Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - GGACP Classic: Ron Friedman Returns!
Episode Date: August 1, 2024GGACP celebrates the birthday (August 1) of longtime television writer and podcast pal Ron Friedman (“The Odd Couple,” “The Andy Griffith Show,” “All in the Family,” “Barney Miller”) ...by revisiting Ron's second sitdown with Gilbert and Frank. In this episode, Ron discusses the structure of storytelling, the importance of escapism and the inspirations for Captain Marvel and the Sub-Mariner and shares all-new stories about Lucille Ball, Tony Randall, Danny Thomas and (of course) Pat McCormick. Also, Jack Benny takes a stand, Carol Wayne dodges a bullet, John Huston tangles with Errol Flynn and Ron remembers the late, great Stan Lee. PLUS: Stump and Stumpy! Herve Villechaize’s doppelgänger! Marilyn Monroe converts! Buster Crabbe teams with Chuck McCann! And Ron kills off a beloved fictional character! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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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.
Hi, this is Gilbert Gottfried and this is Gilbert Gottfried's amazing colossal podcast with my co-host Frank Santo Padre and our engineer, Frank Ferdorosa.
Our guest this week is back for a return visit by popular demand.
He's a screenwriter and one of the most prolific television writers in the history of the medium,
scripting over 700 hours of television.
His list of credits, which he insists is only a partial list, is staggering.
My favorite Martian, get smart, be witch, Gilligan's Island, The Andy Griffith Show,
The Odd Couple, All in the Family, Barney Miller, Happy Days, Love American Stylestyle Charlie's Angels, Wonder Woman, Fantasy Island, and Starsky and Hutch,
just to name a handful.
He's also written specials for stars like
Dick Van Dyke, Lucille Ball,
and Danny Thomas movies for the big and small screen,
including Marathons starring Bob Newhart,
Record Cities starring former podcast guests,
Ed Begley Jr. and Larry Storch,
and of course, Murder Can Hurt You, featuring former guests John Beiner and Jamie Farr,
who played Starsky in Hunch.
Correct!
In addition, he's written and produced dozens of hours of TV animation, including Iron Man, the fantastic four, and G.I. Joe. He penned
the very first Transformers feature film back in 1986. In a six-decade career, he's written for, worked alongside, and palled around with some of the most
memorable showbiz personalities. Where'd she get prolific? Well, you'd be surprised
the stuff that Jonathan went through. The books he's written. It's true.
The novels.
Who are those names?
The collection of contemporary fiction
by Jonathan Winters and Danny Kay.
Oh, where was I?
Danny Kay, Bob Hope, Fred Astaire, Sammy Davis Jr.,
Zero Mustell, Jonathan Winters, Orson Welles, and of course,
Ah, they villages!
The guy even met Marilyn Monroe, Walt Disney, and Frank Lloyd Wright.
Marilyn Monroe was converted to...
Well, we'll hear about that in a minute.
His new memoir is called I Killed Optimus Prime. How one man single-handedly destroyed
the world's most iconic Transformer and lived to tell a tale.
iconic transformer and lived to tell a tale.
Please welcome back a master storyteller and the world's funniest former architect
and a man who could finally tell the
Pat McCormick, Carol Wayne story
that we didn't get to the last time he was here.
Our friend, Ron Friedman.
I don't know what to say except Ging Gatch Gook is going to be pissed off you didn't include him.
Who?
You didn't mean the last of the Mohicans? We were very close.
I helped the British fuck him out of California and Nevada.
Welcome back Ron.
I'm thrilled to be here, particularly when I realized that the only other person ass
back twice was Eleanor Roosevelt.
That's right.
We had Sacco and Van Zet.
Yes, favorites of mine.
Absolutely. Now because this is this will be picking away at my head the
whole time tell us about Pat Mc... always ready for a Pat McCormick story. Yeah we
ran short of time last time you were gonna tell that is the Sheik story yes?
Yes, yes. We'll open with that. As I heard it and Pat was reluctant to reveal the
story he always changed it when he told it,
but he took a round the world tour with Carol Wayne,
who Johnny Carson used to feature as the weather lady
on many of his episodes.
Sure.
And Pat is traveling with her,
and they're in one of the Emirates states.
I think it was Saudi Arabia,
ever popular if you're into beheadings.
And he's in one of the lounges with Carol
and a distinguished guy who had just gotten off his camel
came over and said,
I represent and he named the particular Amir
who I think used to play third base for Cincinnati.
And he said, he loves her, he wants her, what's the price?
So Pat is ever eager to make a deal
and make a friend in an unusual nation.
And he gave a price, something like 400,000 camels,
you know, 12 racehorses, a speedo plane, you know,
it just went on and on
and the guy's nodding and making notes.
And I said, didn't that disturb you, Pat?
He says, no.
He said, I thought he had trouble with English.
So he was just checking a dictionary.
Anyway, Pat has a big laugh and the guy comes back
and he comes back and he says,
my master has agreed to the terms.
But he- To buy caro-wane. Yes, to buy caro-wane, And he comes back and he says, my master has agreed to the terms. But it's-
To buy Carol Wayne.
Yes, to buy Carol Wayne,
but he can't get the livestock here this afternoon.
That's going to take,
that will take some time.
So would you be willing to take money
in lieu of the camels and the thoroughbreds?
And Pat said, of course.
I mean, why make an enemy?
Anyway, the guy said, good, we have a deal.
Hand her over.
And Carol Wayne at this point said something in the nature of,
what the fuck are you talking about?
I'm not going away with this guy.
You can shove your animals up your ass.
I'm not leaving.
The guy meant it and he said, but we have a deal.
I've spoken to your handler or your trainer,
whatever he thought Pat was, we have a deal.
They had to call the American ambassador to come over
and they send over somebody to argue the case.
Unreal.
Oh, geez.
They missed their flight.
Wow.
Love Pat McCormick stories. We can't get enough.
No, he was wonderful to work with, but he's a guy that could embarrass a toilet seat.
Yes.
By the way, did anybody ever mention his hobby of drop kicking old ladies?
No, you didn't mention that.
You mentioned that he used to keep rolls of coins in his pocket.
So he could drop his pants immediately.
But he had a hobby of like running up to a short woman
and pretending to kick her in the head.
And this guy, I mean, everybody needs a hobby.
So we're standing in London at Marble Arch
and there's a char woman there with two leather bags,
and Pat runs up to her and then lifts that right leg
like he's going to kick her in the head,
and holds the leg up in the air,
the foot in the air right near her face.
And she says, Harold, help me.
And a guy that looked like a coke machine
in a leather jacket comes out of a doorway,
and says, what are you doing to me, mom?
Pat said, I'm an ugly American and here's 200 pounds.
That was it. He bought the guy off.
Yes. Fantastic.
He did this frequently though, which again was embarrassing.
Yeah. That was when you were in London doing the Lucy special? Exactly right.
Wow.
Now, how old was Lucy when you were doing this special?
141.
Gilbert's obsessed with her last attempt at prime time, Ron,
which was Life with Lucy, where she pulled Dale Gordon out of mothballs.
Do you remember this?
In the 90s?
Nightmare.
It's in the Smithsonian.
But she liked you. You got on with Lucy.
I liked her.
I thought she was great.
I don't know if I told you about the time
I'm sitting in her house and the doorbell rings
and she says, Cleo, see who that is.
She called her her sister.
She was really her cousin or something.
Cleo comes back and she says,
you're not going to believe this. Lucy said, what is it?
She said, it's a tour group. A woman knows this is your house
and asked if she could use the toilet.
Lucy said, tell her to go fuck herself.
This isn't a union station.
You you you regaled us with the wonderful Desi Arnaz Orson Welles story last time. Oh yeah.
Orson, go ahead.
No, no, it just, every time I think about it, I think Orson was lucky that Desi didn't
shoot him.
Yeah, to refresh everybody's memory, Ron did a show with us back in October and that was the story about
About Desi pulling a piece on on Orson because he hadn't delivered material that he'd been. Yes
Compensated for yeah, that was it. Yeah, but he finally turned it in at which I read in the new book
Yeah, actually he finally delivered. Absolutely. He sent it the script in by limo from
The desert which is where Lucy and Desi put him.
They put him up in her house in Palm Springs.
And he sent the script back,
I think it was in four or six days, by limo,
and it was brilliant, absolutely.
And they shot it, and it was sensational, of course.
And then Desi said, what's next, Orson?
Orson says, oh, I need to get some relaxation.
I don't have anything.
And Lucy had to wrestle Desi for the gun.
Wow.
Wow.
But you liked him too.
You liked Orson Welles.
Yeah, I did.
How do you not like a legend?
How do you not like a mountain?
I mean, you know, the cheeks of his ass
had two different zip codes.
So.
So.
You wrote.
Had to admire him.
Did you write his last role?
Yes.
Orson's?
Unicron, that was the character.
Now did Johnny Carson fuck Carol Wayne?
I believe you need to go to Yeshiva and talk to the Rabbi in charge of star-stupping.
How are his second ways, Ron? I'm not gonna lie buddy. In charge of star-stupping.
How are his segues, Ron?
I'll give him some credit for a smooth segue at the very least. It was. It was.
Speaking of boulder dam,
just keep moving.
That's the answer.
Now, Frank and I were talking about,
well, surprise to both of us that you're a Jew.
Because you don't find comedy writers.
Of course not.
We know they're all Norwegian.
It's those vast spaces and the temperature
that brings out the humor.
What are we having for dinner, Lars?
We're having you.
The moose died.
So you were being bullied as a kid.
Oh, one of the touching things in the book
is the story of you and your brother growing up in what?
West Virginia?
Yeah, we're in West Virginia.
Hard Gravel, West Virginia.
And kind of escaping into the comic books of the day,
the radio characters of the day.
And we needed to escape.
And of course, this Wirtin, West Virginia was described
as if you give Pennsylvania an enema,
you put the bone in Wirtin.
Because it's in the panhandle of the state.
And if you look at a map, you'll say, this is apt.
This is correct. Anyway, all the steelhandle of the state. And if you look at a map, you'll say, this is apt. This is correct.
Anyway, all the steel workers were, of course,
Eastern Europeans, and they had these fine traditions
of killing Jews.
And they didn't want to leave them at the dock
when they came to America,
so they were alive and well in Wharton.
And the big Catholic church was our lady
of the Spanish Inquisition,
which might've given you a clue
as to the way things worked.
Anyway, the elementary school there did not open
in a timely fashion,
because they were remodeling it and there was a fire.
So the Catholic school offered to take those
from the public school in.
So we had to talk to the rabbi first. And he says,
you will observe as they observe, you will do what they do, except when it comes time to speak the
name of their God, you will instead insert the word, MHA. So, when Jesus mentioned it was MHA.
And it was okay until we're singing Christmas carols and we're singing,
And it was okay until we're singing Christmas carols and we're singing Christ is born in Bethlehem.
No, no, it's, mm-ha, is born in Bethlehem.
And the nun who was walking up and down the aisles with sodality sticks taped together
with bicycle tape and would hit you on the knuckles.
So I'm singing and I go, mm-ha, is born in Bethlehem.
She whacks me on the knuckles and I said, Jesus Christ.
She said, sing it, Chewboy.
It affected my life.
I would imagine.
Absolutely.
That was an escape, all these fantasy characters.
Oh, you bet your ass it was.
And it was welcome.
It was wonderful.
And when I saw who wrote Superman, Schuster and I forget the other guy's name.
Segal.
Segal, Segal and Schuster.
I thought they understand, you need a Superman.
And it's very-
And Gilbert and I were making that comparison
because reading about it in your book,
you disappeared in a similar way.
I mean, you feared the same things.
Absolutely.
You needed a hero.
I did, desperately. And it things. Absolutely. You needed a hero. I did, desperately.
And it's odd, I was doing a convention for Transformers
because I wrote the movie, The Transformers, the movie,
and so many people came up to me
and told this kind of story.
A guy with tears in his eyes who was a grandfather,
because there are three generations of people there
that loved Transformers, said, when I was seven years old, my father was a grandfather, because there are three generations of people there that love Transformers, said,
when I was seven years old, my father was a drunk
and he abandoned the family.
I needed a father and I picked Optimus Prime
in the Transformers.
And that's how I got through my childhood.
Wow.
And oddly enough, my father died when I was 11
and I was looking for a father figure.
And somebody told me I looked like an army football player
named Doc Blanchard.
So schmuck that I was, I cut a picture of Doc Blanchard
out of the newspaper and I put it in my wallet.
And I would consult Doc when I needed father.
But he was no good at Purim, he didn't know.
But Shabas, he was, you know, I had to finally ditch him.
There's something sweet about that, Ron.
And like the ones that wrote Superman,
and what I noticed, in Jewish names,
there's El at the end.
El?
El.
Oh, you mean, oh, he's saying like Superman is Cal L and Jor-El was the father.
As in Bissell and Schlissel.
Yeah, yes.
As in Temple Beth-El?
Is that where you're going with this?
Yeah, yeah.
There's names like in the Talmud.
I don't know where.
I bet that's right.
Yeah, that end in L.
Yeah, I know the loyal who had to circumcise Superman could never make it.
Yeah.
The blades kept, you know, give me a diamond tip.
Let me try that.
Of course, I think L might be God or something.
Not that I know of, Gilbert, but good luck with that.
I'm sure they'll build a temple for you.
So, did Johnny Carson fuck Carol?
The research is unclear I heard there were skid marks on the sheet
Tell us about those characters you what you you know we're talking about early days of comic books.
Oh yeah, absolutely.
We're talking about Captain, first Captain Marvel.
First Captain Marvel.
Who you thought looked like Fred McMurray, which I found was interesting.
No, it was absolutely intentional that Captain Marvel was made to look-
Is that true?
Absolutely.
Wow.
Sure.
Because people loved movie stars and of course you're not going to hire Fred McMurray to
show up and be painted
in various colors. But if you use Fred McMurray's face, everybody looks and says, you know,
I like Captain Marvel. I don't know why, you know, but he, and Fred Astaire.
And Fred Astaire of course was Prince Namor, the Submariner.
Was that intentional on Bill Everett's part to make him look like Fred Astaire? Yeah.
You know, Fred McMurray had this great deal when he did My Three Sons.
You bet.
Yeah, he didn't want to be there all the time because he was a movie star.
So they would film all of his scenes separately.
Like they'd film like a year's worth in a day.
Exactly.
I heard he was the cheapest man in Hollywood, Fred McMurray.
No, there's a big list.
Until I came along.
There are many ahead of him.
Until Gilbert came along.
You told Fred Astaire when you worked with him that you thought he resembled the Submariner
and this was news to him?
No, I told him you were the Submariner and he says what the hell is that?
And I gave him the comic book and he looked at it and he got a big kick out of that.
Wow.
And he said don't show mom.
I said why not?
Because she thinks comic books are cheap.
So I never showed his mother.
Now Ron, who are the most famous anti-Semites in Hollywood?
You want it alphabetically or by heart?
Yes!
Start with Eugene Paulette and work with Ward Bond.
Ward Bond was famously so, as was Adolf Mongeau.
Adolf Mongeau.
And I heard that, let me think, John Wayne was supposedly anti-Semitic.
He was certainly not fond of black people,
but he sort of reformed at the end.
And that's when I met him,
when he was toward the end of his life.
And he seemed far different from the right wing zealot
that he had been during the blacklist years.
But you never know.
I mean, there were a lot of secret antisemites
when they would use code words for Jews,
like motherfuckers and.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Gilbert, who's on your list?
I love New Yorkers.
Was always a famous code for Jews.
It was, exactly.
But yeah, Eugene Pallette hated both blacks and Jews.
That's what they say.
What about Walter Brennan?
Walter Brennan too, yes.
Another famous.
Yes.
Oh, Errol Flynn.
Yes, but John Huston beat the crap out of him
because John Huston didn't like people
who were anti-Semitic or anti-black.
John Huston was like a liberal bastion.
And at a famous Hollywood party,
when Flynn was drunk and going on and on about the Jews,
Huston took him outside and Flynn was prepared
to beat the crap out of him,
and Huston beat the crap out of Flynn.
Wow.
That's good stuff.
Yeah.
That's a great story.
I was thrilled when I heard that.
So all this stuff, Ron, that you're exposed to as a kid and your book sort of tells us...
Did John use...
Fuck, Carol Wayne.
Now cut that out.
Wait a minute.
Let's go back a bit in history.
Benjamin Franklin, they dated but it never went anywhere because he was always out in the yard with that fucking kite
By the way what you told me on the phone about a stare was interesting that you asked him
Who he thought the best dancer was that?
Apart from himself and gave you a surprise answer.. Well his sad answer was, you know,
you can't pick who's the champion dancer,
like who's the greatest baseball player,
because there are a lot of great players,
there are a lot of great dancers,
and you know, Bobby Vann was a great dancer,
and then Gene Kelly, but finally one day he said,
fuck Gene Kelly.
Ah ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. He knew me well enough so he didn't have to go I love that.
Yeah, he knew me well enough so he didn't have to go through the ritual of being accepting
of everybody.
That's fantastic.
You remind me, Zero Mostel used to do something about opera singers when he was senior Mostelli
and he had a guy, Phil Leeds, who was an actor, a blacklisted friend.
You remember Phil Leeds?
Oh yeah.
He'd say, interview me, I'm
Signior Mostelli. So he would say, please Signior Mostelli, what do you think
about the following opera singers? Ferruccio Tagliavini, a pig. He says,
Yossi Berling, a pig. He said, Robert Merrill, bad at home. better tone. Yeah. Phil Leeds.
A little opera background.
And his last day was
Daysworth on Ali McBeal.
Who was? Phil Leeds.
Oh, Phil Leeds. Yeah, we know Phil Leeds.
I think he played Hank Kingsley's agent on
the Larry Sanders show. He did, that's right.
And he was famous during the Blacklist.
He's being interviewed in front of the House
and American Activities Committee and Senator McCarran said, all right Mr.
Leeds, you keep denying your affiliation with fellow travelers, but
if it walks like a duck and it quacks like a duck and it looks like a duck and
Phil says I'll stop you right there, I'm not a duck. I'm a swan. That's fantastic. They held him in contempt for that.
Damn. I'm going to keep trying to talk about the book, Ron.
Please do. As Gilbert interrupts me to ask you about
Carol Wayne and who your favorite anti-semites fuck Carol Wayne?
Certainly.
Hold on, David Wayne.
Did the American Nazi party ever fuck Carol Wayne?
It's going to be one of those shows.
I'm sure they tried.
But you weren't just reading comic books.
You were reading pulps, you were reading comic strips.
I'm trying to figure out if this is your first step toward becoming a writer and a storyteller.
It really was because I was so thrilled to be able to escape the confines of Wirt in
West Virginia and the prospect of being bombarded in the winter with snowballs that had been turned to ice
and inside of each snowball was a piece of jagged
mill slag.
Oh Jesus.
So that when the snowball hit you, it exploded
and the piece of sharp slag would cut whatever you had on
or if it didn't cut you.
Oh Jesus.
This was one of the Christmas specials
that my brother and I always ran from.
But I should tell you this,
my mother was a fanatic about medicine.
She loved doctors,
and so she always schlepped my brother and me to doctors,
and she invented problems that we didn't have.
So she-
Okay.
So, I remember, never forget this,
when I'm like six and my, no, I was five
and my brother's three, and she takes us
to a gland specialist, and he strips us
and stands us on his desk.
And he looks very solemn and he says to my mother,
their testicles have not descended.
And then I realized, you're five, you're six,
you're supposed to stand up and bang,
a testicle hits the stem and bang, the other testicle hits,
and then you know you're okay.
And then I realized, you're five, you're six,
you're supposed to stand up and bang, a testicle hits the stem
and bang, the other testicle hits,
and then you know you're okay.
Gilbert, on the subject of this, how did you avoid beatings
and bullying growing up in...
Cause I'm so cool.
I thought it was the wardrobe that got them.
The plaid shirts.
That's it.
He grew up in Coney Island.
I mean, it was a different mix.
It was.
Yeah, Coney Island, Crown Heights.
Yeah.
It's, hey, antisemites show up everywhere.
I've always had the feeling that if I were an explorer
of the galaxy, wherever I'd land, I'd see a sign,
no Jews or dogs.
That's funny. Yes.
You didn't understand, this was fun to me,
or interesting to me, you said you didn't understand
why Nazis were depicted as evil in the comic books,
but not Germans.
Yes, I didn't.
Can you elaborate on that?
Yeah, it was one of those things that made me think
how easy it is to learn to hate.
In fact, it's one of the simplest lessons to pick up.
So in comic books, the Nazis were bad,
but the Germans were okay.
And yet the Japanese were all bad.
There were no good Japanese.
And I thought just the law of numbers,
a couple million Japanese,
there have to be at least two good guys,
Shecky and Dwight, you know, so.
And it began to make me aware of how readily hatred
can be passed on to inquiring young minds
that are just looking to escape in a four color universe
of fun and games.
And the example I use in my book is the book,
Little Black Sambo, which every little kid had that book
or somebody read it to him.
And it was about a little black boy who's caught up
in a palm tree while tigers are running around
because they want to eat him.
And the more they run around, they finally turn
into melted butter and syrup for his pancakes.
But the idea that little black samba was okay, so I ask in my book and I ask myself, what
if a book was Little Jew Sheki?
How would I feel about that?
And I don't know what would be running around under the tree, I guess, process servers or
personal injury lawyers.
And they keep going until you pledge to Israel.
But whatever it was, it just made me aware of,
I could have been turned into an anti-something or other
very quickly if I didn't question it.
And this is something that bothered you your whole life
because we were talking on the phone about when you got to
meet Timmy Rogers and Scatman Crothers, another guy you befriended,
and this obviously was something you fought against your whole life, something that made you sick,
the way these people were treated. It did. By the business as well. Absolutely. As the general
population. You bet. Well show business is not an exemplar of human conduct as the question,
who fucked Carol Wayne, we'll You know. Nice callback.
You don't get questions like that in nuclear science.
You don't get questions like that in Egyptology.
Or in physics and mathematics.
I wonder who Einstein is fucking.
Nobody gave a shit.
That's not what it's about.
But show business, that's not what it's about.
But show business, that's the first order.
First order.
Well, we'll talk later about Timmy Rogers and the...
I heard there were black performers
who would have really beautiful, expensive cars
because they were successes, but no place to park the car.
I've heard that too. I've heard that too. Doorman wouldn't take it. because they were successes, but no place to park the car.
I've heard that too.
I've heard that too. Doorman wouldn't take it.
Yeah. Yeah.
What breaks your heart too is that story about
Hattie McDaniel winning the Oscar.
Yes.
In 1939 and having to wait out in the kitchen
when she couldn't sit in the main room.
Sickening, isn't it?
It is sickening.
Well, I was happy to hear that Jack Benny would not play anywhere where Rochester couldn't stay in the main room, in the ballroom. Sickening, isn't it? It is sickening. Well, I was happy to hear that Jack Benny
would not play anywhere where Rochester
couldn't stay in the same hotel.
Yes, I'd heard that.
Yeah, and also Sinatra with Sammy would not appear
if there was any of that crap.
But it took people of courage who had some stature
and a willingness to put their, to stick their neck out.
And that remains to be true.
And today, of course, there's such ferocity
and immediate response on the negative side
that it's really like somebody's trying to unwind history
and go back to those good old days,
which, you know, where the German American Bund
was all over New York City.
And the slogan of the German American Bund was
if George Washington had been here now he would have been a Bund member.
Incredible. Yep. It could always come again. I believe that. Me too.
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did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did,
did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did,
did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did getting the attention she deserved. Poor thing. She had a short life, you know. She died tragically.
Yes. Oh, that's right. She drowned.
Oh my God.
Yeah, there's another bit for your act, Gilbert.
So, did Buster Crab fuck her while she was driving?
Buster Crab. He was Flash Gordon.
He was my idol.
There you go.
Yes.
Lovely guy.
Chuck McCann made a movie starring Buster Crab.
Sure.
And I don't know if you've ever seen the movie, but-
The Projectionist.
No, this was another one.
Oh, the other one.
The, um, it's not the one you mean.
It's a variation of The Producers where these two schlubs are going to make a movie with
an old action star.
The comeback trail.
That's it, and they have ensured his life.
So what they do is they figure he's so weak and ill
that they'll put all of these stunts in front of him
and he'll die performing them.
And Buster Crabb plays this character
and in the course of the movie, of course,
he gets really buff and strong and they can't kill him.
But the movie kept running out of money.
So there are plenty of scenes when Chuck McCann
gets in a cab and he's 38 and he gets out and he's 59.
You just have to be willing to go with that.
Was that Harry Hurwitz, the same guy
that made The Projectionist?
I think it was.
I think it was.
And you got to know Chuck a little bit.
I know he played Ben Grimm in the Fantastic Four series.
Oh yeah, I know Chuck very well.
Sweet guy, we had him on here.
Yeah, terrific guy.
Lovely guy.
Yep.
I love how Ron knows so many people
that he's able to take every one of your perverse requests
and turn it into a winning anecdote.
And he did.
And Buster Crab, I got a Buster Crab story.
And he did so much for Israel. Hahahaha!
I don't know what exactly, but I'll find out.
Buster Crab, I heard made a fortune selling those like rubber t-shirts.
Really?
That would like hold your stomach in.
I know what you mean.
Hahahaha! Well, obviously that's why he couldn't fuck Carol Wayne.
She had a rubber allergy.
I'm going to get back to the book if it kills me, Ron.
But I gotta listen.
Please do.
I gotta listen to your funny stories here.
We can keep Gilbert entertained for a moment.
You gotta tell him the Jackie Vernon, Lenny Bruce story.
Oh yeah. I was working for Jackie Vernon
and he told me a story,
which he later told on Joe Franklin
or some other one of these shows that nobody sees
unless they have insomnia and they're right,
right before the last rights are performed.
Anyway, he said, I'm rooming with Lenny Bruce.
He said, neither one of us has a gig.
He says, we're starving.
And Lenny says, listen, I got an idea.
How much money you got, Jackie?
He said, like a $1.70.
He says, I have about the same.
That's 3.40, 3.50.
He says, here's what we do.
We go to the butcher store and we get a big knockwurst.
He says, you put it in your pants.
We go to a Chinese restaurant.
We have the 10 course feast.
He said, the Chinese, they hate gay guys.
They hate fags.
So the minute we finished the dinner,
you get under the table
and you output the knockwurst between my knees
and you go down and suck the knockwurst.
They'll see it.
They'll throw us out.
We won't have to pay a dime.
So he said, we did this.
And then I got a gig and I said, okay, Lenny,
now we don't have to do this anymore.
And he said, oh, I ate the knockwurst six weeks ago.
Right? knock where six weeks ago. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh.
Oh.
Oh.
Oh.
Let, Gilbert, do a little of your Jackie Vernon for Ron,
because I promised him.
Here are some slides from my vacation.
Here are some slides from my vacation.
Here are some slides from my vacation.
That's, that's.
Here's Manuel leading us around the quicksand.
Here we are from the waist up.
Here's just a bunch of hats and ropes and things.
Pretty good, right, Ron?
That's very good.
Not bad.
What about the death of his uncle, who was a weird guy?
Oh, how did that one go?
Buying a cherry pie at the automat, the little door came down on the back of his neck.
Love Jackie Vernon.
Yeah.
So how does a kid, as I was starting to say, who grew up on all this stuff.
Now I heard Jackie Vernon used to love to drop his pants in public.
I never knew that.
Yeah. pants in public. I never knew that. Yeah, someone who worked with him said he'd walk around like a supermarket and go to a
woman who's standing in the aisles somewhere and he'd suck his stomach in and that would
make his pants fall down.
It's no putting rolls of coins in your pockets.
And then he'd go, oh oh sorry. That's surprising. That's an element of his
character I was unaware of. Interesting. I thought it was just McCormick and Neville
Chamberlain. And I met Jackie Vernon and he said, I fucked Carl Wayne. Somebody had to.
He's not going to let it go, Ron.
No, I know. Gilbert commits.
That's good.
And should be.
So how did you decide to become an architect?
This is what throws me about your life story.
Because you're obviously a storyteller from a very young age.
You're obviously fascinated by this world.
Yeah, and telling stories as an architect used to get me in trouble.
Yeah, I can imagine.
For example, a very nervous guy asked,
did the steel arrive for the building?
I said, yeah, but it's all bent out of shape.
It's all sort of curlicues. He grabbed his heart and had a heart attack right there
holy shit yep and I'm trying to explain it was a joke I'm kidding
it's okay I would tell you how I knew I had to stop being an architect yeah I
get a call and a woman says is is this Friedman the fantastic architect? I said, no, no, you have the wrong number.
She says, not so fast.
I'm giving you carte blanche.
You should do the last void in modern.
I'm not going to interfere.
I'm not going to make a pass.
I want you to do something that is absolutely within
what you feel is your best aesthetic, artistic,
and she says, I have a half acre on Shanley Park,
it's beautiful, you'll come and we'll talk.
So I go there, there's a woman with blue hair
and pedal pushers, and she says, Jake, it's the architect.
Jake is reading their forwards, and he goes,
muh-huh, muh-huh, muh.
She says, pay him no mind, he's old fashioned,
he doesn't know. She takes me into a room, she says, pay him no mind, he's old fashioned, he doesn't know.
She takes me into a room, she says,
I'm not going to dictate,
but I would like an occasional piece in the living room
and I have these clippings from home and garden,
theater and stream, you should look.
I said, no, no, I'm not interested, I'm not.
She says, all right, I'm backing off,
you're going to do what you wish.
I just have one definite you have to give me."
I said, what's that? She said, should be a ranch style house. I said, you mean one story? She says,
yes, with a circular staircase. I said, one story house with a circular staircase. Do you want to
go up to the roof and have it? She says, no, I'm afraid of heights.
I said, then where does the circular staircase go?
She says, no place.
But when we have parties, I'll get a girl in a white dress,
stand at the bottom, it'll look terrific.
That was it for you.
That was it.
I didn't take the commission, I should have taken it.
It was a lot of money.
A sign from the gods that it was time to go.
Now, I gotta ask you, and this, I spoke to you the last time, but my favorite episode
of Charlie's Angels is where they kidnapped Sammy Davis Jr.
Yes, I wrote that.
That's Ron's episode, yes, of course.
And it's Sammy Davis as Sammy Davis.
Yes.
And but in a dual role,
cause he's also Herbert the grocery store owner.
No, yes.
I forget when he had a car dealership or something,
but he said they have the wrong man.
I'm tired of being confused
with that no talent, skinny idiot.
So I checked it over with him first to see if he would do it.
And Aaron Spelling put us together.
So I was very happy to write that for Sammy.
Very.
And that had a double.
They, every show back then, every cop show had a joke ending.
They did, absolutely.
And this one had two jokes.
That's what stands out.
Like they're all together in the room
and they solved them, they captured the kidnappers.
And Sammy, as Herbert goes,
I'm the coolest guy in this room.
And Sammy in a non-threatening black fist
does the fist and goes, right on, Sammy.
Right on, Herbert.
And you figure that's enough.
They already had the, and then they come back
and the angels are in their office
and Herbert shows up and goes,
hey, we're all going to an opening.
And they go, what?
Oh, they're all excited.
And he goes, an opening of my new grocery store.
And I thought, this is an embarrassment of riches.
Two jokes.
And the wonderful Patty Duke double screen.
I had not episode.
Let this be my epitaph, Gilbert.
Yes.
He remembers your Charlie's Angels episode.
He vividly remembers you better than I do.
Wow.
But your pal Aaron Spelling,
what did you like to say about Aaron Spelling?
I loved Aaron Spelling because Aaron loved me
and Aaron was not a guy who needed to fool around
with material if it was right and it worked.
He says, we're shooting this baby and we did.
And he bought your house, you like to say.
He did, absolutely.
And once I'm over there, he calls me 11 o'clock at night.
He says, the script just fell apart.
I need a two hour Starsky and Hutch.
We're gonna be reading Tuesday.
Can you come over?
So I went over and he has a police car always parked there
which was ASP police, PD.
That was Aaron Spelling Productions, PD.
Because he was always nervous about a home invasion.
So I said to him, you know, Aaron, my mother's coming to visit, but my house is shabby compared
to yours.
Would you mind if I pretended that this was my house?
He said, I better check with Candy first.
That's his wife.
So he checks and he says, it'll be all right.
When is she coming?
But I killed the deal. He couldn't do it.
No, because he was going to fuck Carol Wayne and I didn't want to do it.
Alright, good callback.
While Gilbert tries to remember who our guest is...
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Fun, fun.
Just watch me now.
Now, you, uh, you wrote an Artie Johnson special.
I did. Oh, yes.
Now, if I'm not mistaken, is this the special where he sings Secret Man?
I don't remember.
This is disturbing.
This is...
How many Artie Johnson specials were there?
He sings this song called Secret Man,
and at the end of it, he goes,
I'm a secret man even to myself.
Any bells, Ron?
No, but that's the most profound philosophy I've heard
since closed cover before striking.
Ver-terosa, find that.
He's not gonna find that.
Arnie Johnson singing secret man.
Not a chance.
How did your family react, Ron?
How does your mom react when you said
you were going to leave architecture
to write stories for a living?
She said-
Because it was a bold stroke.
You had no rich relations, you had no nest egg,
you had no connections in the business.
Zero.
Well, my mother took it the way my mother would took it.
She says, congratulations, good luck with your new knife, knife, life,
and before you go, stop in the kitchen and get me a knife. I'm going to put it in my
heart because I'll never hear from you again.
Did she stick around long enough? She obviously did because you were telling the Aaron Spelling
story. So she saw your, she saw your success.
She did.
Good.
But my mother never quite accepted it because we had her to the house and we're having
Some caviar and she says from cans you're eating
Wow, but that I mean you were you were making a nice living as an architect in Pittsburgh
So it was a risk. It was a big risk. It's all this aside and and at what 29 29
I still at the time it felt logical
But I'm sure that's what every serial killer says too.
Pretty ballsy.
It just seemed like the thing to do.
And it just felt right.
And I found through the years that when I go
with that feeling, I'm gonna do okay.
What happened first when you got to the,
I know you took the place in Brooklyn.
Yep.
And was it, was Shelley Berman a turning point?
Were you writing for people right away?
Tell me, Rogers.
No, Shelley was the turning point in Pittsburgh
because I was working seven days a week
as the chief designer and field supervisor
of a medium-sized Pittsburgh architectural firm.
I had my own practice and I couldn't clear 10 grand a year
and I thought I'm never going to get my kids educated if I couldn't clear 10 grand a year and I thought I'm never gonna get my kids educated
if I can't clear that much.
So I thought, why don't I just get into writing
because that'll be a cornucopia of money.
Ridiculous, but that just seemed like it.
I'll give it a shot.
Right.
So I sold my practice.
Well, what I did first is I called Shelly Berman
who was playing the Vogue Terrace
in Pittsburgh, which for Pittsburgh was a classy nightclub. Classy, they were toilets for ladies,
and you know, it was a reasonable experience. So anyway, I'd met him in Somersetalk, and I called
him and reminded him to make him believe he remembered me and I said I can write for you says schmuck
Nobody can write for me. You can't write for me. I write for me. I'm me. I read I said well
Why don't you just look will you look he says? All right? Here's my address. Send me something
So I wrote some stuff and send it to him, but four weeks later
He calls up and he says schmuck you can do this shit come to New York. I'm doing it
I'm doing the Perry Como show.
I'll get you an agent.
I'll see you at the Como show."
So I made arrangements.
I go to New York.
I go to the Como show and there's Shelly.
I said, Shelly, Ron Friedman from Pittsburgh.
He says, I'm having a nervous breakdown.
I'm going to Jamaica.
I can't speak to you.
I said, I came in from Pittsburgh.
He said, it will be there when you return.
I said, Shelly, come on, I'm changing my life.
He says, I'm going to Jamaica.
So anyway, my fraternity brother, Gary Smith,
was the scene designer for the Como Show.
Gary Smith.
And he said, did you bring any material with you?
I says, yeah, I wrote about five pounds of stuff.
He said, let me give it to Goodman Ace,
who was the head writer of the Como show.
So I gave it to Goodman Ace,
who was a legendary radio writer
and a damn good writer period.
And I sat around with Gary, I think he took me to lunch
and I came back and Goodman Ace says,
I read your stuff, come with me.
He takes me to the writer's room and he said,
if any of these Jews die, I'll hire you.
He said, if any of these Jews die, I'll hire you. He said,
he said, I don't have any money in the budget.
He said, I'm calling Larry Auer back
at the William Morris office.
I'll tell him he has to sign you right away
and then he'll sign you.
So I go over to see Larry Auer back
and he says, good.
He says, you're great.
So you must be terrific.
He says, but you have to come to New York.
You can't write from Pittsburgh.
Nobody writes from Pittsburgh.
So it took me about a year, sold my practice for $11,
went to New York and wanted to write plays and movies.
And they said, no, you're funny.
You're going to write for standup.
And that's how it began.
Yeah.
And you, I mean, it happened pretty fast for you,
all things considered.
It really did. In the first three, four months, it was. Yeah. I mean, it happened pretty fast for you, all things considered. It really did.
In the first three, four months, it was very difficult.
Nothing happened.
And then I finished that year making 10 times what I'd ever made my best year as an architect.
Nice.
And I didn't know this until I read the book.
You dabbled in stand-up yourself.
I had to because many of the comics would read what I gave them and they said, it's
not funny.
I said, it's funny.
They say, you do it.
So I do it, I'd get laughs and they'd have to pay me.
So you were just doing one liner material.
I was doing the act I wrote for them.
The act that you wrote for them.
So Timmy Rogers was one of the first guys.
One of the first.
Okay, and can you perform the line he would say after every one of his punch lines?
Timmy?
Yeah.
Hmm.
I know it wasn't my Yiddish mama.
That was Sammy.
Yeah, that wasn't him.
Oh yeah!
Oh yeah, Mr. Oh Yeah, exactly.
Mr. Oh Yeah, Mr. No, Oh No.
After every joke, he would go, Oh Yeah!
Yeah, yeah, yeah, you're right.
Absolutely right.
And he said, they say that money can't buy happiness. Now people like Bob Hope, the Vanderbilt.
Ah, Bing Crosby and Ella Fitzgerald,
do you think they're happy?
Oh yeah!
Oh yeah!
And he also said, in my neighborhood,
in my neighborhood there was no heat.
There were no windows, no glass in the window panes.
He said said the plumbing
did not work and there was nothing to eat. And then the depression came.
Oh yeah. His name has come up a bunch of times on this show.
He was just a lovely guy.
And he'd open and close with, everybody wants to go to heaven,
but nobody wants to die.
That was it?
Yes.
That was one of his big songs.
The other one was Flajolapa.
Oh!
Yeah, call my baby Flajolapa.
Flajolapa is her name.
Met her in flaw,
or wed her in laws,
with jaw flaw,
whatever the hell it was. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha was. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha.
So you would do the material to prove to these people
that the material would work?
Yes.
And was Timmy one of them or did he buy in?
No, no, Timmy was a big fan of mine
and I never did an act for him until he really had some money
and that was to do an album, If I Were President,
when he would be the first black president.
And it was a great cast.
It was Ruby Dee, Aussie Davis, Hal Cromer.
Stump from Stump and Stumpy.
That's it, Stump and Stumpy.
He was the first black act to do white carbons.
And Sammy stole that from Hal.
Wow.
He was just fantastic.
So now you're just-
Yeah, Stump and Stumpy were like the black Martin and Lewis.
Yeah, but they were really funny, wild and funny.
Yeah.
So you're doing standup now to prove
to some of these clients that the material works.
Yes.
In other cases, they're buying in,
they're buying material outright.
I was desperate, I had to do it.
I put everything on the line, so I was normally a kind of reserved guy.
I was an architect.
Architects don't go up and say, hey, did you hear about this?
Doorbell rings at a whorehouse, madam opens the door.
There's a guy in a basket, no arms and no legs.
She says, what are we going to do with you?
He said, I rang the bell, bell didn't I Frank Lloyd Wright never
bothered with that shit I heard I am pay use that one I am pay very good yes
always perfect with so how do you make role who were some of the other comics
some of the other performers that you're writing for at this period? Oh god I have to think Corbett Monica. Corbett Monica, Gilbert. Oh my god. Jackie
Cahane. Jackie Cahane, we know his name. Yes, I'm trying to think hard now. Oh god.
That's Jimmy Casanova. Jimmy Casanova. Bill Persky wrote for Jimmy Casanova when he was starting out. Persky and Denof. Yep.
Yeah.
One of the most interesting one was an heiress named Nell Webster.
She was a lovely girl and she inherited an unbelievable fortune,
but her dream was to be a standup comic.
Uh-oh.
So when I met her, I said, get over this dream.
You're insane.
You do not need to go to these toilets and show them you're funny."
And she says, no, and I want to be funny and I want to be clever and you're clever and
you'll make me funny and clever.
So anyway, I wrote an act for her and she says, I'm in Erie, Pennsylvania.
Would you come down and watch the act?
So I had to do it because she was nice.
The opening act was Doc Cerci.
Anybody remember Doc Cerci?
Doc Cerci, Gil? No. Well, he was a large guy in a tuxedo and he had a padlock on his fly.
Sounds good.
And he came out singing, what is the number, a calypso number, what is the number? And people
would yell, 69. He'd ignore it until he heard like 40 other numbers.
And then 69 was the number.
He'd open his padlock and take out his deck.
That was his act.
So I'm thinking I've written supper club material
for my client and she's going to follow this.
Doc Cerci and his padlock. Yeah. Right up there with BS Pulley and HS Gump.
BS Pulley. Yeah. So what ever happened to this girl? I don't know. She was a lovely person. I
hope she found another calling. I'm sure she must have. How did you make the transition from
writing for these performers in toilets as you you like to describe them, into television?
Well, the first television job I got was writing for Car 54, Where Are You?
Yeah, Gilbert will appreciate this.
I love that, Joe.
I did too, and I particularly liked Fred.
Fred Gwynn.
Fred Gwynn. Just a lovely guy, very good artist as well.
And Joey Ross was his co-star.
So I'm in there with George Foster,
who was a very good writer, who was doing a script with me.
He liked me and he says,
"'Come on, we're going to do a script for this show.'"
So I'm in there with Nat Huyken
and Huyken's secretary comes in and she says,
"'Nat, Joey's here. "'I guess his divorce is final.'" So Nat says, I'm going there with Nat Heiken and Heiken's secretary comes in and she says, Nat, Joey's here. I guess his divorce is final.
So Nat says, I'm going to call him in, but I want to give you a little heads up on him.
He says, you know, Joey always marries hookers.
So then he divorces them and this would probably be number five or six.
So be ready.
So Joey comes in and he's, you know, woo, woo, woo, woo, woo, woo, woo.
You know, that was his act.
Yeah, sure. I got a dog, a Mexican
spitz in Europe. So
anyway, Nat said, you got a divorce, I hear your divorce
advice is yeah, he says, but I figured out, you know, he says,
first being married to a hookers, like being married to a
doctor, she would get calls in the middle of the night she had to go I mean he said but I figured out
he said it was a bargain that's what do you mean a bargain he says well I
figured out how many times I fucked her and I was fucking her for $15. She charges $50. He was ahead of the game.
Yes.
Now, you know, there's that famous story where I think, I don't know if it was Johnson & Johnson
who were their, they were the sponsors.
It was Olson & Johnson.
And they were the sponsors and the sponsors stopped by the set of Car 54.
I think Hank Garrett told us that story.
Yeah. Who was on it. I heard it a few times and it's like they were walking, they said hello to
all the cast, the whole cast shook their hands and posed for pictures and they passed by Joey Ross's
dressing room. He was there with the door open, jerking off.
Well, self-expression is what it's called.
So that Car 54 episode never aired.
And never, the show was canceled.
The show was canceled.
And I heard Nat Huyken said,
he doesn't know if he's doing another show or not,
but if he does, it's not gonna have Joey Ross in it.
Yes. I think, yeah.
The other great thing he said about Joey Ross
is he came in eating a sandwich
and it was horrible to watch.
And when he left, and when he left,
Hiken said, he's great with dry food. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha Okay, so the car 54 episode doesn't air because the show gets cancelled.
So what's the what's the sort of the breakthrough credit?
I wish I knew.
The breakthrough moment in television.
I mean, you you're IMDB page and you and I were talking about this on the phone and you
said a lot of it is not here.
Yes.
That is it.
It's only a partial list of credits.
One of them was the Jerry Lester show called Weekend.
The first thing they have you here for is the Jerry Lester show and the Victor Borga
show both in 63.
Yeah.
That sound right?
Probably.
I can't remember.
But Victor was a great guy.
We really got along terrifically well.
And some of the great moments with Victor, he'd call from any place in the world and, you
know, I need a joke for Stuttgart. And of course, German jokes. I mean, what could be simpler?
But I got to know him pretty well. And I asked him, Victor, when you were brought here, because,
you know, like all the Jewish Danes, they wereuated they were taken to safety I said did you speak English he said no he said I only
spoke Russian French Dutch German Yiddish but and they went on with like
15 other languages he's but I didn't talk English I said well how did you
learn English he says well one of the first places I stayed was like the
Danish Siemens rest it was a hotel for Danish and Norwegian He says, well, one of the first places I stayed was like the Danish Seamen's Rest.
It was a hotel for Danish and Norwegian seamen and it was near 42nd Street.
He said, I could go in and see movies, watch movies all day for 10 cents.
He said, so I was learning English by watching movies until a friend of mine says, Victor,
you can't watch the movies anymore.
And I said, why not?
He says, you sound like a gangster.
He was doing George Raft. the movies anymore and I said why not he says you sound like a gangster
he was George Raft fantastic fantastic so how did you get to the Danny K show
was that the Vaughn meter thing that you were writing that was it yeah the live
Vaughn meter show but the last Vaughn meter after Kennedy was assassinated
said oh what am I going to do now?
I said, you'll wait six months, I'll write you a new act.
So that's what happened.
It was at the Blue Angel.
And of course, because Kennedy was beloved
and Von Meter was equally so as is Kennedy surrogate,
the place was mobbed with all media.
I mean, magazines, even the Reader's Digest was there.
I mean, it was unbelievable and jammed. And Shelly Berman shows up in a tuxedo
to introduce me because I'm his discovery,
that introduced Vaughn, and then Vaughn did the act,
and all of the reviews were the same,
that the act was brilliant, that the material was brilliant,
but Vaughn was an indifferent performer.
And Danny Kaye was at that show with Perry Lafferty.
How about that?
And said, you're coming to California.
I said, under no circumstances, I hate California.
But he made me an offer I had to go.
And then it sort of all comes from that.
It all stems from getting that Danny Kaye show.
I guess.
And I heard, we've heard it from a couple of guests,
that Danny Kaye was a prick.
He could be, absolutely, but he liked me.
I still don't know why.
I think it was because Perry Lafferty says,
tell him about Frank Lloyd Wright.
The first time I'm sitting in a meeting with Danny
and I had to tell my Frank Lloyd Wright story
and that impressed Danny
because he took me aside afterward and he said,
that little prick was an anti-Semite.
I said, yeah, he was.
So it was kind of a half ass bond,
but we're playing word associations with Danny one day,
stops in to annoy the writers and playing word associations salt pepper black white somebody said mother Danny said gas
chamber he said all mothers should be gassed Wow yeah whoa dark guy Danny K
he could be yeah yeah well you know we've had as I said to you on the phone
we've had 200 of these shows and we've had people who disliked Danny tremendously, like Jamie Farr and Bernie Coppell.
And then we had Joyce in here, Joyce Van Patten, who liked him very much.
He loved Joyce.
And he liked me again, who knows why, but I was grateful that he did.
Yeah, the two people we've got nothing but bad reviews. Well, Danny K.
and Joey Bishop. Yes. Oh yeah. Joey was difficult, let's put it that way. That's
the word now. So did you work with Joey Bishop? He was a guest on a Chevrolet
special that I wrote and had no problem with him.
He did all the material, he was happy with it.
Never again.
Yeah, so how that happens, I don't know.
I'm looking at these credits,
the Danny K Show in 64,
Love on a Rooftop we talked about,
Gilligan's Island.
You got to know Bob Denver pretty well.
I did.
I knew him pretty well because he had been on Max Schulman's The Secret Loves of Dolby
Gillis.
Oh, yes.
And Max Schulman was a good friend.
So the fact that I'd known Max when Bob Denver played Maynard G. Krebs, the beatnik.
Yes.
So he was immediately responsive because of the max connection. So what was he like?
Bob? Yeah. Very sweet guy. Usually stoned. Yeah, he liked his cannabis. Yeah, but a lovely guy.
Yeah. Now I heard that Mary Ann used to deliver cannabis to, I mean, real life.
It's entirely possible.
I don't know about the dark side of show business, Gilbert.
I'm not sure, you know.
What about the Danny Thomas block party in 1967?
Did you like working with Danny?
I only, barely worked with him.
Barely worked with him.
Just enough for him to show me his gun.
Perfect!
I've heard about this!
Yes, he said, this is Roscoe.
And if you mess with me, you're going to meet Roscoe.
Wow.
I heard some director was working with Danny Kaye.
And not Danny Kaye, Danny Thomas.
Some director was working with Danny Kay and not Danny Kay, Danny Thomas. Some director was working with Danny Thomas.
Danny Thomas would chew tobacco and spit
and the spit would go past this director.
And he said, would you stop that?
And Danny Thomas took out his gun
and placed it on the table.
And he said,
this is so I don't have to move or do anything.
Well, once things are explained,
it's a lot easier to go.
Yes, yes.
Yeah, we'd heard that from several people.
No, I, yeah.
Luckily I know nothing about that.
Now, what else have you heard about Danny Thomas?
Don't take the bait, Ron.
No, it's just him and Carol Wayne.
I know.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing colossal podcast after this.
Let me try to get back to the book, even though Gilbert will fight me at every turn.
The book is called I killedilled Optimus Prime and famously
So sue me. Yes. So sue me. Yeah. Oh, so sue me. Yeah. And you did kill Optimus Prime in the
Transformers movie because Hasbro so demanded it. Yes, they did. Yeah. And I told them they'd have
to replace him within 90 days and they said absolutely not. But they did. You don't just
kill Big Daddy. You know, you don't kill Odin if you're doing Nor they did. You don't just kill Big Daddy, you know,
you don't kill Odin if you're doing Norse mythology,
you don't kill Zeus if you're doing Greek mythology,
you don't kill Optimus Prime
if you're doing Transformers mythology.
But you, so you brought up a fight,
but it's a fight you lost.
Well, they were paying me,
I'm happy to lose those fights.
Yes, so it followed you around a bit.
People, some fans didn't care for the decision.
For years, people would stop me on the street
and they would say, you son of a bitch,
I was six years old, I went in to see Transformers,
the movie, and you killed Optimus Prime.
Would you please sign my underwear?
Ah ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha Would you please sign my underwear? For years. It makes a good hook for a book though, Ron.
It was, absolutely.
A book that needed to be written.
Absolutely.
And I should say that the book is also filled with stories,
anecdotes, some of the actors that we're referring to.
Also, there's some writing tutorials.
Yes. There's some good stuff about how to're referring to. Also, there's some writing tutorials. Yes.
There's some good stuff about how to write a script.
I think it can be. And how to tell stories.
Think it can be helpful.
Which is valuable.
And some comedy pieces, some original comedy.
What do you think are some of the biggest mistakes
in writing movies and TV that writers make?
Yeah, one of them is trying to write for the ages.
When I first began writing, I figured,
would Shakespeare approve of this sentence?
And he wouldn't have.
So I'm stuck trying to be great.
And the answer is, don't get stuck trying to be great.
Just try to express yourself as clearly as you possibly
can and try to be as honest and familiar with what you're doing so that people can relate
to it immediately.
I've had a lot of students over the years because I taught screenwriting at USC for
almost 18 years and been teaching at 15 years at Chapman University Film School. And many writers will say,
I'm gonna write something that is so unique,
so different, so groundbreaking.
And I would say, great,
who the fuck is gonna know what it is?
The touchstone of storytelling is the family,
because everybody understands what a family is.
Yeah, you stress that in the book.
Yeah, because it's true.
That's how we relate to the world.
The idea of family and story go together.
Everybody understands a crazy uncle
who moons the school bus.
Everybody understands the old aunt
who thinks that she still looks terrific
and is always trying to show the tits.
Everybody understands the mean stepfather
or the nasty uncle or the crazy nephew
who will never straight nod.
He's always going to be 12 years old, even if he's 88.
Everyone understands this.
And when we understand and recognize the humanity,
the familiarity, the family-ness of characters,
we're home, we'll watch anything.
It doesn't matter if it's on Mars or under the water
or in 12 feet of meatloaf.
If we recognize the humans, we get it, we go with it.
We're home free.
Well, you use classic examples,
classic storytelling like The Wizard of Oz.
Yep.
As an example.
Or Star Wars.
Yes, exactly.
People playing familial roles.
And when you recognize that,
you can deal with surrogate families.
I mean, every cop show is a surrogate family,
as is every medical show, as is every law show,
as is every space opera.
It's about the family members.
Chewbacca we get it
that's uncle uncle schmool uncle schmoolbacca now another thing that I think writers have to
fight is you know all of us grow up on movies and TV, so there are certain ways that people talk and act
that is just the way they talk and act in movies and TV.
You're absolutely right.
Absolutely right.
And that's often stilted and feels phony.
And what it is is the audience sort of recognizes
that these aren't human beings talking to each other.
These are people lecturing me on plot points,
which is now that you know this, I'm going to show you that.
So when this comes back in the next scene,
you'll recognize that it came right out of my ass
and it's not really a relic from the Smithsonian.
And this is something that plagues beginning writers, where what they
do is they write about things rather than write the things, and they write dialogue
that is about the plot points and the things that they're trying to plant, and it doesn't
feel like real people talking.
Well, one of my old-time favorites, I always talk about this, is in Beyond the Sea with
Kevin Spacey.
Oh, the Bobby Darin biopic.
And Bobby Darin says to his manager, John Goodman, you know, I'm nowhere, my career's
nowhere.
And John Goodman, I feel bad for him. Cause he goes, what are you kidding me, Bobby?
In 1964, you won, you know,
Performer of the Year in Vegas.
You've got seven platinum albums.
You are nominated for an Academy Award for Dr. Newman.
And he reels off a list.
Exactly.
And on the next page I will tell you how much you weighed at your last birthday.
It's exactly bad writing.
And they had a TV movie with a guy playing Robin Williams where he's supposed to be there
with Robert Evans.
And he goes, and he goes, so how you doing Robin?
And he goes, well, I'm doing great.
I'm doing the movie Popeye with the esteemed director, Robert Alton.
And here I am sitting in Malta with you, the producer of The Godfather. Available for bar mitzvahs and various social engagements.
By God, yes.
You talk about a lot of that stuff in the book, but also your own journey from making
the transition from writing for performers to writing for television and then having
to try to get away from the typecasting of being a comedy guy.
Yep. Trying to make the transition into hour longs.
Well, they always talk about the glass ceiling for women.
It was a cast iron ceiling in show business
where you're typecast.
So if you play a corpse who's from outer space,
that's what you do.
You cannot do anything else.
And if you wrote for standup, that's what you do.
You write material.
If you wrote sketch comedy in a variety, that's what you do.
You can't write half, if you write half hour,
you can't write drama.
If you write drama, hour drama, you can't write a movie.
It's ridiculous.
So you were always battling that.
Always.
Yeah.
And yet you managed to break through in every,
every genre.
Well, my next one-
Or every format. I hope so. And my next one... Or every format.
I hope so, and the next one is Broadway.
I have a play now that hopefully will do that.
Oh good. Oh good.
And tell us about working for Chico and the Man.
Where did that come from?
You...I mean, what was Jack Albert...
I love Freddie Prinze. I really love Freddie Prinze.
And Freddie really loved my work.
And in fact, he told Jimmy Comack,
I want Ron to write all the scripts from now on.
And Comack was furious.
Although Jimmy was generally a friend,
but Freddie really liked what I did.
And so the story editor, Mike Morris,
used to come in with challenges for me
to see if I could screw up.
So he said, this one I want Jack Albertson to do act one
and Freddie to do act two, that's it.
The other actor, they have no scenes,
they have scenes together,
but it's a monologue for each one of them.
So I did that and it worked great, worked great.
And Jimmy was pissed off that it worked.
But Freddie was just a wonderful guy.
I really liked Freddie a lot.
He was a brilliant dancer, by the way,
and a wonderful musician.
And I watched him kill himself with cocaine.
And I called an executive at NBC and I said,
you're gonna have to shut down Chico for a while
and get Freddie clean because he's going to kill himself.
I just see he's shoving cocaine up his nose.
They said, that's not your concern.
That's the producer's concern.
And the producer has things well in hand and stay out of it.
Wow.
And I just, I watched him kill himself.
And it was horrible to watch.
Just horrible because he was really funny, really brilliant and a nice kid. I probably
had a really big career ahead of him. He did. Yeah. Where'd you pull that one out Gilbert?
Yeah. Sheko and the man. Oh, and tell us about Jack Albertson. He was a great actor. Jack was great, because Jack was a real pro.
And real pros, as you know, really know what it is they do.
And they know how to do what they do.
And they know when you know what you're doing or not.
And so to be accepted by Jack
as somebody who knew what he was doing
was always great for me.
And when I got that kind of response
from a lot of outstanding professionals,
it made me feel really good
because I know it's not automatic.
You really have to learn it, you have to feel it,
you have to understand it.
And that's when the artistry comes.
When you're stuck, something isn't working,
what do you do?
Where do you go?
How do you fix it? If you're a pro something isn't working, what do you do? Where do you go? How do you fix it?
If you're a pro, you'll find a way.
And you don't leave anybody on the beach when you do it.
You bring them along with you.
And that was great with Jack,
because Jack really, really knew where it was happening,
how to make it happen.
And I saw him do, the subject was roses on Broadway.
He was terrific in that.
So it didn't matter what the job was.
He understood, he knew.
And you know, Gilbert, you know exactly what you do
and how you do it.
You know when to do it and to what extent.
And I said before, when we first met,
that you really commit to the material
which a lot of people can't and don't.
And to me, they're not professional
if they don't commit to the material.
How about that Gil?
Oh wow.
Although his problem is trying to be too good Ron.
Like those writers you were talking about.
Herman Gehry had the same problem.
It holds him back.
Talking about a performer, Jack Albertson,
who was fun and easy and a professional
and going in the opposite direction.
Tell us about Shelly Winters.
You did a punch up on Minis Boys.
Yeah, I did.
On the Broadway stage.
My dear friend, the director, Stanley Prager,
Starsh Prager, great guy.
He did the Danny K Show, directed it briefly, and Danny decided he wanted to go with a choreographer,
not Stanley.
Anyway, Stan got the job of picking up, replacing a director on Minnie's Boys, which was the
story of the Marx Brothers starring Shelley Winters as Minnie Marx.
You bet.
So I get a call from Stas and he says, get here immediately, the show is not making it,
it's terrible, we're having all kinds of problems,
come in right away, see the show,
I got you tickets down front
and you'll see what we're up against.
Anyway, he also said, by the way,
Shelly comes out in a rabbit suit
because they do a number when many marks and the
Marx brothers are younger and the Marx brothers are dressed in bunny suits and
she's wearing a rabbit suit but she's a nervous eater and this has been in in
preview so many times she's put on 80 pounds so she's got like nine rabbit
suits he said the problem is she has a weak singing voice, so the suits are mic'd. So, be prepared.
So, I'm sitting in row three in the orchestra behind two rows of young
tall men of Woodmere Long Island.
That's the theater party that's there.
Guys wearing shremels with long sideburns and they're sitting there, the ideal theater crowd.
So as she comes out and she's singing in the rabbit suit, she's farting.
And a woman in front says to her husband, what's this?
And he says, feedback.
Feedback?
Hilarious.
Anyway, Lou Stadland Jr. was playing Groucho and I thought he was fabulous, so I did a
rewrite featuring him
as the star of the show, narrating.
And it was a hell of a good rewrite.
And Stan Prager says, this is great.
He says, but the producer thinks it's Shelley's show.
He'll never, never accept this,
but we're going to use the changes you made.
And he says, but there's going to be an actor's
equity meeting on stage.
You might as well stay for that.
The equity meeting was the cast was up in arms
because Shelley was unprofessional.
She was showing up late.
She didn't know her line.
She was drifting away.
And they wanted to go out, walk out in protest.
And Roland Winters was the equity deputy.
And he said, please, please, there's nothing wrong with Shelley
that can't be fixed by taxidermy.
That's a great line.
And the result was everybody laughed like hell
and they kept showing up.
That's a great story.
Now was Roland Winters?
I think he was one of the Charlie Chaps.
Yeah, that's what Frank said.
He probably was, but at that point he was Flo Ziegfeld. So I didn't know. I believe he was one of the Charlie Chams. Yeah! That's what Frank said. He probably was, but at that point he was Flo Ziegfeld, so I didn't know.
I believe he was.
Can you tell Gilbert and our listeners what you told me about your friend Tony Randall?
Oh yeah, Tony, I love Tony and I love Jack.
They were difficult guys, but they were really great individuals, unique characters.
And one of the things that Tony loved to do
was go to the Climax Theater,
which was a porn movie theater.
This was a sexual revolution,
was just coming to the fore
where they had these porn movie theaters.
So the Climax was near Paramount.
And I said to Tony,
Tony, aren't you worried that somebody's going to say,
I saw Tony Randall
in the climate.
He says, Oh no, there are so many more important people than I are here.
They wouldn't dare.
I love that.
You wrote some great odd couple episodes too, Ron.
I love doing the odd couple because I like Jack and Tony a lot, and they were very responsive.
Yeah, we could go up and down this list
like we did last time.
I'm trying to pick out some goodies here.
Tell us again, just, this is, I'm curious,
what are the, and I don't want to upset your wife
who's sitting there next to you, but what exactly,
I won't put this question on my resume,
what are the circumstances, the exact circumstances
surrounding Pat McCormick defiling
Jonathan Winther's swimming pool?
Oh God, I wasn't there.
I just heard about it.
I'm all ears on this one.
So I don't wanna talk about it,
because I wasn't there, and there are people
who were there that take this very seriously
That it is their story. Okay, you know, so I
It's unusual when people are fighting over a turd in the pool
Well tell us
Since the last time we spoke you lost a very good friend,
and that was the great Stan Lee.
Oh yeah, yeah.
So tell us something about Stan.
Well, Stan was a wonderful friend and a great guy,
and we became good friends almost immediately.
Lee Mendelson, who produced the peanuts and the Garfield,
introduced us, and we just started talking right away
and it was easy and comfortable.
And Stan, of course, I admired what he had done
with Spider-Man and all of his characters
were superior because he recognized it
like the pantheon of gods in mythology.
If the gods have feet of clay or various other
human frailties, they become more important, more significant.
It took a while for Superman to invent Krypton because otherwise it's just, who's going to
beat a shit out of this week?
It doesn't matter.
Here it comes.
It's okay.
I got it.
Well, that was his genius, wasn't it, among other things, realizing they had to have vulnerabilities?
It really was, and he was a genius,
and he was always ashamed of himself
for not having written the great American novel.
And a lot of people didn't understand this about Stan.
Stan was a child of the Depression,
and he was always afraid he was going to lose his job.
He really was in fear of that with all of his success,
with the fact that he was an indelible icon himself
and couldn't be replaced.
He was still fearful about losing his job.
And I watched some people that he worked for,
that I worked for as well, treat him shabbily,
really as much as saying, well, you know shabbily. Really, as much as saying,
well, you know, you do comic strips, we do movies.
And I hated that because there was a kind of
send off for Stan at the Chinese theater
when a lot of these,
it looked like a Comic-Con convention, really.
But a lot of those people that he had worked for
that went out of their way to say how much they revered him
and adored him, they treated him like shit.
So standard Hollywood hypocrisy.
But he was a wonderful guy.
And when he was in the army,
he got an unusual assignment,
which was his commanding officer said,
the accountants, the accountants are
going crazy because the families of the soldiers are not getting their checks in time. And
I have depressed accountants and I want you to find a way to cheer them up. So Stan wrote
a marching song, an army marching song for the accountants.
Wow. And it improved morality to such an extent
that he got a medal.
I never knew that.
Yes.
So the next time you see accountants marching and singing,
you'll know where the song came from.
I know the Mary Marvel Marching Society.
I wonder if it had its roots in that.
It could have.
You refer to him as the Jewish Walt Disney.
I agree. That's what he is, that's what he was, really.
A creator who understood what it was that he was doing
that was unique and what was unique about it.
There were a lot of people that kind of luck into celebrity
or luck into skills and they're heralded
for having those skills, but many of them don't recognize
exactly what is unique about their skill.
They can't duplicate it.
So if they lose the job or something,
somebody turns away from them, they're lost.
They can't reconstruct, they can't adapt,
which again is the mark of a professional,
the ability to be able to adapt to the circumstances.
So Stan was adaptable in the extreme, as was Disney.
And when I was introduced to Disney, he said,
call me Walt.
I said, call me your excellency.
It did not go over.
He didn't laugh.
Now I heard with getting back to the odd couple
that they really were those characters in real life.
Is that true?
To an extent that's true.
Yeah, but Felix didn't go to the climax theater.
Yeah, oh yes.
No, Felix would not because the seats would be dirty.
Absolutely.
He would do if he could put paper on the seats.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
They were. Jack was a guy who loved the track.
He loved horses.
He had a very good horse.
I forget the name of that.
He got in a claiming race and it was a gelding.
If it hadn't been a gelding, Klugman would not have died.
He'd have stayed alive just to see the horse reproduce.
And Tony, of course, was an opera lover and an esthete.
He was well aware of history and furniture
and the history of costume and a lot of other things.
And certainly the theater, he knew the theater brilliantly.
And he put together an American stock company in New York.
Sure did, yeah, he sure did.
And did some terrific productions,
but of course the audience wasn't there for it.
Which is a shame. Yeah. Let's plug the book. Oh, yes. I killed Optimus Prime. So sue me.
I'm gonna read because we had a mistake
Ron I gave Gilbert my copy by mistake and I got his oh, so we're gonna switch
But it allowed me to read what you wrote for him
Okay, as much as it pains me I'm gonna pay him another compliment through you to Gilbert a daring comedic force of nature
Impervious to the indifference of all those lost souls devoid of a sense of humor and doomed to dine on Gentile food through eternity
That's the nicest thing anyone's ever said about me. It's the least I could do Gilbert.
The least.
Ron, because it's Hervé Villaché's birthday.
Oh really?
It's also Shakespeare's birthday today.
And your pal Alan Oppenheimer.
And my pal Alan Oppenheimer.
Do you have one Hervé story, last time you told us about him carrying a piece into the men's room to ward off, to frighten off looky-loos?
Exactly.
People who like to look at midget dick.
You have anything else on Hervé in his honor?
In his honor, let me think. Well, I wrote an episode of Fantasy Island in which the attempt was to create a children's
version of Fantasy Island that could run concurrently with the adult version.
So in it, I created like the bizarro half of the company.
So Mr. Rourke and Tattoo were one half and the other half was
Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Yes, is this the one with red buttons?
No, I
Don't think so, but I knew red
And he was gonna do a play of mine and then he died
Aaron Schwab. Oh go back to what you were saying, man.
Okay, back to Fantasy Island.
So it was, God, he was married to Esther Williams and-
Oh, Fernando Lamas.
Fernando Lamas and Billy Barty.
So they were like the bizarro half
and they were these competing characters.
I'm laughing already.
And Hervé took me aside and and he said he's not really a dwarf
That's Billy Bardy. I
Said what do you mean? He's not really a dwarf
He doesn't have it here. He touches his heart. He doesn't have it here inside
have it here inside.
Of course, I saw, oh go ahead. What?
Well, see, well, the whole idea
that you're a dwarf on the inside
and if you don't have it,
it doesn't matter if you're three feet tall,
you're not a real dwarf.
Right, that's what he was a purist.
I saw an episode of Fantasy Island
that was Red Buttons and Billy Bardi,
also playing the evil.
Well, look this up.
And Billy Bardi's name was Hubba Hubba.
No, that wasn't mine.
No, I don't think so.
I have to say, I did 54 Fantasy Islands.
They're sort of like a curtain of nothing
in front of my eyes.
I'm really not sure.
In 54 fantasy islands every actor you thought was dead was in one of the episodes of Least.
You have that line in your book about the love boat.
You say these were actors you only thought were dead but once you saw them in the love boat that was Anderson Anderson voice of the
ABC and Budweiser Goularty that's it yeah yeah you want to take us out with
one of your your wonderful Jewish Christmas carols okay I don't know if I
can remember it it's been a while but I'll just go through a few of them, which is... Jingle bells, Minsky cells, plumbing fixtures, hey, this Christmas get your wife a toilet
and a nice bidet, hey!
I forget the rest.
And then there was, we three girls from Shaker Heights are cooking up a hadassah bizarre
Say the mince is a Jewish princess. She sits on her tush like the czar
And then it gets into making cookies and they make a cookie of moisture Diane you only need one raisin for his eyes
so
And then there was a little...
Oh, oh, Tannenbaum, oh, Tannenbaum,
what are you doing in a Christmas song?
Where can people get their hands on these, Ron?
Can they buy them through your website or email you?
You have to email me and it's $25 plus postage.
Let me think what the other numbers might be in there.
I'm thinking, thinking, thinking.
Oh, little town of Bethlehem, Altoona, Scranton too.
I should not have opened a kosher store
in any town like you.
And what goes on from there?
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. a kosher store in any town like you and what goes on from there.
Next time we have you and again there's much more to cover.
We'll make sure Gilbert does a duet with you of one of those Christmas songs.
I'll send the album and in between time I'm going to get on Google and Google Carol Wayne
and who stopped her?
I'm sure it will be a compendium of bangs.
Gilbert, what would Hervé say about having Billy Barty play his doppelganger?
It doesn't have it here. Well, Erve Villaches used to get angry, we heard, at Tom Selleck.
Because Tom Selleck, he had the hit show.
That's right, Magnum PI.
And he was jealous and he used to go, ah come, he gets so much money and pussy?
I should be getting the money and the pussy.
Oh yes.
One day I'm standing there when he's bitching
about the fact that he's limited to playing this one role.
I can play a king.
I can play anything.
I can play a doctor.
I can play a professional man.
I can play some, I can play a king. I can play anything. I can play a doctor. I can play a professional man. I can play some, I can do Shakespeare.
And Ricardo says, we're holding you back.
Let us release you now.
Be free.
Take these other jobs. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha Oh Ron that silenced him God bless you. Hey my pleasure to be with you again
And when I get to New York, I'll take you out to dinner. Are you coming? I hope so
I hope so too
There's so much one day what we're gonna do is just go through your IMDB credits show by show and just
See if you have an anecdote about each one of these
Cuz it's uh, it's just Gilbert and I were talking before we got Sean.
It's just, it takes your breath away.
By the way, I just thought of something
that is to me very interesting.
I bought an album which was called Yiddish Radio.
And in Yiddish Radio from New York, there was this story.
During the early days of aviation,
a guy named Charlie Levine decides,
we need gas stations for planes.
They don't have them.
He did it.
He put down a series of gas stations with little airports
and also some mechanics to provide treatment
for planes like they were cars.
And he decides that he's going to compete with Lindbergh
to be the first one to fly the Atlantic solo.
He doesn't fly.
Levine's don't fly, but he has a pilot
that's going to help him.
And the pilot used to be a pilot
along with another famous aerial acrobatic pilot
named Chamberlain.
So Charlie Levine is ready to take off
at the same time that Lindbergh's taking off.
But he's such a pain in the ass, the pilot walks away.
So Levine has to get him and drag him back on the plane.
And finally, the truth is they do land,
they cross the Atlantic after Lindbergh lands in Paris, they land in Berlin.
But it's like an hour later, so it doesn't count.
But Yiddish radio decided they had to celebrate this.
So this was the song.
You got to celebrate it.
A Jew was a, you got to do it.
So the song was,
Laveen, Laveen, you're the hero of your race.
Levine, Levine, you're the greatest Jewish ace.
We had a thrill when Chamberlain flew,
but you were up there too, we're proud of you.
Levine, Levine, just an ordinary name,
which you've given everlasting fame.
We welcome you home over the phone. Levine, meet thine flying machine. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha been okay this has been Gilbert Gottfried's amazing colossal podcast with my
co-host Frank Santo Padre and we've had on for a return visit Ron Friedman and
get his new book I killed Optimus Prime so sue me thank you on read guys and Oh, Sue me. Thank you. It's a fun read, guys. Pick it up. Absolutely great. Thank you, guys.
Thank you.
Ron, we love you.
See you soon.
Same.
Bye.
We know that love is the only way to have a peaceful work today.
We know we're young.
We know we're young, we know we're small
But love is all that matters after all
We're happy every time we make a friend
And we're happy, dream and dream that never ends We sleep each morning with the sun And most of all we get along
Why let your life go by so fast?
Take time to love and make it last
We may not know the things you do
But we have things and we love you
Why let your life go by so fast?
Take time to love And make it last.
We may not know
The things you do
But we are Queen
And we love you.
Gilbert Gottfried's amazing colossal podcast is produced by Dara Godfrey and Frank Santapadre
with audio production by Frank Fertorosa.
Web and social media is handled by Mike McPadden, Greg Pair, and John Bradley Seals.
Special audio contributions by John Beach.
Special thanks to John Fotiades, John Murray, and Paul Rayburn.