ask you, can you do
something? You say, yeah. And I wrote this,
they put me on,
uh,
as a junior writer on the Coca-Cola account,
which meant I did all the retail stuff.
And these are like basically print ads for newspapers and things like that.
And at that particular time,
Coke and Pepsi were in a bottling war where they kept going and doing mold,
different molds of the bottles to make the bottles taller.
So that in the store, people would go, Oh, look, that one's bigger.
I'm going to get that one.
And, um, so the ads and the creativity there is really limited.
But one of the things I got asked to do was a contest commercial where they would, you
know, get under the cap of Coca-Cola.
There'd be like a thing and you'd, if you got lucky,
you'd win.
So,
um,
I did,
there was a TV commercial that was part of that.
So I wrote a TV commercial and they gave me 28 and a half seconds of legal
copy for a 30 second spot,
which is like,
Oh,
what the hell am I going to do with this?
So then I thought,
Oh,
I remember that old weatherman bit that Don Knotts used to do on The Tonight Show, the early Tonight Show with Steve Allen.
And the breakaway pointers, too much information, too much data.
So I made the 28 and a half seconds of legal copy that I had.
My, that was the bit that became the bit that the guy had to give all this information.
He couldn't do it all. And so I went into the creative director and pitched this.
And he said, you can't write this and send that to Coca-Cola.
They're not even going to get it.
You have to go up there and pitch it.
So I went up to the head offices and pitched it.
And then they liked it.
And they said, who do you see doing this?
And I said, Tim Conway.
I pulled the name out of a hat.
A week or two weeks later, I was on a plane to LA to shoot this spot with Tim Conway.
And it was like, holy shit.
So instant gratification.
And then I got put onto more.
Then I ended up doing more TV stuff for Coca-Cola and they fired the girl who was head writer. And then I did one spot that got the attention of this guy in New York who was creative director at McCann. His name is Bill Backer.
We talked about him on this show. He was kind of a legend.
Of course. He thought if things go better with Coke, it's the real thing Coke. And that mountaintop commercial, I'd like to buy the world. That was his spot.
Yeah. He passed away last year yeah so i he saw one of my spots he said i want to meet that kid get him on a plane
get him down here so i went down to new york and um and i go into his office it's a lexington
amnesty it's a corner office and he's got a grand piano and a he's this little guy in a in a
gray suit with suit with a bow tie and um he's sitting in his office and i walk in and he says
he says i'm bill backer and i say i'm dave thomas sit down and um he starts quoting shakespeare now
i had just done a master's degree in english lit and I'm thinking, what the hell is he quoting Shakespeare for? What is this guy's game? But he started quoting stuff and I thought, all right, well, I'll quote stuff back. So I quoted Shakespeare back. Well, that was my ticket. It was like the stupidest thing.
that is how I,
I won him over.
Then he says to me,
Hey,
um,
I want you to come up.
Have you ever written a jingle?
And I went,
yes,
I hadn't lying of course.
And he said, I want you to write a jingle and I want to make it,
keep it simple.
Keep this.
I wrote this jingle and then they put me on a plane to go to
England and shoot with these kids.
And then I was,
I was on a roll in advertising mostly by luck.
A lot of these things are luck and timing.
And so then they,
I hear they're opening second city in Toronto.
That was the gig I wanted.
And I missed the first one because of stuff I was doing advertising.
But the second time that it opened because uh
the first one failed because they couldn't get a liquor license the second time it opened they
were having auditions and i and i went auditioned and got it and then i quit i went in to see my
boss and i said i'm leaving and he said what are you doing? I said, I'm going to go do second city. And he's,
how much are you making? I said, $145 a week. By this time I was making like 50, 60 grand or
something like that in advertising, which was good for single guy. And, uh, he said, you're crazy.
And he said, look, go there, do it for a year and get it out of your system. And if you want
to come back here in a year or two years, we'll give you your job back.
So that's how I got into advertising.
I guess a shorter version of that would have been something that you probably would have rather had than my.
No, we got the time, Dave.
I don't know how to edit.
We got the time.
Good luck getting the knife in there because i talk like a politician
and and how much were you making with second city 145 bucks a week big come down oh geez
yeah big big bucks and who was in second city at the time uh dan akroyd, Kevin O'Hara, uh,
Eugene Levy,
Joe Flaherty,
Brian Doyle Murray,
Gil Radner.
No,
he,
he had gone.
Oh,
he,
he was in the earlier one that closed cause they couldn't get a liquor license.
I see.
Toronto.
Uh,
and then this was 74 and 75.
Lawrence started,
uh,
recruiting,
um,
for SNL and Gilda went first and then Danny was going to go down.
But I worked with Danny backstage and we ended up augmenting our 145 bucks a week because he heard I was in advertising and he said,
David, couldn't we do some retail stuff?
There's a way we could do radio spots for that wacky audio guy on young street and maybe some other guy and i said yeah sure let's
he said how much yeah i said i know that for the freelance spots when i was at mccann it's like a
grand a spot so he was that was big money to us so we went let's do it so we started writing spots
we were doing a lot of those radio spots together.
So you were writing ads by day to make a little money to supplement that income, obviously.
You needed a couple of bucks.
And you were doing Second City how many nights a week?
Six nights a week.
Six nights a week.
Jesus.
And you and Ackroyd had a thing going before Belushi managed to succeed in pulling him to New York.
Didn't he used to say, come to the big stage?
That was Belushi.
Yeah, that's what I mean.
Belushi was trying to convince Danny to come to New York.
And Danny was like, oh, I don't know why.
You never saw anybody do Dan Aykroyd before.
I know.
Because his laugh.
I love his laugh.
It's like, oh, oh, oh, oh.
So Belushi said to him, Danny, Danny, Danny, come to Rome.
And Danny got it.
What that meant is when you're in Toronto and you're in these little satellite Detroit and these satellite cities, that's not where the arena is.
You know, it's like in the movie Gladiator with Russell Crowe.
He's like, you play the provinces, but you're not doing anything
until you're in the Circus Maximus.
You got to go to Rome.
And I thought it was a cool thing that Belushi said to Danny.
Yeah.
So he went into New York.
He got sucked in.
You stayed put with who was in that cast.
Who was left?
Oh, well, Catherine O'Hara was there.
You started working with Catherine.
Catherine was there.
Andrew Martin was there.
Andrew Martin.
Marty Short joined later.
Yeah, but we were all in Toronto after Godspell hanging around trying to get work, you know.
And thank God Second City came to Toronto because I don't know what I would have done.
I probably would have stayed in advertising, you know?
And Paul was the musical director in that, in that Godspell production.
Paul, Paul Schaefer. Yeah. Yeah, he was.
And when I went down to New York to work with Bill Backer,
Paul was doing the Lampoon show. Oh, Lemmings. Right. No, not Lemmings.
The radio hour. Oh, the radio hour oh the radio hour
radio dinner yeah and it was with brian doyle murray and joe flaherty and bill murray and
belushi and uh uh oh shit the guy that did the movies with um eugene levy um Eugene Levy. Um, I can't think of his name.
Chris guest,
right?
Chris guest,
Chris guest.
So there were,
there was a hell of a cast down there doing that stuff.
So there was always,
yeah.
And there was cross pollination between like Murray came to Toronto for a
tour.
And we went to Chicago and Belushi came up to Toronto all the time to visit Danny.
There was traffic back and forth. We knew who all the players were.
And everybody who works with Paul Schaefer
usually winds up with a Paul Schaefer imitation.
So let's hear yours. You have a pretty good one too, Gil.
Well, So let's hear yours. You have a pretty good one too, Gil. Oh, ah, well, uh, let's see.
I don't actually do Paul.
I can't really do.
No.
I mean, if I, if I heard him do something, I might imitate him, but you know, we have a little thing we do on the phone.
What I call Paul, I just say six.
And it's a reference to something that Sinatra yelled out in one of his songs meaning six and based on another thing that some other guy in
toronto used to say paul will call me back and if he misses me it'll be ho. So it goes six ho. And that's our little link.
I just missed his show.
I saw, um, in Vegas, he was playing, um, uh, in Caesars at Cleopatra's barge, one of the lounge rooms there.
And, um, Marty went and Eugene went, I was supposed to go with them, but I got a new chair for my office.
And I thought my old chair was hurting my back.
I get this, this amazing thousand dollar, $1,200 chair that it's really good for your
back.
But what I didn't know is that the wheels make the chair roll more freely than my old
chair.
is that the wheels make the chair roll more freely than my old chair.
So I get up at this very desk thinking I got to do something.
And then I, when I'd sit, I just kind of drop in the chair,
but the chair had rolled away and it was gone.
And I dropped back down onto my sacrum and just like, holy crap.
I couldn't, I couldn't sit, stand or do anything over the whole holidays so i couldn't go see paul's show and i was really disappointed about that anyway do a little paul for uh for dave
you yeah let's see oh yeah yeah you know uh you know gilbert g Gilbert, yeah, he's talking to Harry Shearer.
Harry Shearer, he hates you.
We love Paul.
And now while Gilbert heads into the nutmeg kitchen to steal more Perrier,
a word from our sponsor.
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It's Frank and Gilbert time.
Yes, yes, it's Frank and Gilbert time.
It's Frank and Gilbert time.
It's Frank and Gilbert time.
And now back to more hilarity and trenchant insight, Gilbert Gottfried.
Now, I think you said that when Second City went on the air, it was actually bombing.
It wasn't bombing.
It's just nobody was watching.
Yeah.
I guess that's another way to bomb.
But, you know, we were a show was
syndicated in the u.s it wasn't on any network and it was sold through um this guy named jack
rhodes who was involved with a company he might have even been his company called filmways and
they were syndicators of things and nobody knew what to do with this little bastard half hour of sketch comedy and
so we're in 48 markets in our first season of the u.s in most of the major markets like los
angeles and new york but not in enough markets and certainly no no promotion or advertising
people had to discover the show to find that it was on, and it was on really
late. So it's very hard to discover a show
like that unless you're a night watchman.
That was Candy, Eugene, Catherine, you,
obviously, Flaherty, Andrea Martin, and Harold Ramis was the head writer?
Right, for the first year. And, Andrea Martin, and Harold Ramis was the head writer. Right. For the first year.
And then Harold left, and I became head writer after he left.
And you started auditioning misfits.
Writers.
Yes.
That's right.
Yeah.
There's a guy that I hired named Eddie Gordeski who worked with Chuck Lorre a lot.
You know Eddie?
Oh, sure.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
I gave him his first job. No kidding. You know? He's a big deal, sure. You know Eddie? Oh, sure. Oh, yeah. Yeah. I gave him his first job.
No kidding.
He's a big deal, Eddie.
Josh Weinstein and Bill Oakley.
Oakley and Weinstein, yeah.
I gave them their first job.
I gave Dave Cohan and Max Muchnick.
Sure, the Will and Grace creators.
I gave them their first job.
So I got them in the WGA.
This is one thing you didn't mention in your run of things that i did i was the producer of uh the dennis miller
show for a while oh yes yeah his tribune show so that's where i met those guys was overton on that
show who was on that writing staff?
Oh,
Overton was.
Yeah,
he came later.
I forget all the guys that were on it. Yeah,
I find it interesting too,
that you're not only a student of comedy,
but you're a student of comedy writers.
You,
you were,
I saw in your interview with Kevin Pollak,
that you were firing off the names of guys that used to write for Mad Magazine,
and guys like Arnie Kogan,
and Larry Siegel,
who used to cross over to TV and and write
mad and Dick DiBartolo by the way I sent Dick DiBartolo who's a friend and who's done this show
I sent him your clip and he was enormously flattered that you mentioned his name really yes
well god bless him I mean those guys when I was a kid I was like man that's where it's at those guys those guys got a nice turn they
know how to tell jokes you know al jaffee yeah every snap snappy answers to stupid questions
we had jaffee here we had him on the show yeah he's 96 holy shit i remember one of his jokes
this is like a guy at the maitre d at a restaurant standing there alone he said no he's there he's there with his
wife it's a couple standing at the maitre d and the maitre d says table for how many he goes
table for one my wife will be sitting on my shoulders al is still going strong dave
yeah he's still doing it they're all borscht belt jokes but god bless them there yeah yeah yeah
tell us about how and how long were
you doing the stage show before was it bernie solins who decided that we have to turn this
into a television show yeah so how long were you doing the stage show and it's interesting too you
talk about luck and timing and serendipity how all this is happening for you you audition for
this thing because you just want to have fun and that's what you want to be doing and sooner before you know it you're on tv well i went to college with eugene and marty right so
i knew those guys from school and i didn't just in all fairness i didn't just hear that second
city was having auditions eugene called me and he said you got to get in here in addition i see
they they marty and eugene called me for godspell too they said you got to get in here in addition. I see. They, they, Marty and Eugene called me for Godspell too. They said, you got to get in here in addition. And I said,
oh, okay. So I drove in from Hamilton. Uh, I was, I was teaching first year tutorials
at the time while I was working on a master's degree. Cause I didn't know what to do, you
know? And they went to Toronto to try the acting thing. And I was too chicken to do it, uh, at first.
And, um, and they call me, I went, I drove to Toronto, I got in Godspell.
So Eugene called me and said, you got to get in here in addition for second city.
There's an opening.
And so I went in addition to, and he did some lobbying for me in all fairness, but I got in.
You have to do five characters through five through the door.
They call it,
you know,
so you go through the door,
do a character,
do some jokes,
blah,
blah,
blah,
blah.
And then clearly and cleanly establishing character,
then exit and come on right away as another character and do that.
Do five characters in a row.
And then,
and then there's other stuff that they do,
but that was one of the things.
And,
and I don't do him,
but can you do a Eugene Levy?
Does anybody do Eugene Levy?
He is a very thoughtful guy.
And will take his time to nail something down.
He has to tease him relentlessly, you know, about his.
He has a natural kind of Jack Benny speed.
That's his speed.
Eugene isn't doing a bit.
That's him.
He has a different clock than the rest of us, you know?
But, you know, God bless him on SCTV.
He was like a robot.
Oh, my God.
He'd go off by himself, and he would just bang, bang, bang, bang, bang, bang, bang.
He would write a piece every day.
He was like a robot.
I have to say, going back and watching those sketches, you know, what occurs to you is how edgy, how savage you guys were, especially when it came to show business characters, how ruthless that satire was.
People like Lola Heatherton and Sammy Maudlin.
I mean, even today, it's still – it's got a lot of teeth.
Well, it's worse today.
I mean, you got these snowflakes in the audience today i don't think
you can do anything today i'm so glad i'm not trying to do comedy now and i have to tell you
moving into drama is largely because my stuff is so dark and so different that i couldn't give it
away yeah so you know i found transitioning to drama really easily but you know uh i don't we
never like my impersonation of bob hope was something that was based on you know admiration
and and respect not for the guy who became you know uh the the guy that people in the 70s thought was a warmonger and things like that.
He wasn't really.
I got to know him.
I spent time with him.
I did shows with him.
I got invited over to his house one day.
I was shooting Grace Under Fire at CBS Radford, and that's very close to his house in Toluca Lake. And I'd done some stuff with him and met him and been at CBS Radford. And that's very close to, um, his house in Toluca Lake.
And I'd done some stuff with him and met him and been at his house before.
And his publicist,
a guy named Ward Grant called me and he said,
Bob wants you to come over to the house.
I went,
okay.
So I just got in the car,
left the rehearsal and came over to Bob Hope's house.
I mean,
Bob Hope.
So I get there. Now, he's
still sharp, but he's slowing down a little, you know, and Ward
says he's upstairs outside the bedroom. He had a little kind of
a makeup area that he set up outside his bedroom
and he would get made up there before going over to
NBC. Then he wouldn't have to go to makeup at NBC.
And, um, so I walk up the stairs and he's, he's sitting there when I get up there and
he turns and he sees me, he goes, he goes, Oh, hi, Dave.
What are you doing here?
And I said, well, Ward said you wanted me to come over.
And he looks at me, he goes, Oh yeah.
Well, what do you want?
Now, I know you don't get into it with an old guy like that.
No, no.
Ward said you wanted me to come over.
You told Ward you wanted me to come over, and now you're saying, what do you want?
So I didn't get in.
When he said, what do you want?
I just looked at him.
I said, I want to see that picture you You got a patent pissing in the Rhine.
I'd heard about this.
Hope lights up like a Christmas tree.
He's like, he said, you heard about that?
Come here.
I'll show you.
And he walked, he walks me to this hall of pictures outside the bedroom.
And he's describing as he walks.
He said, he said, you know, Patton said he'd cut a swath through Hitler's Europe and he'd piss in his rhyme.
And he said, I got a picture of him doing it.
And he said, you know, the family, they wanted, there were three of these pictures and the family wanted them all back.
And they got the other two, but I'd never give them this one.
There's this picture of General Patton, twin Colts on his hip,
the Colt pistols on his hips, and Dick out
pissing in the Rhine. I thought that was just amazing.
He goes to the picture right beside me and he said,
this is Neil Armstrong. He did my special right after he got back from the moon.
Who can say that?
That impression is uncanny.
I got into him when I was doing SCTV.
And then that became my ticket.
You know, everybody loved that impression, you know, from, uh, you know, Robert
Klein and, uh, Albert Brooks to Johnny Carson, you know, and I ended up doing
the tonight show with Johnny Carson.
Everybody wanted me to do Bob Hope, but unlike Joe Piscopo, I never thought I
was almost Hope.
thought I was almost Hope.
I just did my stupid impersonation.
I was on his 90th birthday special. I was going to ask you about that.
Yeah, and that's where I did Chester Hope.
Right. His nephew.
The producer of the show said,
you know,
when you finish your bit,
Dave,
I want you to walk down this ramp.
Bob and Dolores are going to be sitting here.
And,
and he said,
he won't recognize you.
He won't be able to hear you.
He won't know who you are.
I said, well then why do you want me to walk down the ramp?
And they said, because everybody's doing it.
So I walked down the ramp and hope gets up.
He gets up and walks over to me.
And so I see the camera's repone.
You're always watching that stuff out of the corner of your eyes,
right?
Like,
where's my camera.
And hope walks up to me.
He says,
Hey Dave,
he says,
it's been some time since I saw you up there in Toronto there,
you know?
And I'm like,
Holy crap.
Now,
you know,
he knows me.
And I said,
yeah,
Bob,
how you doing?
I said,
happy birthday.
It's a pleasure to be on your show.
And then as we're talking, I noticed he's blocking my camera.
And I just think, ah, he's old.
He made a mistake.
So I just counter a little bit so that I can see the camera covering me because there's a two shot and then there's a cross to me and across to him.
So I counted a little bit.
to me and across to him. So I counted a little bit and then he counters with me
blocking me again. And I counted a third time and he
was blocking, he was blocking my shot on purpose.
And so I looked
at him, I needed a way out of this. And I said, I said, Hey Bobby, I can do something
with my ski jump nose that you can't do.
And he said, oh, yeah, what's that?
And I had as part of my Bob Hope impersonation this makeup SCTV woman, Bev Shackman, who did makeup on SCTV.
She made me a little kind of a ski jump thing for the end of my nose, a prosthetic piece that I'd glue on my nose.
So I'm standing there with Bob, and I said, I can do something with my ski jump nose.
You can't do.
And I just pulled that piece right off and handed it to him.
And he laughed.
I got him.
And it made me feel so good.
You know,
that was my,
that was my out.
You know what?
I always found strange with hope.
It's like there were two of him.
There was the early Bob hope,
It's like there were two of him.
There was the early Bob Hope, where it's kind of effeminate and eye-rolling and loads of nervous energy.
And then in the later Hope and Crosby movies, he already started doing that one.
You know, it became the later Bob Hope. I think by that you mean like Road to Hong Kong, which he did in 1960, which was much later.
You're absolutely right.
What happens with a lot of comedians, and I think this happened with Bob, he had this amazing energy.
And when he did his monologues in the 40s during the war and things like that, they used to call him Rapid Robert.
Rapid Robert.
And the reason they called him that was because his monologues were so fast if you listen to those
old radio shows not only is he fast he'll be doing the jokes i've been real fast like that
the audience is fast with him the whole thing is speeded up really fast and i thought it was like
well this is a weird recording you know this is this is, this is, this is an issue of the recording. And then I heard other things and realized it wasn't.
So then, you know, there's that thing that comedians do where one day they have had some
success and then girls are paying attention to them because women like guys on television more
than they like guys who aren't on television.
Then they walk by the mirror and they go, you know, hey, I don't look too bad.
That's the beginning of the end. That's when a comedian thinks that they can play a leading man.
I saw Belushi make that mistake when he did Continental Divide.
Oh, yeah, with Blair Brown.
And it was just like, come on.
You know, you're the short Albanian guy who is known for shoving potatoes in your face, you know?
So it, it, I do, I do think that that affected Bob.
And then Bob started hobnobbing with all the presidents.
And I used to do this joke.
This was just for, you know, Brian, Noah, Murray, and Paul Schaefer and people like that.
But Bob would actually drop his voice
about an octave when he was talking about
either generals or presidents.
We're going to have my special and I'm going to have Kiki D
is going to be on it. And also President Ford
is going to drop by for a little while.
His voice would drop
very reverentially for, you know, politicians
and I was down there at Da Nang and Joey Heatherton
did her number and then General Westmoreland dropped by. It was
marvelous to see him there, you know.
So that was, I think, you know, the beginning of the end for Bob when he became a guy who golfed with the politicians.
And you lose touch with your audience and, you know, you're not in you you become part of the joke instead of being
the guy who's standing outside at doing the jokes you know but god bless him he had this longevity
and this amazing energy that just pushed him right through to the 90s i don't think anybody's going
to have a career like that these days you know things are much faster and more disposable. And I think a lot of performers, too,
they reach the self-proclaimed grand old man of show business status.
Yeah.
And it's a shame.
Well, you know, those later specials, I mean, if you're a fan of his,
they're a little difficult to watch because, obviously,
he's more than lost his fastball.
And he does another thing on those later specials. if you're a fan of his, they're a little difficult to watch because obviously he's more than lost his fastball, but he's,
and he does another thing on those later specials.
He,
he got into this thing where he would,
he'd do his joke and then he'd turn like this.
He'd,
he'd do this real serious.
Yes.
And,
and,
and he,
and he go,
yeah.
And,
and Hey,
this is Bobby.
Get that bunker bomb out of my cave.
Hope.
Oh,
coming to you live from Tora Bora, Afghanistan, hey, this is Bobby. Get that bunker bomb out of my cave, Hope. Coming to you live from Tora Bora, Afghanistan's holiday hideaway spot
where Mujahideen families can get a luxury cave for less than $5 a day.
I wish we were on video so people could see that tape.
Yeah, it was that classic Hope look that you did where he's looking underneath his eyelids at the audience.
And it's like, oh, I just did something naughty,
and you're going to love it, you know?
Yeah.
It's like, no, you didn't, Bob.
Did you ever share Play It Again, Bob, with him?
Oh, God, yeah.
I did that.
Jeff Barron, who was a writer on SCTV and also one of Hope's writers, took me backstage while we were doing SCTV.
And I had set up a monitor.
He was playing in Toronto at O'Keeffe Center.
And I had a monitor, and I brought a video cassette with me.
And we set this stuff up.
That was the second time I'd actually met Hope.
But the first time he actually knew who I was.
So I played again, Bob, for him.
I played, we did this other bit.
Hope did this thing in the 80s where he went to China. And he did
a monologue in China and he had a Chinese interpreter.
All of Hope's jokes
are like references to American culture.
And there are things that these people who are behind the Iron Curtain of China, they're not going to get that.
They're not going to get any of the stuff because it's such a cultural difference.
So the guy, the interpreter is saying something completely different, probably making fun
of him. And so one of the sketches we did
on SCTV was Bob and
Mel Shavelson, played by Rick Moranis, who was one of his writers, sitting backstage
with some Chinese writers trying to come up with some topical
stuff that Chinese people relate to.
And I played that for Hope, and Hope laughed.
He didn't get into the joke of what we were doing as much as he got into
it. You know, that really happened.
He said, you know, we did a show in China there.
And it was so hard to come up with the references that those people would like.
Hilarious.
Anyway.
I remember the Bob Hope Desert Classic, too, with Bacon and Arafat.
That was another SCTV sketch.
That was the first time I did the impersonation,
and Brian Doyle Murray wrote that with me.
He was one of the authors
of Caddyshack, because collectively
we figured that Bob's
two things were golf and war.
So we did
a desert classic
in the Middle East with Menachem Begin
and Yasser Arafat as golfers.
And Bob bringing them together.
Yasser Arafat, didn't he something, ladies and gentlemen?
It's on YouTube.
I urge our listeners to find it because it's wonderful.
But you remember when you were 16 the first time?
Yeah.
Yeah.
He played in Toronto, and I ran backstage as he was getting into his limo.
He's already in the limo.
I put my hand in limo to shake hands with him and he was close.
He almost closed my hand in the, in the limo.
And then I met him again.
Catherine O'Hara, Marty Shorten, Andrew Martin, and I did this really horrible gig at the Playboy Gird, Playboy Gorge Club in New Jersey.
And we had no idea what we'd signed on for.
It was one of those things that your agent goes, yeah, it's terrific.
You're going to love it.
It's a great gig and the money's good.
So anyway, we go there.
And what we found out when we got there was they were closing the club and they were doing
a show they were going to come out
and say to the staff ladies and gentlemen don't bother coming into more because you're all fired
and now a show
and then katherine o'hara marty short and andre Henry Martin and I had to come out and try to make these people laugh.
We just found out they have no job.
And Hope was the main event on that night.
And so we were walking in the lobby towards the backstage area, and then Hope came in with his entourage.
And I said, hey, Bobby, I met you in Toronto.
And he stops, and he says, oh, yeah?
He said, where?
I said, at the Canadian National Exhibition.
He said, oh, yeah, I remember that.
And I said, yeah, I shook hands with you.
You almost closed my hand in your power window.
And he looks at me, he said, oh, I know what it was.
He was still walking while I, and I was walking with him while we were talking about this.
And I said, I met you in Toronto. Yeah. And then you almost closed my hand in your power window.
And he said, yeah, I must've been in a big hurry. And I said, like you are now, Bob. And he stopped
and he said, he said, no, I'm not in that big a hurry. Who are you? What's your name?
So I talked to him a little bit there. And so I met him at the Gorge Club. And then
the third time was backstage with Jeff Barron when I showed him these sketches.
And one of the things he said was, he said, you know,
he said, you know, Rich Little, he's tried
to do me. And he said he could do all these other votes he
can't do me at all he said but you got it down that's wild you know that's my i watched play
it again bob last night and it's just the you know the random anita ekberg reference
it's just it's just just wonderful it's on youtube YouTube for people who haven't seen it. Shame on you.
Watch it.
And Flaherty shows up as Bing, of course.
So we got a leading lady in this thing for me?
Well, it's not really a leading lady per se.
What, do you got a troupe of girls?
Well, actually, there's an affair that you get involved in.
Oh, that's good, yeah.
And then from there, like, there's sort of a...
Can we get Joey Heatherton for that?
Well, actually, for that, I was looking at a terrific actress.
I don't know if you know her, Diane Keaton. She's really,
really, really great. That string bean that
was in your movie? What do you mean?
She's terrific. She's versatile.
She's attractive. She's great.
Geez, I don't know. I don't know. I need a girl
to build. If I'm gonna fall in love with her, it's gotta
be realistic for me. Realistic?
I mean, it's exactly what I'm going for, you
know? I mean, I don't want to mug or go too broad with this thing. Yeah, well, what's wrong with Anita Eckberg?
At least she's, you know... What, what, what? What's with the hands? You want an actress with arthritis?
Yeah. Okay, look, Woody, you hang loose, okay? I'm gonna be right back. Look,
your mood ring's turning black. Take it easy, boy. Take it easy. Mood ring? What is this, 1968?
Take an Asian bar, take an Asian bar. Mood ring?
What is this, 1968?
And now, ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Bob Hope.
The Village People, ladies and gentlemen,
aren't they something?
They're the first rock group to stay at the Waldorf Astoria
and request bunk beds.
group to stay at the Waldorf Astoria and request bunk beds.
Now, seriously, ladies and gentlemen, I think that our next act is going to be something that you're going to love.
I was interested in the structure of his jokes, too.
You know, they were like, if he was doing ISIS jokes today, it would be something like,
hey, how about that ISIS? Aren't they something? Fighting the jihad
to the last man. Jihad, that's Arabic for I'll believe anything that some
crackpot in a beard tells me. You know, it's like those definitions
are very much a Bob Hope thing,
you know, or yes, sir, what a country. Mountains, caves, desert,
poverty, mutilated women, a 24-hour-a-day prayer.
Who needs paradise when you can get it all here in Afghanistan?
You know what I mean?
So there's these structured things that were real.
And after a while, I could write them.
It was like, oh, yeah, OK, I know how to write that.
And Jeff Barron came in, and I learned from him how to write Hope jokes.
So I'm doing a special with him.
This was before the 90th birthday.
It was Bob hope salutes the young comedians.
And it was crystal Bernard.
And I were the hosts of a Bob hope special.
Bob was,
wasn't even the host of his own special.
And,
um,
uh,
Oh,
and I,
I wrote the monologue for it and Bob's reading the script.
His daughter,
Linda told me this,
he's reading the script and he goes,
he says,
Hey,
when you do this,
when we do this earthquake,
Joe,
do the,
do the bit,
you know,
uh,
I danced around the house and then the house dance around me do that.
And Linda said,
well,
that's not your monologue,
dad.
That's Dave Thomas's monologue dad that's dave thomas's
monologue where he's doing you and hope looks at her he goes you're there yeah well tell him to put
it in anyway because if he's gonna do me he should do me the way i would do me so i had hope punching
up my monologue you know i love it it was amazing yeah tell us we and gilbert wants to hear your uh
your von seedow tell us about getting max von seedow for strange brew because it's such a fun I love it. It was amazing. Yeah. Tell us, and Gilbert wants to hear your Von Cito.
Tell us about getting Max Von Cito for Strange Brew because it's such a fun story.
Well, I was a huge fan of Max Von Cito, primarily from Three Days of the Condor.
I had seen all the stuff, the Bergman stuff that he had done.
And then he was the first jesus
to ever show his face sure so you know when we were sitting in freddie fields office at mgm and
they were going to do the movie that freddie fields was the president of mgm former manager
of judy garland and mickey rooney probably one of the most evil men in Hollywood.
Anyway,
he says,
who do you want for brew?
Mr.
Smith?
And I said,
Max,
so he goes,
Hey Adele,
get Max on the phone.
So they call him in Sweden and,
and,
and,
and he goes,
Max.
Yeah.
Hi,
Freddie.
And he had done a movie with him, and so Max knew Freddy.
And he said, I got these two guys here, Dave Thomas and Rick Maranis.
They got this very funny movie.
I'll forget.
I'll let them tell you about it.
Here.
And he hands me the phone.
So I had to tell Max what this, you know, do a short summary of the plot of Strange Brew.
And I stumbled through it the best way I could.
And I didn't hear anything on the other end of the line.
And then I finished.
And then he goes,
so it's a comedy then.
And so he said,
send me this,
send me the script.
I'll read it.
I'll read,
you know,
so I found out later that he called his son and his son lived in the States.
And he said,
I'm getting an offer to do a movie for MGM with Bob and Doc McKenzie.
Do you have,
have you heard of them?
And,
uh,
his son said,
Oh God,
yeah,
you got to do that,
dad.
They're great.
They,
they,
and so he did it.
And I met him in Toronto.
We were shooting that night and he showed up when we were shooting the riot at the theater at the very beginning of the movie where Bob and Doug try to wreck their own movie.
And I walked out and, you know, I was introduced by our, by the producer.
And I said, I'm Max.
I'm so thrilled you're doing this.
I know everything you've ever done.
Um,
Bergman,
all the Bergman stuff,
first Jesus to ever show his face and greatest story ever told.
And,
and I said,
and three days of the condor,
I said,
God,
I memorized your last speech.
And once,
you know,
he's six,
six,
you know,
he's a big man and I'm a little guy.
And he looks down at me.
He says,
Oh, can you do it for me now?
So I have to do this speech for a few days.
The Condor, and I get partway through it, and he cuts me off.
And he said, that was my idea.
And I said, what was your idea?
He said, the script was, but he will leave the door open and i because i'm playing
european i said no he will leave open the door and i was kind of like
that's your brilliant
he's fun and strange bro dave He's fun. An inspired casting choice.
He's so good
and so professional
and set such a high bar
for especially Rick and I
who'd never done a movie let alone directed
a movie.
What a mad thing
that they gave us the job
of directing that. It was insane.
There was a director attached and they fired MGM,
fired him.
What was this?
How did the McKenzie brothers come to be?
As a well-told story,
but it's the CB,
um,
CBC,
the CBC version of the show was two minutes longer,
meaning that it had two minutes less commercial
content than the American syndicated version.
So this was in the third season.
So CBC said, do something distinctly Canadian with that two minute difference.
And we were kind of insulted by that.
It's like, what are you talking about?
We're all Canadians doing this show.
This isn't an issue of nationalism.
And so I, or Rick and I collectively said, what. You want us to, this isn't an issue of nationalism. And so I,
or Rick and I collectively said,
what do you want us to do?
You know,
where to some parkers and sit in front of a map of Canada and drink beer. And they said,
yeah,
that's fine.
If you could have a Mountie on the show,
that would be good too.
And if you look at the early Bob and Doug's,
we had a mounting mug that was in the shape of a Mountie. And if you look at the early Bob and Doug's, we had a Mountie mug that was in the shape of a Mountie.
And it was a mean-spirited joke
aimed to make fun of the CBC and ended up
becoming a goldmine for Rick and myself. And it's just
you never know what an audience is going to pick that
they're going to like. You don't ever know what's going to be what they call going viral today.
We,
we had no clue that,
you know,
people were going to like it.
We were just doing it for ourselves to amuse ourselves and people got into it.
And,
um,
and then some,
yeah,
it spawned an album and yeah.
Sure.
The album made so much money for us that i bought a like a house with an indoor pool in toronto
what the hell you know and i was never good with my you know the um uh
uh right uh what's his name? The comedian, right. Steven,
right.
Steven,
right.
Joke.
I love this,
his joke,
which is how did the fool and his money get together in the first place?
I think that I was driving Mercedes at a house with an indoor pool and it was all Bob and Doug money.
It was just crazy.
Yeah.
Uh,
theme song in the movie by your brother,
Ian.
Yeah. Yep. Yep. Yep. Yep. Painted ladies. I remember. Yeah. Theme song in the movie by your brother Ian. Yeah.
Yep, yep, yep, yep.
Painted Ladies, I remember.
Yeah.
So here we go.
Here's a couple of wild cards that are on our cards.
You can tell us about the great Tom Poston,
which you said was the best experience,
the best part of the experience of Grace Under Fire
was befriending and working with Tom.
Or you can tell us a Buck Henry story
because you worked with Buck on the
ill-fated new show.
Yep.
And, of course, everybody who we've had on the show who's worked with
Pat McCormick, I have to ask if they can tell their version,
if they know it, of the helicopter story. I don it of the helicopter story i don't know the helicopters oh
wow well we'll another time we'll tell you the helicopter story okay uh all right really quickly
uh buck henry um so we're doing the new show i'm having having dinner with Lorne and, um, Candice Bergen and Buck.
And, you know, this is another one of Dave Thomas's free rides in the business where I don't know how I got there, but there I am.
And, um, and Lorne tells stories and is known for his storytelling.
And, um, I love Lorne.
He was very nice to me in New York, but he's not the most self-aware person.
And so he's telling these stories and we're sitting at dinner and he's saying,
it was 1968 and I was doing Laugh and Buck goes, that fucking doesn't.
He throws his knife and fork
down and stomps out of the restaurant.
Candace Burke
is like,
what the hell?
I'm what the hell.
Lorne is
unflappable.
You can literally
self-combust in front of Lauren and he won't react.
Lauren says, gee, I wonder what's bothering Buck.
I said, well, Lauren, I don't know. I've only known you
about six months and I've heard that 1968
Peter Sellers story, I don't know, maybe six or seven times.
Buck has known you for a long time.
He must have heard it maybe a hundred times.
Maybe that was it.
A hundred times.
And Hornlinson goes, no, I don't think that's it.
I think something else is troubling him.
So I get back to the offices.
We had offices in the Brill building.
And Buck's there in his office.
And I said, what the fuck happened?
I said, what, sorry, what the heck happened?
And Buck says, if I have to hear that goddamn story one more time, that was exactly why
he stormed out.
You know, the new show was a very funny experience because it was, Lorne wasn't totally committed to the show.
It was something he was doing between his two stints on SNL.
Right.
He never did it, and then he left the show.
Dick Abrasal was producing it for a while, and there's somebody else was,
I forget, a female producer.
Anyway, so he wanted to get, I think he'd already had it in his mind that he made a mistake by giving up SNL and he wanted to go back.
So he didn't really put a lot of effort into the new show.
And I remember storming into his office one time, really mad, because he said he was going to like, Dave, I'm bringing you to New York.
You're going to, you never became a star on SCTV. You're going to like dave i'm bringing you to new york you're going to
you never became a star on sctv you're going to be a star now so i stormed into his office we were
68th in the ratings of 70 wow it was just awful and i throw the ratings on his desk and i say hey
not bad for the legendary producer of snl i cannot believe that you are doing nothing to make this show work.
You promised me you're going to make me a big star.
I'm not,
I'm not even going to be able to get a job after this show.
And he looks at me and he goes,
you know,
it's true.
These days,
instead of thinking about what great comedy idea I want to do,
I think about what I want to eat that day.
When I get up,
I burst out stupidest response.
It's so typical of Lauren because nobody knows how to defuse rage from
performers better than Lauren.
That's a talent.
And,
and he just just you know pricked the
balloon on dave thomas and let all the air come out and it was you know it was just it's a shame
because you look at them now and i was watching a bunch of them and the talent that's on that show
i mean not only yourself and buck but valerie bromfield and and john candy did a bunch and
you got randy newman in there there. Steve Martin's on there.
Penny Marshall.
It's incredible.
And the writing room was amazing.
I bet.
George Myers and Gamelin Pross.
Oh, they're great.
Franken and Davis.
Yeah.
Was Y. Bell there still?
Y. Bell.
Yeah.
Buck Henry.
Yeah.
That's an amazing room.
I love that writer's room.
It should have succeeded with all of that talent
sure yeah it should have
so what about Pat McCormick anything
I was doing
a
Bob Hope roast
at the Beverly Hilton
and I had to you know I'm not a stand up
so I needed jokes
so I'm doing
Bob Smith who was one of the tonight show writers
was also a grace under fire writer so he came over to my dressing room he was helping me with jokes
tom postman was also on the roast with me and he was helping and um then tom said i'll call pat
mccormick he'll come over so pat came over and sat in my dressing room. And he did, he gave me
one joke, which I thought, nah, it's too cheap. I can't do that joke. And the joke was, um,
on the theme of Bob being so old, he says, the joke is I complimented Bob on his alligator,
on his new alligator shoes. And he says, I'm not wearing any shoes.
alligator shoes. He says, I'm not wearing any shoes.
I thought, well, that's too cheap. I can't do that, Joe. So cut to the evening and on the dais with me, Phyllis Diller,
Norm Crosby, Sid Caesar, you know, Connie Stevens,
Phyllis Diller does that alligator shoe Joe and kills with it.
So I didn't know what I was doing, you know, and I had this joke that I wanted to do at the beginning, which was a long get and post and warned me not to do it, but I did it anyway and totally tanked.
I don't mind tanking.
You know, if I, if to me, it's all an experiment, I've already done way more, had way more fun
and got way more, had way more opportunities than I honestly believe I deserve.
So if I go out there, it's like, try this.
See what the hell is.
I don't, I never really looked at any of it as real.
The money was fake.
You'd get this money, you know, well, how much do you want for doing it? I want this much and I'll walk if I don't get it. Well, it
was like ridiculous amounts of money that you didn't need and that you didn't deserve and that
they gave it to you, you know, and I, this business just amazes me. I read an interview with you. You
said one of the great things about show business is that you can be the guy looking in the window.
And if you want it badly enough, that it can actually happen.
I really believe that, you know?
Yeah.
I mean, I know Oprah's made kind of a religion out of it.
And now people want her to be president.
But, I mean, God, I do believe that I sat in Canada watching Bob Hope on TV when I was a kid.
And to say to any of my friends, I'm going to work with that guy, they would have thought that I was committed.
Do you know what I mean?
I was in Dundas, Ontario, Canada.
Hollywood and Bob Hope might as well have been on Mars for its accessibility to Dave Thomas.
And you were saying that people come up to you and they say, how can I make it in show business?
And that means they're never going to make it.
Because if they ask that question, they're already disadvantaged.
The people that make it are the people who, the question they, the USM is,
is there anything that could have stopped you that, you know, they were so relentless.
And, you know, when I, when I, when I, I told you when I got that advertising job,
I was relentless. I went, I made up fake ads. I went through the yellow pages. I phoned every
ad agency. I had doors slammed in in my face i knew it was going to
be bad and the whole job in this business and it's worse today i mean i have a son that's in
the business and and it's just it's harder for actors today than it ever was i got in at a lucky
time i got in when they were paying before the internet lowered the bar and lowered the money.
Boy, that sure happened.
Right?
Yeah.
I mean, absolutely.
Well, there's so much free content.
This generation is not used to paying for it.
Yeah, the whole age of Seinfeld friends and everybody loves Raymond money is gone.
Totally.
And that's part of why I moved over to drama.
Right.
And we'll,
we'll reiterate again that you're writing black shows like the blacklist
now.
Yeah.
So there's still some of that money around if you come up with a drama or
even if you're on staff for a drama or if you talk Lori.
Yeah.
You can still make pretty good money you know but uh
but that old model is dying fast and and you know that the studios just look at and they go
wait a minute these internet companies are getting this content for what nothing or like 10 cents on
the dollar then lower the bar lower everything you know so yeah the money isn't going to get
better it's going to get worse i think
you want to tell us a little bit about about poston um see i became uh here's how we got on
the show um i another guy you were probably watching when you were very young oh for sure
steve allen yeah i was a huge fan. And Brett Butler was famous.
She was the star of Grace Under Fire.
I was originally hired as a co-star,
but I became the platonic friend when I wouldn't kiss her.
Anyway,
in the second or third season,
they hired this really terrible actor to play my father.
And Brant was famous for tantrums.
And I had never had one because, you know, I didn't care.
And I had a tantrum when I saw this guy.
I said, forget it.
I'm not doing this.
This guy's my dad.
And they said, well, who do you want to be your dad?
And I said, well, let's get somebody good like Tom Poston.
And I meant Tom Poston as an example.
Right.
And next day, I come in. Tom's there. And I meant Tom Poston as an example. Right. And next day I come in, Tom's there.
Wow.
And he walks up to me and goes, I understand.
I have you to thank for this job.
So, uh, we just had so much fun together and it really became like a father and son relationship you know and
i would do stuff on the show just to make tom laugh that was my goal was to break him up you
know and um he had a sixth sense of humor didn't he yeah yeah yeah that's what we've heard jj wall
told us that too oh yeah yeah. Work with Tom.
And he's fearless.
Like he,
and he does totally off color,
racist,
sexist.
I know someone like that.
So there was a guy that Brett, Brett kept going through her male co-stars.
Like,
and so come to fifth season, there's this guy, D.C. something, a black guy.
And he had one of these kind of voices like that.
Tom is standing backstage as this guy does his first scene.
And the guy walks off, and Tom's got his arms folded.
He's looking at him very critically
the guy looks at me he's a big guy and he goes what what are you a problem what are you looking
at tom just looks at him and tom says that is the worst impersonation of a black person i ever heard I mean, come on. So what a funny guy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
When he, his wife died and he,
Suzanne Plachette's husband died and they'd had a fling together in the
fifties and then they started dating.
And, um, she said, uh, we,
my wife and I went out for dinner with them and, um, when they got
engaged and Suzanne told the story and says kind of course, but funny, you know, course
funny.
And she says, yeah, Tom gave me a ring.
And I, she said, I told him I wouldn't sleep with him unless he gave me a rock.
And I mean a big effing rock.
Unless he gave me a rock and I mean a big effing rock.
And so she said, Tom says, so, and Tom picks up the story here.
He says, so I went to a jeweler.
He said, and I had a piece of gravel mounted on a very expensive set.
He said, I had it put in a nice little box. And he said, I took her out.
I got down on one knee and he gave her the ring.
He said, she opened it and just laughed her ass off and said, yes, I do.
So they got married.
And then I was at their reception, which was at the Beverly Hilton.
Merv donated the Beverly Hilton.
This is one of the best nights of my life.
It was just like everybody from 70s TV was there. I was at a table
with Merv and Bob Einstein and Don Rickles
and just everybody from that era.
There was a band that
what was the guy's name? The trumpet player on the old Merv Griffin show.
Oh, was it Jack Sheldon?
Yeah.
Jack put together a band, and people could go up and sing.
Anybody who wanted to sing could go up there, and there's a full orchestra, and they knew everything.
It was a fantastic evening.
I think he was in Yarmie's Army, I think, Tom Post, and he hung around with those guys.
Yeah.
Don Knotts and McCormick and Jack Riley.
And Don Adams.
All those great characters.
He was in my office one day and he said,
Don Knotts has the stupidest message on his answering machine.
He said, we got to call it and hear it.
And he said, the message is you have reached.
So we called Don Adams and he says, he gives me the phone.
He says, you got to hear this.
So I put the phone up to my ear and Don picks up.
And wait, am I, am I saying the right guy?
The guy from Mayberry yeah yeah yeah don nuts
don nuts i said don adam yeah don i meant don um and don says hello and i went
shit it's him we didn't get the answering machine and i said hi hi don uh it It's Dave Thomas. I'm here with your buddy, Tom Poston.
And why don't you just hand the phone to him
and he can explain.
And I hand the phone to Tom, embarrassed, you know,
that Don had picked up
and we were just going to be laughing at his message.
And Don says to Tom, what do you want?
And Poston says, I wanted Dave to hear that stupid message.
Or your voice goes up real high and you sound like an idiot and anyway so yeah that was what
was brett butler like to work with that was whenever i was going to ask that question because
it came in from one of our listeners. Did it really? Yeah.
Well, so everyone wants to know.
Bjartmar Janssen is his name.
People would say to me, so what's the story with her?
Is it drugs?
Is it alcohol?
And I said, no.
You don't get to where she is just by doing, abusing drugs or alcohol.
I've worked with plenty of people who have those problems.
You have to be insane first. And then have drugs or alcohol. I've worked with plenty of people who have those problems.
You have to be insane first. I've had to have drugs and alcohol to get the kind of punch that you need.
Since we're talking about our listeners here, we've got one for you.
There's a bunch of them here, Dave, but time permitting.
Eric Conner says, how the hell did you get Mel Blank to play your dad in Strange Brew?
Well, believe it or not, it was about money.
And Mel was $10,000 an hour for voiceover work.
Wow.
And so, back then.
And so, I said, I want him to do the father. And they estimated
there'd be like a three hour session, $30,000. So Freddie Fields says, no way I'm paying that
guy 10 grand an hour. So I thought, Oh God, how am I going to do this? So I said, okay.
so I said okay I said to the producer tell him we have a three-hour session and we talked him into doing the three hours for 10 grand we got a deal on Mel's price then Freddie Fields says yeah
okay he says okay to that well we gave him we I knew we could get in and get him in and out in under an hour. So he got his 10,000 an hour.
And you got to work with another hero, another childhood hero.
And when I met him, I got a great picture of the two of us together.
But when I met him, he had this thick pipe, this throat that seemed thicker and more dense and had more larynx cords than most people.
Do you know what I mean?
He was genetically made to do those voices, you know, like Yosemite Sam and Daffy Duck and Bugs.
I don't know.
He's a unique talent.
Yeah.
Really?
Yeah.
Really.
And speaking of doing impressions and voices, I love your Richard Harris story.
Really?
And speaking of doing impressions and voices, I love your Richard Harris story.
And I found the SCTV skit, which is what is it?
I'm trying to remember the bit.
Mel's Rock Palace?
Oh, Mel's Rock Pile.
Mel's Rock Pile, excuse me.
Well, it's based on Richard Harris singing MacArthur Park.
Which, by the way, Gilbert, we had Jimmy Webb here,
and Gilbert sang MacArthur Park with Jimmy accompanying him.
He did.
You did. On keyboards, yes.
Which was one of the big thrills of my life.
I'll send you the clip.
So you know the high note?
Yes, yes.
Someone left it, and it's an order, don't have to beg it.
And I'll never have that memory again.
Oh, no.
There's a high note there.
And so everyone knew Richard Harris didn't do that high note.
So I go on Mel's Rock Pile as Richard Harris.
My impersonation of him was based on two things, really.
And that was Richard Harris had a low voice,
a low voice down here like this.
I have a very high voice up here like this,
and no voice in between.
So we had the high shouting voice and the low voice.
So I do the MacArthur Park thing,
and we had a girl sitting in a chair
and reading a novel right beside me during
the whole thing.
It's so great.
How's she doing there?
And then when it gets to the high note,
I just step aside.
She leans into the mic and does the high note.
And then I lean back in and take credit for it as though,
as though it was mine cut to,
I don't know,
20 years,
25 years later,
I'm at some film thing and somebody pulls me up to meet Richard Harris
and says, Dave, you've got to meet
Richard Harris. Richard, this is Dave Thomas. He impersonated you on SCTV.
He hated me.
And he physically pushed me.
He was just like, I never saw that bit you did of me,
but I heard about it, and he's pushing me while he's doing that.
I've never seen anyone communicate like that,
where they punctuate every sentence with pushing somebody hard.
So he claimed that he hadn't seen seen it but i could tell that he had
you know gilbert you ever have a bad reaction uh from somebody that where you were doing the
impression and i don't know seinfeld seinfeld didn't appreciate your impression i used to
imitate seinfeld back when no one knew who he was because we used to work at the same clubs like catcherizing star
and comic strip and he was just another comic and i would start imitating him on stage and all of
the waitresses and wait staff would run in and the other comics and laugh at that. The audience had no idea. Do a little bit for Dave so he gets it.
And I heard when I would do that,
Seinfeld wouldn't come in for that,
and he'd pace the bar angrily going,
that doesn't sound anything like me.
Is that the worst of it, though, of anybody that you've ever done an impression of?
I think so.
Nobody ever gave you a hard time?
And, oh, I just remembered a Bob Hope story I heard that was.
Oh, yeah.
That I heard it was when they were cutting for a commercial.
Carson said to Hope, he said, you know, I was reading about you and I heard you
were born in London. You were raised in like a rat infested apartment and your parents,
your father was an alcoholic. Both of them died when you were young. Your older brother died. And you were left to fend for yourself on the streets.
And Hope just goes, yeah, that's wild, isn't it?
Because he didn't hear.
He didn't hear.
He probably didn't hear it.
You know he had a real hearing handicap, right?
Oh.
No, no. Oh, God. you know he had a real hearing handicap right oh no no oh god we only assumed we only assumed it
was later in life that he went well no he started going deaf in his uh like bad deaf in his 80s
and where he really couldn't hear you and um and may, and he wouldn't wear hearing aids. And that benefit that I told
you that roast was, was, uh, hosted by the house ear clinic, which is this famous doctor, Dr. House
in LA that, you know, does amazing things with people who have hearing handicaps. So, but Bob
was very, very handicapped in terms of hearing. And he could hear.
He said to me, he said, you know, I can't hear other people, but I can hear you.
And I said to him, that's because my voice is up in the same pitch and range as yours.
You just love yourself so much that you can only hear people who sound like you.
He goes, yeah, maybe that's right.
It's uncanny. It's uncanny.
It is uncanny.
You know, next time we talk to you, Dave, we'll do this again down the road.
And I was watching my favorite brunette, and Peter Lorre's in there,
and I thought it'd be fun to have you doing Peter Lorre.
Oh, yeah.
And Dave doing Bob Hope.
Oh, that'd be great.
And actually read a scene.
Yeah. And we'll do it next time.
Last question I have on here, and we could go on forever
because this is so damn entertaining.
Do you have a tape of a conversation between Marty Short and Jerry Lewis
that you trot out and listen to?
I did, and I misplaced it.
I don't know where it is.
Oh, damn. I think't know where it is.
I think Marty still has a copy of that, but I'm not sure.
Marty gave it to me. This is one of the sore spots between Marty and me because I think I lost that thing and I don't know where it is.
But yeah, I had that tape and it was a video of Marty and Jerry and Jerry was just the biggest dick that you've ever seen.
Such a jerk.
My take on Jerry was that when he discovered the character Buddy Love in The Nutty Professor, then he never wanted to be anybody else.
And it was the man that women loved and men feared.
And that was the character that he played on his telethons.
And he'd have the tux and the cigarette and Mr.
Cool, you know, and he was like, Jerry, Jerry, the swinger.
And, uh, I found out actually, I don't know if you know this, he got paid a
million per telethon at a point in his career when he wasn't working anywhere.
Did you know that, Gil?
No.
Wow.
That's news.
Yeah.
That was his gig.
And he was getting a million bucks per telethon.
So he's like, for Jerry's kids, we raised $220 million at a million for Jerry.
You know?
Wow.
They'd fly him in on a private jet, and he would do the telethon, get a million bucks, and go home.
Wow.
When he got bounced off that, I guess that's part of it, right?
I will tell you one final Hope story where I was sitting with him.
I was doing one of his shows, and I got him mad.
He got mad at me.
And I always wanted to know why hope never played vegas he was a guy that
would do a boy scout breakfast if he could get 25 grand for it why why do you never do the big
money and play you know the sands or the sahara or any of those clubs and so i said to him we
were sitting there i said hey bob how come you never played vegas in a typical style like the
way the story i told you before he looks at me,
he goes,
well,
why do you want to know?
And I said,
well,
and now I'm on the spot.
And I said,
well,
you know,
I'd heard that you'd never done it.
And I'd heard that maybe that it might have something to do with,
you know,
Dolores being so religious and,
and,
you know,
Vegas being sin city.
And he looked,
he gets really mad and he said
she has no say in what i do and i'm whoa now i got hope mad and i got back fast and i said well
sorry i i said that that's just what i heard somebody theory it's not even mine he said i'll
tell you exactly i'll tell you exactly why he He said, around about 1960, I had this
idea for a show that I would do in Vegas. And the idea was that
I would be the highest paid entertainer to ever play there.
That was
his idea for a show.
He said, well, my people talk to their people.
They wouldn't come up with the money.
I just said, screw it.
I never went there.
Our listeners are going to be upset, Gil, if we don't mention the Jack Frost, which I sent to Dave.
Did you watch that clip, Dave, of Bob as Jack Frost in the last Christmas special?
Yeah.
Gilbert has a theory about that.
Go ahead.
I truly believe, because when you watch that, it looks like he died 10 years ago.
I mean, he is in horrible shape.
And he's there with, like, a glue-on beard and a pointy elf hat.
And the icicles.
And, yeah, icicles and fake snow around.
And I think it was like Dolores' revenge
for all the times he fucked around on her.
Well, I got to tell you, there's some truth to that
because, you know, when he said,
she has no say in what I do,
that was definitely him, you know,
reacting to being led around by Dolores and Linda because, you know, they had no real connection with him when he was at his, in his prime.
You know, he was flying all over the world and with different babes and dolls and different people on his arm at different times.
And, you know, he was, he was arm at different times and you know he was he
was a real uh yeah he was a real hound no question about it i heard stories that he'd go to like
vietnam and stuff well you know for those shows and he'd bring along always a sexy girl with them and it was like he would hint to them
or out and out tell them
that if they didn't fuck him
he would leave them
there
alright
I became friendly with a lot of his
writers
I've had deals with them
and yes
there's yes that's partly true from what i heard from
writers yeah wow a gilbert godfrey rumor wow that's actually true that's a first on this show
it wasn't just one girl either it would be more than one girl and um you know it's it's like
uh yeah that side to him.
I don't relate to that side.
And,
you know,
I mean, if,
if he was a younger guy today,
he would definitely have been on the Harvey Weinstein.
So he would threaten to leave them in like Vietnam and stuff.
Well,
I heard that story.
Yeah.
So from one of his writers.
So I would assume it's's it's more than likely it's the first time in 180 plus shows gilbert that one of your stories had validity
and here's something i i always ask about every old performer
uh do you know anything about bob and Bing hating the Jews?
Really?
I'll tell you why.
All his writers were Jews.
Oh.
And he loved his writers.
I don't.
I think you know that anti-Semitism was open and know, open and rampant back then.
And, uh, and he may have said things as a joke, but you know, guys like, you know,
Mel Shavelson and, uh, people like that, that Larry Gilbart and people like that,
that were, he loved those guys.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
These guys were, he knew that he was nothing without those guys. And, um, and, and I'm, I'm one, here's one story that I heard, which was, um, one of his, uh, uh, one, one, the wives of one of the writers called, uh, looking for, no, Bob was calling. Yes, I know this one.
You know the story?
Yeah, the writer was in bed with his wife at the time,
and Bob calls them like past midnight.
And the writer said to his wife, Bob's there.
I'm not home.
And she goes, oh'm sorry bob um you know mel's not
here right now no no he said he was with you he said he was working for you that's what that's
what she said yes and so and and and the writer is going no and, no, no. And then Bob goes, oh, yeah, wait a minute.
He's just walked in.
Okay.
It's good every time.
And that proves, that's the smoking gun on how many times he's fucked around on Dolores.
Yeah.
We should wrap and let this man go back to his life.
Dave, we've covered about half my cards. So we'll have to do this again down the road.
This was fun, and I'm, you know, I haven't really seen you much since that.
I got to tell you, I'm a big fan, and I love to laugh.
And when you do this for a living, there aren't very many people that can make me laugh and you're one of them.
And I've always loved you.
So,
you know,
wow.
Keep it up.
Oh,
thank you.
Nice thing.
Thank you.
Yeah.
We,
we have some,
we have some fun episodes you'd enjoy listening to Dave with Steven Wright and
Einstein and people like that.
And Buck.
Oh yeah.
We'll share them with you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And somebody's got to tell Richard Lewis to get off Larry David's show because he's looking so cadaverous.
If you think Bob looked like Jack Frost, check out a recent episode of curb oh my god that's that's the ultimate insult that he looks older than more pathetic than bob hope
honestly it's insane. Did you see the wheel Kirk Douglas outlasted?
Oh, my God.
Yes.
Yeah.
I wish they hadn't done that.
Yeah.
It's just.
He looked so horrible.
101.
And you go 101.
I would say 130 more like it.
He's lying about his age.
He's had some work done.
It shows you the terrible job that gravity does on just pushing us into the ground when we get really old.
Because you were looking at him going, I mean, I know what Kirk Douglas looks like.
And that doesn't look anything like Kirk Douglas.
My wife said when they put the mic down for him to speak he should have said putting on the rich
monster and young frankenstein would have said it like this
understand him if you if your interpreter is katherine z Zeta-Jones and she can't
understand you, you've got problems.
There was a Coxman in his
day, Kirk Douglas, looking at
him in that shape.
This is not a business for
old people, which is why I'm glad I've
gone behind the scenes and I'm writing
now. I did a movie
called White Coats. It was a hospital
movie. there was me
one scene with me dave foley and then another guy who's kind of like looks a little bit like
dave foley only he's a lot younger like a decade younger and his name's peter oldring
we i was let i was director and i let them watch the playbacks and make their decision if we want to do another take. And we looked at the take and Foley looks at it and he goes, oh, God.
And I said, what?
He said, you know, when I think of myself and even sometimes when I look at myself in the mirror, I think I look more like Peter.
But when I see myself on the monitor like this, I realize I look like Dave.
like this, I realized I look like Dave.
And it was a real reminder that, you know what, it's
time to just stop going
on camera, you know?
All right.
Next time
we'll do it again, Dave, if you're willing to
have us again, and we'll do the Clee story,
and we'll talk about, we didn't get to Candy or
Ramos or any of that good stuff, and we'll do it next time.
Okay.
And you want to wrap, Mr. G?
What do you think?
Yeah.
Well, first, I just want you to know, if they ever plan, I want you to keep my number, if they ever plan on doing a sequel to The X-Perch.
I'm available.
Okay.
We've been talking to the great Dave Thomas.
What a show.
Dave, can't thank you enough.
Thanks for putting up with us this long.
I enjoyed it.
All right, man.
We'll talk again soon.
Take off.
Take off.
Through the great white north.
Take off.
It's a beauty way to go.
Take off.
Through the great white north.
Decent singing, eh?
Yeah.
Yeah, it's good.
Okay, so good day.
Our topic today is music. That's right. Because my brother and I are now experts in the field, eh? Yeah. Yeah, he's good. Okay, so good day. Our topic today is music.
That's right, because my brother and I are now experts in the field, eh?
Right, because we're a band now.
Well, except for him.
I'm a band.
Oh, how can you do that?
Making me look bad.
You're such a hose hand.
Yeah, well, take off.
Take off to the great white north.
Take off.
It's a beauty way to go. Take off to the great white north Take off It's a beauty way to go
Take off
To the great white north
Hey, Jose
Yeah, what?
Listen to this, it's coming
You know what it is?
What?
It's a drum solo
Okay, everyone
Like, this is me on the drums
Oh, get out It is not It is so like, this is me on the drums, eh?
Oh, get out.
It is not.
It is so.
Stop lying, will you?
Take off, eh?
Take off to the great white north.
Take off.
It's a beauty way to go.
Take off to the great white north.
Take off.
It's a beauty way to go.
Take off.
Beauty, eh? Like magic, eh? It's coming in. Well, that's like... It's like it way to go Take off It's like magic, eh?
It's coming in
It's like it was sung by angels
Hey, Jose
Yeah, what?
Guess what?
What?
It's over
Take off, that can't be
It is, yeah, it is
Because, well, hit records are short
No way
Yeah, they're not that long
Okay, so that's our topic for today
So, good day
Good day Hey, you guys What? Take hey you guys what no hey don't go
no come back hey look what you did everybody's going to you come back i won't let him do it
again my fault was yeah your fault you're such a hoser there's no way i'll ever do another record
with you hoser okay that's fine i'll do a solo album fine and you'll be looking for me
like on another label now everybody's gone good day good day
gilbert godfrey's amazing colossal podcast is produced by dara godfrey and frank santa padre
with audio production by frank ferderosa web and and social media is handled by Mike McPadden,
Greg Pair, and John Bradley-Seals.
Special audio contributions by John Beach.
Special thanks to Paul Rayburn, John Murray,
John Fodiatis, and Nutmeg Creative.
Especially Sam Giovonco and Daniel Farrell for their assistance.