Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - GGACP Classic: Gilbert Sings!
Episode Date: May 2, 2024GGACP once again remembers our late, lovable pal Paul "Raybone" Raeburn by revisiting this mini-show from 2018, as Gilbert "reinterprets" compositions by Elton John, Kris Kristofferson, and podcast g...uests Charles Fox and Paul Williams. Also in this episode: Moms Mabley! The genius of Roger Miller! The Paul Raybone Band! Paging Gordon Lightfoot! And Ed Sullivan blows the joke! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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TV comics, movie stars, hit singles and some toys
Trivia and dirty jokes, an evening with the boys
Once is never good enough for something so fantastic
So here's another Gilbert and Franks, here's another Gilbert and Franks, here's another Gilbert and Franks.
Colossal classic.
Gilbert and Franks, colossal obsessions. Hi, this is Gilbert Gottfried,
and I'm here with my co-host, Frank Santopadre,
and we're once again recording at Nutmeg
with our engineer, Frank Perderosa,
and this is Gilbert and Frank's
amazing, colossal obsessions with legendary blues singer Skinless Raybone.
He's skinless.
Yes.
I lose another body part every time.
To be born without skin.
Yes.
Well, I heard a crocodile swam past him and scraped the skin.
Wow. I heard he was boneless.
Yeah.
And as a result, a world-class limbo champion.
Is there no truth to that?
It's difficult to confirm being skinless because what am I talking with?
Boneless Paul Ray Bones.
And I think they designed that educational model of the visible man that they used to have in classrooms.
And yet I'm not hearing the traditional blues music, the Paul Ray Bones.
Here's the interesting phenomenon.
We've become the Ray Bones band, as you know, has become quite a hit on the Internet.
The only problem is we've yet to record a single song.
I see.
So we're working on that.
Me and the band.
And I should say before anything else, Will Jordan, thankfully, is out of the hospital.
Oh, good.
Glad to hear that.
Yeah.
And he was telling people how touched he was that I came over and saw him.
That's nice.
That's a nice thing.
That's nice.
We love Will.
Yeah.
He was great here, and we're glad that he is on the mend.
Other housekeeping before we start this actual premise, I saw you on the John Oliver Show.
Oh, yes. Yes, you were funny.
Yeah.
You don't have to act so incredulous.
Darren gave me a heads up on Facebook
that he was going to be on John Oliver, and
my wife went to sleep, no offense.
My son in New Zealand sent me
an email and said, you've got to watch this link
here. And there's a five-minute version offense my son in new zealand sent me an email and said you got to watch this link here so and
there's there's a five minute uh version of it i don't know if they've shown it yet they ran it
through the credits after they did the bit oh yeah yeah oh okay they seem to love you over there yeah
that that was a very funny one last time i was there i was the voice of Jared Kushner.
So they come up with strange ideas. Our friend
Tim Carvell, the head writer on that show,
is a brilliant guy. It's a very funny show.
The other thing is Steve
Hanna, our favorite Photoshop
artist. I assume by now you've seen
Maria Juspenskaya. Oh, yes!
Yes!
Gilbert likes to talk about Maria Juspenskaya,
who played the gypsy.
But who doesn't?
Who doesn't?
Because the kids love it.
What is the name of the character she plays in The Wolfman?
Maliva.
Yeah, it just went out of my head.
Maliva.
And Steve Hanna, the talented Photoshop artist,
we seem to credit every week,
did a drawing.
It's on Twitter.
I'll send it to you.
Paul's staring at me like a Weimaraner stares at someone playing the kazoo.
Yeah.
How he goes into singing one of those songs out of nowhere.
That's the amazing thing about Regal.
So check out Steve Hanna on Twitter.
Check out his Maria Jew Spenskaya with Gilbert as Maleva.
It's a wonderful, wonderful work of art.
And that's it.
That's all I have for housekeeping.
I think so.
Who died since?
Nobody died.
I am reeling, though, with joy and glee.
I'm abuzz from having Peter Fonda in the booth a couple of minutes ago.
And it's ridiculous.
He's like near 80.
Yeah.
He's in great shape.
He said he was born in 1940.
Yeah.
He's sharp and funny and energetic, and we loved having him here.
Yeah.
Before entertainment fans go crazy hearing this episode,
Anthony Bourdain would take issue with the fact that we said nobody died.
Oh, yes.
Yes.
Anthony Bourdain and also-
Did you just call him Anthony Bourdain?
Bourdain.
He's another blues musician.
Was he Jethro's brother?
Yeah.
He was one shot Bourdain.
He opened for us.
He got new blues music.
And who else that woman?
Kate Spade.
Oh, yes.
Yes, but these are not.
I know.
Kate Spade is not really a show business or an entertainment person.
But they were both in Abbott and Costello meet the Wolfman.
I didn't realize that.
I bet Costello would make purses. I didn't realize that. I bet Costello would make purses.
I didn't realize.
I've learned so much from this show.
We should take the opportunity and broaden out into fashion.
I think that would be a good place for us to go.
You can no longer say anything without having a...
I'll put on my smoking jacket.
All right, let's get down to business here.
This is not producer of the month.
This is Gilbert Sings.
Yes.
Because you haven't favored us in such a long time.
I know.
And angry mobs.
They are.
Pitchforks.
You don't like to disappoint your fans.
So we decided to see what was on Patreon.
I continue to disappoint my fans.
You do.
Just for the record, I don't like it.
David Komarowski, our old friend David Komarowski, who just sent us cufflinks, by the way.
Yes.
So we want to thank him for the cufflinks.
Can I say, David, those are real cheap shit cufflinks with some can i say david those are real cheap
shit they were both falling apart i'm trying to thank the man they were both falling apart
and and and uh frank said to me yeah which ones do you want there's a monkey on one, and there's the godfather on the other. And I said, I really don't give a fuck.
These are pretty worthless.
It's the thought that counts.
Well, it has to be.
Don't listen to him.
Because it's not the merchandise.
I'm going to enjoy my Vito Corleone cufflinks.
Don't listen to him.
You're going to cut the buttons off your cuffs.
Do fans send you guys a lot of neckties?
We get a lot of stuff.
We get a lot of stuff.
We get a lot of weird stuff from fans,
and I don't know what to say except keep it coming.
Oh, and then who sent that book?
Be careful.
We got sent a book of those authors
from the back of comic books.
There is one there. Oh, I didn't see that.
Who sent that book? Did anybody send you any
Monster Times? You solicited Monster Times.
Yeah, and they never did.
I want the Monster Times.
We'll put it out there again.
I think there's one single $20 bill
I want you to know. I can't find
that tweet.
Oh, let's see. Who sent this?
Okay, this was sent by Tim Knight.
Thank you, Tim Knight.
Yeah, and it's just all these great, ridiculous heads from the back of comic books, and there's
even a card here where they have the miniature live monkeys oh i like monkeys i was just gonna get
my hands on that brings me out and i can't remember the name of the book but somebody
sent a long like a year ago yeah he's around that book mail order mystery and we were gonna do it
we're gonna do an episode mini about that yeah he's somewhere in the midwest i've been trying
to track him down that's like every everything from every comic book ever. Yeah, and his name is escaping me,
but the challenge there is getting an engineer to him.
But we'll revisit it.
And this we've talked about a few times.
You could actually send away.
It was legal.
Well, I'm sure it was 1,000% illegal.
The monkeys?
Yeah.
You could send away for live monkeys.
I got a Mickey Dolenz once.
Ah, see.
Why do I bother?
Why do you bother?
I'll trade you my Nesmith.
After 200 shows, I wasn't aware you were bothering.
I had to.
We're going to do David Komarowski's song request.
First, he requested that Gilbert do Abraham, Martin, and John in the style of Moms Mabley.
Anybody here see my old friend Moms?
But this being 1968, I thought that would be in poor taste.
As he has just demonstrated.
So we'll take David's second suggestion, which is Chris Christopherson's wonderful Me and Bobby McGee.
Yeah.
Which I know you are familiar with.
Yes.
And I have some lyrics here for you.
Okay.
And then Paul,
Raybone,
boneless Raybone,
headless Raybone,
will give us some,
he'll give us some trivia.
He'll give us some facts.
Gluten-free Raybone.
You want to try this one, Frank?
Oh.
This is for David Komarowski.
Frank's going to give you the music.
And just do a couple of bars.
Because I think that's all any of us can tolerate.
Sing by the door.
We'll help you out.
Okay.
And Janice is gone.
All right.
You don't want to hear her turn and spin.
Let's give him a lead in there, Frank.
My feet flat and back root,
Head full of the trains,
Feeling nearly faded as my jeans.
Bobby thumbed the diesel down just
before it rained.
Took us all away
to New Orleans.
Look at Tara's face.
I took my harpoon out of my
dirty red bandana
and blow a
tag on Bobby
saying the blues.
And then
they whipped you like a slap in the blues. And then they whipped your wife a slapping time.
And Bobby clapping hands.
We finally sang a bit.
Another word for nothing left to lose.
And nothing.
And birthday is free.
Feeling good was easy
But when Bobby sang the blues
And Bobby was good enough for me
Good enough for me and my Bobby McGee
You know, Gilbert is the perfect...
Gilbert made Janis Joplin sound like Maria Callas, I think.
The perfect fail.
Not Charlie Callas is what I was thinking.
But there was a blend in vocal harmony there.
I have no words.
Wikipedia is being changed to update how she died now.
That's funny. Yeah. Wikipedia is being changed to update how she died now. That's funny.
Wow.
What can we say about this song?
Well, I can tell you something about Chris Christopherson, who we would think of as a
kind of a rebel and a freewheeling guy.
Yeah.
He wrote this song.
He sure did.
His father was a general in the Pentagon.
So he apparently, we don't know how, if he had troubles
with his father
like Peter Fonda
had troubles with his father,
but Chris Christopherson
is a complicated guy.
Maybe we should get him.
I'm going to do a tie-in.
Mm-hmm.
In Peter Fonda's book,
Peter Fonda was just here,
he relates the story
of Chris Christopherson
on the set
of Dennis Hopper's
The Last Movie,
the one we were talking about
with the supposed orgies.
Yes.
Chris Christopherson played this song for him.
And someone wrote this on Patreon having no idea
that he was going to be here.
It's a coincidence.
There you go.
Too bad we never had a chance to interview Dennis Hopper.
Yeah, he's gone.
Yeah.
That would have been interesting to get his side of the story.
That we just said.
Me and Bobby McGee, of course, made famous by Janis Joplin,
was, I believe, originally performed by Roger Miller of King of the Road.
Oh.
Now, I can throw, before Janis did it, Gordon Lightfoot also did it.
Did he?
Wow.
I don't know whether he did it before.
I love Gordon.
We've got to get Gordon Lightfoot on this show.
That would be a get.
You know, I think he was just in New York.
Or Helen Reddy.
Don't tell me that.
I think so. Any other Canadian. Or Helen Reddy. Don't tell me that. Or any other Canadian.
Is Helen Reddy Canadian?
Is she?
I think she is.
I think she's on Aussie.
She's a, yeah?
Oh, she is.
Yes.
Who's this?
Anne Murray's Canadian.
Anne Murray.
Anne Murray's Canadian.
Close enough.
Joni Mitchell is Canadian.
She is.
And Alan Thicke was Canadian.
Very good.
And Pierre Trudeau. Yes. We could. Very good. And Pierre Trudeau.
We could do this all day.
Justin Trudeau. Roger Miller
covered it. Kenny Rogers in the first edition.
Charlie Pryde. Gilbert's
favorite, rambling Jack Elliott.
Sam the Sham.
Wow.
William Deluva.
So apparently, according to this,
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 Gordon Lightfoot, Bill Haley and his Comets do tell.
Jeez.
Who was Little Red Riding Hood?
Was that Sam?
Sam the Sham.
And the Pharaohs.
Didn't they have another one?
Wooly Bully.
Wooly Bully.
Wooly Bully was their big one.
But according to this, and we always trust Wikipedia, that's how many people recorded it before Janis Joplin made it into a number one single.
How about that?
But that was pre-Janis Joplin, Gilbert Codford.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
That was...
Other artists to cover it are Arlo Guthrie, Loretta Lynn, Willie Nelson, the Statler Brothers.
How about that?
Jerry Lee Lewis.
Yeah.
And a band called
The Impotent Sea Snakes.
Yes.
That comes from the back
of the comic book.
Yes.
So, David,
I hope you're happy.
You got your wish.
I don't know
what to make of that cover.
If David's happy,
we're happy.
Yeah.
If David's happy,
we're happy.
We love to please our fans.
Roger Miller's another guy I wish had lived long enough to do this show.
Boy, oh boy.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast after this.
Here's another request.
This comes from Chris Cason.
C-A-S-O-N.
I hope I'm pronouncing that right.
I would love to hear Gilbert
either do Love American style
or the Love Boat theme.
Now, because the Love Boat theme
was written by our friend.
Yes, Paul Williams.
The great Paul Williams.
Yes.
Our former podcast guest and pal.
I pick that one.
Love exciting and new. Okay. We now know how he's. I pick that one. Love exciting and new.
Okay.
We don't know how he's going to do this one.
Let's, let's.
Oh, my God.
Please don't ever let Paul hear this.
So, it'll be me as Paul Williams.
If you want to do it that way, here we go.
Here's the lyric.
Wait for the lyric.
Snort the earlier.
The boat.
My sweetest report.
Let it float.
It floats back to you
The longboard
We'll be making another run
The longboard
Promise is something for everyone
Set a point for adventure
You'll find a new romance.
And love won't hurt anymore.
It's an open smile on a fresh shore. It's love! On a frisky shore
It's love
With the world
It's love
Wow.
Wow.
You're a twisted individual If anything's going to sink the love boat
Is there anything you'd like to add?
What could I possibly add?
Yeah
This is the Raybone theme music
It's conflicting
With the Gilbert Sings.
Thank God for Paul Williams' sake that he went on to other things.
I don't think this would have made his career.
I'll tell you what, Gil.
Yes.
With that tune, with that rendition,
you not only potentially offended a previous guest,
you potentially offended a future guest.
Oh!
Because Charlie Fox, who we've been trying to get on the show.
Oh, yes.
Who also wrote Ready to Take a Chance Again, which I believe you sang to Chevy.
Yes.
Paul Williams collaborated with Charles Fox.
Wow.
On this song.
It was recorded as a theme song for the Love Boat broadcast between 1977 and 1986.
Did you know that was on that long?
I did not know that.
This was quite an accomplishment for me.
Yes, yes.
You've cut quite a swath.
Swath.
Jones' version was used in all seasons apart from the ninth,
where it was replaced by Dionne Warwick's version.
Jack Jones' version, I should say.
Jack Jones, alive and well.
Wow.
Got to talk to him.
And his father worked with whom?
The Marx Brothers.
Look at Gilbert.
Yeah.
How about that?
Yeah.
Jones released the track himself as a single in 1979 as Love Boat Theme.
Here it is on MGM Records.
With a cover of the Barry Manilow song, Ready to Take a Chance Again on side B.
Oh, jeez.
So we gotta get our hands on this.
And I'm ready to take a chance again.
There you go.
Yes.
Norman Steinberg,
who did this show.
You know Norman,
the Blazing Saddles writer?
He said,
you've got to get Charlie Fox.
Yes.
And so we got in touch
about Charlie Fox,
and he said,
Charlie will do it
if Gilbert doesn't sing
any of his songs.
And that was a deal breaker.
Right, it was a deal breaker.
Here's some covers.
Actress and singer Charo.
Charo.
Boy, she'd be interesting for us.
Oh, yes.
Should we try Charo?
And I worked with her on Hollywood Squares.
You did?
What was she like?
She was great.
Charo?
She's one of those people very much like Sofia Vergara, who the longer she stays in America, the thicker her Spanish accent becomes, which is quite unusual.
That's very funny.
Like Googie Gomez in The Ritz.
I heard a story that Jack Jones was on the Ed Sullivan show.
Uh-huh.
And Sullivan was famous for not knowing a thing.
Of course.
And he was going to say, oh, he said to Jack Jones during rehearsal on stage, he says,
so your father was Alan Jones.
And he goes, well, he still is Alan Jones.
Hilarious.
He's alive.
Hilarious.
And so that got a big laugh.
And they said, okay, Ed, do that on the air.
And on the air, Ed Sullivan goes, so Jack, your father's dead, isn't he?
It's hilarious.
As Richard Kind would say, that's hilarious.
Hilarious.
Olivia Newton-John covered it.
Your friend.
Oh, that's right.
You love to point out her heritage.
Jew.
Yes.
friend. Oh, that's right. You love to point out her heritage. Jew? Yes.
Olivia Newton-John's
a Jew, and her
father and
uncle are supposed to
be like super.
I think it's her grandfather
was a Nobel Prize
winning chemist. Yeah, they're like super
geniuses. You want to look that up?
Raybone? I can see what I can find.
Ridiculous genius level.
Yeah. I think her grandfather
was Niels
Bohr. Does that name mean anything to you?
Niels Bohr.
I believe that's, unless I'm pulling this
out of my tush.
I believe that was...
I could be totally wrong,
but I think that's Olivia Newton-John's
uncle or grandfather.
Anyway, Dionne Warwick covered this.
Jacques Raymond covered it in Belgium.
And, of course, Charo, as Gilbert pointed out.
And the Belgian band Swoop.
Does that mean anything to you?
Oh, I have all their albums.
You're big in Antwerp.
Yes.
In Antwerp, I'm considered a genius.
I didn't realize that.
Like Jerry.
Yes.
Yeah, it's a Jerry thing.
They consider me the next chaplain.
All right, while Paul is trying to find out who Olivia Newton-John's Nobel Prize winning family member is or was.
Oh, here we go.
We'll do our.
Do I have the right person?
I'm not quite.
Well, I've got.
Let's see.
Do I have the right person?
I'm not quite.
Well, I've got, let's see.
Her Jewish maternal grandfather was Nobel Prize winning physicist Max Born. Max Born.
I'm way the hell off.
It was Niels Bohr.
And Max Born.
Okay.
Max Born.
So they're both Nobel winners.
Led to England before the war.
There you go.
In Germany.
Pretty impressive.
But the important thing is Olivia Newton-John's a Jew.
That's the important thing.
Does it say that there?
It doesn't, but it also doesn't say whether Max Born could sing.
Yeah, but he was supposed to be some super intellectual.
She comes from interesting stock.
Here's our last song, and this is from Derek Herr,
or Herr, H-E-R-R,
and this one is going to hurt me personally
because this is a song that I'm very fond of.
What? The others didn't?
This song shares its name with the first album I ever bought in 1973.
Here we go, Gilbert.
This is a special request.
Now, he requests that you sing it as Peter Lorre.
So here goes nothing and a song I used to love.
When are you going to come down?
When are you going to land?
I should have stayed on the farm.
I should have listened to my own man.
You know you can hold me forever.
I didn't sign up for you.
I'm a present for your friends to open.
These boys too young to be singing the blues. Oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioioio I'm going back to my cloud! Back to the howling old owl in the woods,
hunting the horny fat toad!
Oh, I finally decided my future lies beyond the yellow brick road! What do you think you'll do then?
I'm going to keep going.
Ha, ha, ha.
It'll take a couple of vodka and tonics to set you on your feet again. Maybe you'll get a replacementing for tidbits like you on the ground.
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
So goodbye, yellow brick road
and that tidy owl.
Oh, Lord.
You can plant me in your penthouse.
I'm going back to my plow.
Back to the howling all out in the woods,
hunting the horny back toad.
Oh, I finally decided my future lies. I'm hunting the horny-backed toad.
Oh, I finally decided my future! Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh!
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Oh! Oh! to that. Who asked for this song? A gentleman. I lost the card. Can we strike
him from the rolls permanently? Derek
Herr. H-E-R-R.
Or Hair. Hair Derek.
Hair Derek.
Derek the Hair. Now that was the one that
Elton John sang about Princess Diana, right?
No. That was Candle
in the Wind, for gosh, for corn's sake.
Paul, the king of pop culture
references Rayburn. Yeah yeah he is right on
the spot was was gilbert asked to sing it for prince princess diane he was not he was not
no not a word no he was asked not to sing
uh someone contacted me on uh on facebook about someone who's friends with bernie taupin
Someone contacted me on Facebook, someone who's friends with Bernie Taupin.
Taupin?
Taupin.
I think it's Taupin, who listens to this show.
And I thought, wow, that would be an incredible.
He does a show on SiriusXM.
I know, and he's a talker, and he's interesting.
Now it'll never happen.
It'll never happen.
We were that close.
Yeah.
So Bernie spent something like two weeks working on the lyrics for Goodbye, Yellow Brick Road, the album.
Mm-hmm.
They were writing them fast in those days.
And then Elton spent like three days to do the music.
So a little more than two weeks, which means in the time it takes us to do two podcasts, they sold 12 million records.
There you go.
Which,
how do you feel about that?
Can you imagine how many records
they sold in time?
It took Paul to look that up.
That's right.
Let's see.
It was,
the song was released
in 1973
as the album's
second single
and entered the top 10
in the UK
and the United States.
One of John's biggest hits and surpassed the previous single, Saturday Night's All Right, for fighting.
The Yellow Brick Road is an image, of course, taken from the 1939 film adaptation of...
Oh, of course, Wizard of Oz.
That's right.
Yeah.
That's right.
And what is the album that allegedly you could play Wizard of Oz against?
Oh, that would be Dark Side of the Moon.
Oh, yeah.
Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon.
And it works.
Does it work?
You've done it?
I had years ago a studio manager friend of mine took the laser disc of Wizard of Oz
and the CD of Dark Side of the Moon and linked them up and made a VHS.
And it was a lot of very eerie, trippy, spot-on moments.
I never knew anybody who actually did it. Yeah, it works. In 2010, Rolling Stone ranked Goodbye Yellow Brick Road as the number
380 in their list of the 500 greatest songs of all time. Yeah. And the version that you just did
is not in the top 500,000 of all time.
But the flip side, the B-side of that record was called Screw You.
There you go, Gil.
And released in the U.S. under the title Young Man's Blues
so as not to offend American record buyers.
Oh.
So there you go.
That's all I got this week.
What's your favorite Elton John song?
Oh, my God.
That's a long...
I'm a mega fan, a super fan.
So that's a long conversation.
Gilbert, how about you?
God.
Oh, so many.
Oh, boy.
You know what?
Take me to the pilot.
Yeah, I'm still standing.
That's a good one.
And what was the one that they played in Dog Day Afternoon?
Oh, is that Amarina?
It might be.
I think it's Amarina from Tumbleweed Connection.
My favorite album.
I think my favorite Elton John song is his very first song.
You know, it's a little bit funny.
Well, his first hit.
His first hit.
He had an album before that album.
Oh, did he?
Yeah, Empty Sky before Elton John.
Is it wrong that I like his Lucy in the Sky better than The Beatles?
I like that one.
I like that.
It's really solid.
It's trippier.
It's strangely trippier.
And John liked it.
So it was the biggest tribute.
I like a song called Elderberry Wine, which is on Don't Shoot Me.
I'm only a piano player.
But this is another show.
Another show.
Gilbert?
Yes?
I am more impressed with you now than I think I've ever been.
You did slip into Brother Theodore a couple of times during that.
But that was beautiful.
I don't think Peter Lorre will ever get a better tribute.
I don't think so.
I guess we'll never get his daughter on the show now.
Is she around?
I don't know.
Lori's daughter?
I don't know.
She might be gone.
Why were you turning into Jerry Lewis during the chorus?
Yes.
Yeah, we're turning into.
Because he's in the Patsy?
Oh, that's right.
And John Carradine. Right. And John Carradine.
Right, and John Carradine.
Oh, and Everett Sloan.
Very good.
Yeah.
Who I believe killed himself.
He did?
I think so.
There you go.
I'm usually the one who brings down the episodes.
Everett Sloan was the voice of Dick Tracy.
He was.
In the cartoons. He was. In the cartoons.
He was.
And if he didn't kill himself, I'm going to cut that out of this episode so you'll never hear it.
And I think he wrote, it was never played or recorded.
I think he wrote lyrics for Bonanza.
Very cool.
Yeah.
Well, that'll be for next week's show.
Yeah. Bonanza is just, I just saw them on MeTV, which has suddenly got a channel number you can actually find.
One day, I think, one of these shows will have to do these...
All Bonanza?
No, theme songs that had words, but we never knew the words to.
Well, you just gave me an idea for the next mini-episode.
Brilliant.
Like the Star Trek theme.
Oh, yes.
That's right.
And the Andy Griffith theme.
Oh, yeah.
Which also has words.
There's a Bonanza theme.
Down by the fishing hole.
I couldn't tell you.
And there's another one.
Oh, oh.
We are all the manly men of war.
We are marching in. Oh, Hogan's Heroes. Where thousands have repoured. Very war. We are marching in where
thousands have before.
We'll do an episode on that.
Dara's going to yell at us for doing a too long mini episode.
Oh, okay. So this
has been Gilbert and Frank's
amazing colossal
obsessions with
ribcage-less
rape. Ribcage-less?
Born without a rib cage.
And no sternum.
I'm basically reduced to an amoeba at this point.
Wow.
No sternum.
Rib cage-less.
I admire your pluckiness.
That actually could be a nice stage name.
Rib cage-less.
Welcome, Mr. Cage-less.
See you next week.
Colossal Obsessions