Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - GGACP Classic: "The Munsters" vs. "The Addams Family" (with Universal tour guide Chris DeRose)
Episode Date: October 19, 2023GGACP ushers in Halloween season by revisiting this frequently hilarious conversation from 2019 as Universal Studios Tour Guide Chris DeRose joins GIlbert, Frank (and Raybone) to compare and contrast... two ghoulish 1960s TV series, CBS' "The Munsters" and ABC's "The Addams Family." Also in this episode: Buck Henry cries foul, Mel Blanc voices a raven, Don Rickles guest stars on BOTH series and Gilbert remembers "The Incredible Melting Man"! PLUS: Bobby "Boris" Pickett!"! "The Ghost and Mr. Chicken”! The genius of Nat Perrin! (and Vic Mizzy)! Butch Patrick peddles Woof Woof dolls! And John Astin chooses the name “Gomez”! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Colossal classic hi this is gilbert hi this is gilbert godfrey and i'm here with my co-host, Frank Santopadre. Oh, I'm not a sidekick this week?
Yes, I'm here with my boy wonder.
On your youthful ward?
Yes.
I'm here with my male companion. Oh!
Wow.
I'm here with my life partner.
Dreams do come true.
Frank Santopadre.
And our engineer, Frank Verderosa, who probably will lose this show.
Wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
And the man suffering from Munchausen syndrome by proxy,
Old Black Raybone.
And this is Gilbert and Frank's amazing, colossal,
yes, amazing, colossal obsession.
Correct.
Very good.
That was smooth as silk.
That was the half hour, wasn't it?
That was beautiful.
Pretty much.
Good night.
We also have a special guest with us.
Our friend Chris DeRose is here.
Hello.
Who has helped the show with mucho research.
He's been a friend in deed.
What is that expression?
A friend in need?
Is a friend in deed.
Something like that.
Something like that.
He has a lovely voice for radio.
Don't you think, Raybone?
Yes.
Yes, I do.
He is also a, how do you describe yourself?
You're a tour guide. you're a VIP guide.
Yes, studio tour guide, which was my first gig at Universal Studios Hollywood.
And then I've graduated up to VIP guide, which essentially means in the summer, I'll take around a VIP tour.
Usually I plan your entire day, deal with families,
and not only take you through the park, but
show you through the studio. And if Gilbert
comes with the family, will you show him
the Psycho House and
take him around? Have you done that?
Pictures on the porch of the
Psycho House. Have you done that, Gil? Have you done
those tours? Do they have, because it
was made by the studio,
do they have a Problem Child ride?
Oh, God. One of the big franchises.
Yeah.
It's right next to Jurassic Park
and The Mummy.
That's terrifying.
Alright. Paul, how are you
feeling? Better than last week,
but it's been tough. It's tough, you know, every week.
I heard you were going to a specialist.
Well, I was until he found out I was part of this podcast, and he turned me away.
Dr. Mobutu, Gomez's witch doctor.
We're going to start here.
This interview sounded like when Dangerfield was on Carson.
I'm all right now, John.
I went to my doctor
Vinnie Goombatz.
He says, I'm alright now, but last week
I was in rough shape.
You gotta take care of your health, Johnny.
Health is most important.
These are some gifts. This one's
actually for me, but I'm going to show it to you.
Ah, well, fuck whoever sent it.
I get the rare gift. Usually
I just collect stuff for Gilbert in my office,
which is NetABC,
which has now become the clearinghouse.
But this was pretty cool.
This is from a listener named Michael Caruso.
And look what he sent.
You know what this is?
A 45.
This is a 45,
but look which 45.
It's an original pressing.
Michael Caruso.
Can you read the name on the label?
He's got to put his glasses on.
Hang on.
Frank, how about some syncopated clock while Gilbert finds his glasses?
Read the name on that label, son.
Monster Mash by Bobby Boris Pickett.
That's the original.
And the Crip Kickers.
How about that?
Wow.
Is that an authenticated original?
It is on parrot records.
Unbelievable.
Yes.
Yes.
Pretty cool.
Thank you very much for that, Michael Caruso.
The rare gift that's actually from me.
Gilbert, this one's for you.
This is from listener Robert Schnakenberg, which I think is a Groucho character.
Yeah, I know.
Professor Schnakenberg sends this to you.
You can open it on air so that Robert can have the pleasure.
Okay.
What did he send you?
And he has a card that says Schnakenberg.
Schnakenberg.
A bunch of...
Chick tracts.
Chick tracts.
A million of them.
Look at that.
Oh, my God.
Put those in your bike spokes. Oh, my God. You put those in your bike spokes.
Oh, my God.
I've been reading these like crazy.
Gilbert asked how many shows ago.
I don't know.
What was that, Frank?
Back in nutmeg days.
He asked about this mysterious thing that he remembered.
In my old neighborhood in Brooklyn, they used to hand out these like, what do you call this shape?
It's like a rectangle.
A rectangle.
Booklet.
It's a booklet.
And these booklets that were comic books, little comic books.
And they would all have like these weird religious things where people would either accept Jesus or go to hell.
Right, and they would always end tragically when somebody had not accepted Jesus.
And when you read these, if you weren't an atheist to begin with,
you'd become them after seeing the ridiculous logic.
So he didn't remember.
This was an episode we did with our friend Gary Girani,
who I used to work with at Topps Trading Cards. And Gilbert didn't
remember the name of these things, but he put
it out to our listeners. And to show you what
a loyal, crazed fan base,
passionate fan base, people not only named
them, but started sending them in droves.
So that's about the sixth or seventh
package of those things
that you've received. These are great. They make
zero sense. Yes. These are great. They make zero sense.
Yes.
Absolutely no sense.
Well, I remember that time I brought up like finding, you know, looking into people's past.
And one place said they could find if you had Neanderthal blood.
Right.
find if you had Neanderthal blood. Right.
I got about 20
people who
tweeted me saying
that how
you, which groups
of people have the most Neanderthal
blood? They knew
about it. People know too much. Yes.
Here's another gift. This comes to you
from a listener who identifies
himself as Lord Bloodra.
That's all there is on there.
Did the dog sniff this one?
I had the dog sniff that one.
See, that's a Bela Lugosi character.
It's two DVDs, and what's in there?
Oh, well, Bela Lugosi.
There you go.
A triple terror collection that has the ape man.
Look at that.
Somebody knows you.
Scared to death and the devil bat.
There was Lord Blood Raw was a character?
Was actually a character?
It just sounds like it should be.
Oh, okay.
Okay.
I thought I missed one.
And Lon Chaney Jr.
How about that?
Is the other.
Indestructible Man.
How about that?
Devil's Messenger.
And Spider Baby.
Thank you, Lord Blood Raw.
Oh, wow.
I believe these people have come up on the show before.
Yes.
Do these fans know you or what?
Oh, my God.
It's scary. What do you think? Speaking from the show before. Yes. Do these fans know you or what, Gil? Oh, my God. It's scary.
What do you think?
Speaking from the fan base, I just want to say that there are now, especially working
at Universal, there are a million things I come across almost daily, and I'm like, oh,
God, Gil would love this.
Well, they just put a, and I was telling you before we turned the mics on, on the lot,
they just put up a beautiful, brand-new monster mural
that pays homage to all the classic Universal monsters.
Oh, yes, you saw that.
That was on Twitter.
Did you see that?
Yes, yes.
Tristan Eaton is the artist,
and he's done art installations all over the world,
but Universal commissioned him and said,
you know, make this new, make this your own,
but if you go to the lot now,
there's, I believe it's Bride of Frankenstein,
Frankenstein, the
Dracula, of course,
Creature from the Black Lagoon.
They're all on this wall, and they're done so
beautifully, but I was...
Now, everybody's buzzing about it,
but I was like, oh, God, Gil would love this.
Do you get this on the tour?
If you take the world-famous Universal
Studio Tour, you can see this.
Led by Chris.
Chris and 150 other guys.
I would insist that you give it.
You give it.
I would love to.
Gilbert, here's something you're going to love.
Wow.
This comes from our friend William Forsh.
And open that up.
That's pretty bizarre.
I'm scared. That's specific to this show. It's in a boy. That's pretty bizarre. I'm scared.
That's specific to this show.
It's in a baggie.
It's in a bag.
Looks like...
This is from Bill Forge, who sends us a lot of cool stuff.
Okay, there's a picture of...
Oh, jeez.
That's Swifty Lazar.
That's a picture of Swifty Lazar wearing giant eyeglasses.
Now, is that Candy...
It's Candy Bergen.
Candy Bergen.
I don't know who that is.
Maybe Mrs. Swifty.
Oh, maybe.
But open the bag.
That sounds like an ice cream store.
Mrs. Swifty.
And he sent you.
Oh, I think it's Swifty Lazar glasses.
He sent you giant glasses.
Oh, my.
Frank, somebody sent him the giant glasses.
The giant Swifty. Looks like eat it then. Get it out. I got to get this. Get it out. You get this? Frank, somebody sent him the giant glasses.
Looks like Edith.
Get this.
You get this?
He looks like Harry Carey.
Hi.
This is a, you get it?
This is a gift from Bill Kors. These would also double as Ed McMahon glasses and the old Dean Martin.
Yes, I believe one of them is yours
and one of them is mine.
So I'll have Frank take a picture later
before we get out of here
of both of us that we can send to Bill Forge.
How do I look?
More like Edith Head.
More like Edith Head.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast after this.
And the last gift.
Oh, these are great.
Oh, wait.
He also sent...
Yeah, this is the next gift from William.
But I also want to shout out Patrick Bodale, our friend Patrick, who sent Dara a gift.
He didn't want to leave Dara out, so he sent Dara a very interesting gift that Dara opened moments ago.
She had to run out to a movie, but it is a soap making kit.
Where he got the idea that you were into soap.
Who knows?
And so this is those tiny pieces of soap.
Yeah.
When it can no longer be used in a bathtub, you scrape it up and it makes a new soap out of old tiny pieces.
Yes.
So these are very, very specific gifts that these gifts.
See, I just push them together with my hand.
I let them sit overnight and then it's one burr.
We're actually going to get to a mini episode topic, but we're going to fly through these.
And this is the last gift, Gil.
I can't wait.
This is also from Bill Forge,
and I think Chris DeRose will get a kick out of that one, too.
Oh, boy.
Open it up.
Oh, it's a life mask, a miniature.
And I'm going to say that's, is this Buster Keaton?
I believe it is.
Look on the back.
It's got something on the back.
I believe it is. John Carradine. It's got something on the back. I believe it is.
John Carradine.
John Carradine.
That's what you said.
Didn't I say John Carradine? The very funny
John Carradine.
The other stone face.
See, now I can see it.
Yeah. This is John
Carradine like around the time
when he did the howling
there you go
it's a miniature life mask
is that a magnet?
is there a magnet on the back?
you can put that on your fridge
oh I hope so
don't put it near the mic
it's like Ebenezer Scrooge's door knocker
and Bill also sent this for Paul Raybone
and I think that's toward your treatment
that's a dollar.
This is the second gift I've received of one dollar.
I'm trying to understand what that means.
He sent something for Frank, too, which Frank is telling me I keep claiming that I have.
But it's in my office, and I'll bring it to the next mini.
So thank you, Michael Caruso, Robert Schnakenberg, Bill Forsh, Patrick Bodale, and, of course, Lord Bloodraw. And Bill, for my dollar. I said Bill Forsh, Patrick Bodale, and of course, Lord Bloodra.
And Bill, for my dollar.
I said Bill Forsh.
Quickly, quickly, our friend John Fotiadis, who Gilbert likes to refer to as Tom Fokiakis.
Yes.
And John, I know you're listening, said, hey, you know, Gilbert, Al Lewis comes up a lot on the show.
Beverly Owen just passed away, the original Marilyn Munster.
Oh, yeah.
And we had John Astin a couple of weeks ago.
He said, why don't you do a Munsters versus Adams family episode?
Okay.
And I said, I think Gil would go for that.
Sure.
So I had Ray Byrne or Ray Bone do a little research.
And what can you tell us, Paulie,
before I read my notes? Well,
the two shows, oddly
enough, ran for exactly the same time.
They debuted the same week in 1964.
Ran for two years
and were cancelled at the same time.
Both cancelled in 66.
So, there are any number of things on the
web which want you to
comment on which you prefer.
Munsters versus the Adams, right?
Yeah, it seems to be like the Ginger or Marianne.
Yeah.
Or, you know, it was funny.
Around that time period, they would have identical shows opposite each other.
Like, I Dream of Jeannie and Bewitched.
Were they on opposite each other?
I think so.
They were also, I think, like, they debuted right around the same time.
My Favorite Martian, I Dream of Jeannie, Bewitched, and there were one or two others all sort of supernatural.
My Mother the Car.
And opposite each other were Captain Nice and Mr. Terrific.
Yeah, which Buck Henry is still mad about that because he was the creator of captain nice and he claims which was on nbc yeah and then cbs came up with mr terrific oh yeah which
he said was dirty pool yeah when we had him on the show but they were both an answer to abc's batman
yeah which was a uh a sensation in 66 but let's talk a little bit quickly about uh adam's family
and the munsters and a couple of things we didn't get to when we had John Astin here.
Like Paul said, both debuted, what, September 18th was the Adam's Family in 64, right?
On ABC.
And the Munsters premiered on the 24th on CBS,
created by Alan Burns and Chris Hayward.
Alan Burns is still around.
Oh!
Also one of the creators of the Mary Tyler Moore show.
Wow! There's a different flavor.
We can see if we can find him. Shot in black
and white. Did you find this, Paul? Because the studio didn't
want to pay an extra ten grand
for episodes to shoot in color.
It's better in black and white.
Yes! Because it matched
the old Monster movie. Well, they made that
movie, Monster, go home in color.
Yes. Which is a little strange.
So this is one thing
that I wondered about
that came up.
I don't know if,
among the group here,
we have an expert
on the early universal horror films.
We just might.
And the monster house.
The monsters were supposedly
inspired by those movies.
Chris, do you know
this backstory?
Do you?
I'm not sure I could see that.
Well, it's Frankenstein,
Dracula,
the wolfman.
But the Addams Family has some of the same or similar characters, too.
Well, the Addams Family was based on a cartoon, on a New Yorker cartoon.
I don't remember which.
I saw a documentary at some point back when I started at Universal,
and I think it was Add's family got greenlit, and
then CBS
was like, we need a
monster show.
Supposedly, Lou Wasserman,
who was running Universal, said, we have these
characters licensed, how can we exploit
them for television? Exactly.
And there was a treatment written. And just about
that time, we're talking 64,
or 63 probably is when it was in development.
The monsters, the universal monsters, the last great universal monster movie was probably what?
Creature from the Black Lagoon?
That was what?
53, 54?
It had been a while.
It had been a while.
Over a decade, yeah.
And everybody was going for it.
I remember...
Excited for it. I remember at one point they were advertising this movie as the next big classic monster.
That was the commercials.
And it was the Incredible Melting Man.
Who was in that?
I don't know.
There was a guy with goo dripping on his face.
He was an astronaut.
Wow.
And he got some kind of rare space disease.
I've heard of the film.
And he was melting.
Yeah.
I've heard of the film.
And so he was the next classic to be there with Frankenstein and the Wolfman.
So that is the story.
I mean, they had these characters, and they said, well, what can
we do with this?
It was developed by two writers named Norm Liebman
and Ed Haas, but what I found in my research
was they threw a lot of writers at this thing
before they basically landed
on something they wanted. And you
can tell us about the Munster House.
Well, the Munster House... Which is on
the lot. It's still on the Universal
lot, and actually, it's on what we call Colonial Street on the back lot.
But if you were an ABC's Desperate Housewives fan, you would know it as Wisteria Lane.
There you go.
And it was actually used not only on Wisteria Lane or Desperate Housewives, but it's been used in any number of shows.
I was just watching a couple months ago.
I was watching Super Troopers 2 and the very end of Super Troopers 2, they do a whole scene on Colonial
Street and the whole backdrop, they're supposed to be in just a suburban neighborhood, but they're
standing in front of the old Munster house. If you saw it today and you didn't have somebody like me
pointing it out to you, you probably wouldn't know that it's the Munster house, but the house was originally built
for a movie called So Goes My Love, which was 1946, I believe.
That sounds right.
Yeah.
So they actually built that house and subsequently the Harvey house, Jimmy Stewart's Harvey house.
They were both built for that movie.
They were both put in
Soundstage 12, which, again,
if you're taking the tour, the first thing
you see when you enter the lot is the oldest
and largest soundstage on property, and that is
Soundstage number 12. Subsequently,
Jurassic Park, that's where
the Visitor Center was, that's where
Tony Montana's mansion was, the interiors
for Scarface. That's cool.
The interior of the clock tower in Back to the
Future, Frankenstein's lab,
Dracula's castle were all in Soundstage
12. So goes my love,
nobody knows it anymore.
I hadn't heard of it until today, until I started
doing the research. It's a forgettable
film, but after that movie,
they moved, and the lot
has changed a bit, but they moved
those houses out onto the lot and
we're using them basically as shelves and facades and then in 64 um that's when uh they turned it
into the monster house and uh another movie that i love that was right around that time
and if you ever watch is uh don knotts ghostts' Ghost in Mr. Chicken. Oh, it was the same house. It wasn't the same.
They used the Harvey house.
Oh, they used the Harvey house.
But you can see, if you look closely,
because it's all on that street.
Now I got to watch it again.
They're shooting around the Munster house
because the Munster house is basically dressed
and ready to go to be the Munster house.
But the Ghost in Mr. Chicken house is the Harvey house.
I got to watch that.
Dana Gould's favorite movie.
I'm not sure if this is
true, but I always
heard that Sammy
Petrillo, the freakish
Jerry Lewis
clone
from Duke
Manti and Sammy Petrillo.
Duke Mitchell. Duke Manti.
Duke Manti was Humphrey Bog guy. Humphrey Bogart.
Humphrey Bogart in High Sierra.
High Sierra.
No, Duke Mitchell and Sammy Petrillo,
who was the zero-budget Martin and Lewis.
Yeah, no frills.
And that Sammy Petrillo wrote a pilot
called My Father the Monster.
Oh, I know this story.
And it became the monster.
He claimed it, but he claimed they ripped him off.
Which I think he might be full of shit, but I don't know.
Was the house used in 46 for Abbott and Costello and Meet the Invisible Man?
Because that's what I found.
I have.
And Jerry Lewis' Rockabye Baby.
And Meet the Invisible Man in 1951.
Could that be right?
Also. Oh, yeah.
Built in 46.
I got the wrong year.
Built in 46, and then yes, you got the year right.
The house was also seen in 1958 in Jerry Lewis' Rock-A-Bye Baby.
But, you know, that checks out.
They also used, again, because they're almost a pair, the Harvey House.
I call it lovingly the Harvey House.
And there is some story
and I've never been able...
I'd have to check with Norm,
who's kind of my boss,
who's also our historian,
our go-to guy for...
Obscure.
We'll come off the tour route
and just be like,
Norm, I got a question
about Leonard Nimoy and his being on the lot. Oh, he's the guy. Yeah, and he's like, Norm, I got a question about Leonard Nimoy and his being on the lot.
Oh, he's the guy.
Yeah, and he's like, okay, let's sit down.
We'll look into it.
Now, also, I remember on the Munsters, at one point, one of their relatives, the creature of the Black Lagoon.
Oh, yeah, I was going to ask you about that.
And do you remember what his name was?
Oh, man. No, I don't know this.
Uncle Gilbert.
Gil, get it? Gil.
Yeah.
The Gil man.
I was very, but the only old horror actor, this drove me crazy with the Munsters.
Well, Carradine was Herman's boss.
Yeah, John Carradine, only one.
And I figure, Karloff was alive, and Lon Chaney Jr. was alive.
They might have turned it down.
Yeah, I don't think Lon Chaney Jr. would have turned it down.
He needed the work.
I'll tell you who was almost cast, and this has a podcast connection,
if this isn't bullshit, and this is what I found, Billy Moomy.
Because Lost in Space did not premiere until 65,
and that Billy Moomy auditioned for the role
of Eddie, but his parents disapproved of the makeup
and wanted to put him in all that makeup.
If we get Billy back, we'll ask him that.
And Billy Moomy was a Jew, we found out.
Oh, he
still is a Jew.
That's the most important information.
Billy Moomy, if you're still out
there, if you're still alive, you're a Jew.
A little bit about the Addams Family, too.
We had Aston here.
Did you hear that show, Chris?
I love that show.
Wasn't he great?
Yeah, he was fantastic.
And I've had interactions with his son, Sean, who's an amazing guy.
Lovely guy.
They made it happen.
They really did.
Sean and Mackenzie, they got him here for us.
I've gotten so many things on the internet, how much they love John Ashton.
I think it's our most popular episode in a long time.
What I found is they were using recycled sets from the movie The Unsinkable Molly Brown.
Oh!
For the Addams Family set.
With Debbie Reynolds.
Shot by the company Filmways on what is now Sunset Las Palmas Studios.
Created by a guy named David Levy, which is the story that John told on the show, formerly an ad man.
And developed by Nat Perrin.
Oh, great.
Of Mark's brother's fame.
Not Matt Perrin, as I just called him.
Nat Perrin.
Well, he never actually, did he?
Oh, Nat Perrin.
Nat Perrin.
Yeah. Well, he never actually, did he? Oh, Nat Perrin. Nat Perrin. And as we talked about extensively with John, they were the first TV family to imply that they had an active sex life.
Although, I was doing the research today, and it turns out in 64 episodes.
The Munsters shared a bed.
Yes.
No other TV couple shared a bed until the Munsters.
Lucy and Ricky were always interest they always
had twin beds there's a lot of I don't know if anybody was a good I can and
yeah but in bed you know in the Adams family there's a lot of interaction
between John Aston and which which yeah which was some of it was real yeah
really had the hots for each other, but he said
made a decision to keep it professional.
They never actually kissed on the...
I would have fucked her.
You would have fucked Grandmama.
I would have
fucked Punxley.
Why didn't they just call him Weatherwax?
Weatherwax.
Well, an interesting universal
connection to Adam's family, if you take the VIP tour that I can also lead you on.
We go into our properties department, and we're the only way anybody who's not in the industry can get into the properties department.
Oh, gosh.
What is it called?
The, oh gosh, what is it called?
The Iron Maiden that sat in Wednesday's room is one of the oldest props in the properties department.
And unless it's still, sometimes it gets rented out, as most props do.
You can actually see it and stand in it.
And it was also used in Abbott and Costello meet Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
No kidding.
And you'd have to ask me or one of the guides to point it out to you,
but, and it's a little worse for wear, I really hope they restore it,
but Grandpa Munster's
organ... I beg your pardon?
It's very much the worst for wear.
The man died in the 90s.
They have it wrapped up in aluminum
foil.
The musical
instrument he played on.
Forgive me.
That is also in the
property's department.
Well, we gotta get there.
Is there much call for an Iron Maiden,
by the way? Do people come and rent them often?
You know, parties?
Every once in a blue moon, you'll see
a hold sticker on it.
And I'm like, oh, God, who's using the old Iron Maiden?
Yeah.
I believe they also used it when they did the Addams Family movies.
I think it's in the Addams Family movies.
I love those movies.
Quick trivia, John Astin chose the name Gomez over the name Rappelli.
They gave them the choice of what they wanted to name their characters
because the characters because the
characters in the New Yorker cartoons did not have names, as we pointed out with John.
Pugsley was originally named Pubert, but they thought it sounded too sexual.
Oh, puberty.
Yeah.
And Nat Perrin provided the voice of Cousin It.
Yeah.
And Felix Silla is still around, the guy who was wearing that Cousin It costume.
in It. Yeah. And Felix Silla is still around, the guy who was wearing that
Cousin It costume.
Filmways did not want to pay singers, so composer
Vic Mizzi
sang the song in three different voices.
Vic Mizzi?
Vic Mizzi, who also wrote
what great television
theme song? Why? Green Acres.
You sure bet. He sure did.
Oh, wow! He sure did.
I got to meet Vic a couple times because he was a friar before he passed away.
That's amazing.
Quickly, some trivia.
Okay, Gilbert.
Uh-oh.
As we go out, we're going to try to stump you.
Gilbert's nervous.
Quickly.
I know Frank will add some quiz music to this later in post.
What was Gomez's occupation?
Anybody?
Chris? Raybone? An optometrist came to mind, but I don't. anybody Chris
Raybone
an optometrist
came to mind
but I don't
I know Herman
was an undertaker
yes he sure was
he was a grave digger
Gomez was a lawyer
he was a shyster lawyer
I could see that
what was Morticia's
maiden name
Jesus
it was Frump
wow
and Margaret Hamilton
who we talked about
last week guest starred on the show as Granny Frump.
She was a lesbian.
Yes.
I don't have that on the card.
Yes.
The show was all about that.
In the credits.
In the credits they say, in parenthesis, she's a lesbian.
Yes.
Bruce Valanche described her as a lesbian.
What was the Adams family home address?
Oh, I don't know.
Anybody?
Any takers?
001 Cemetery Lane.
Oh, I should have got that.
And this is a layup for you, Gilbert.
What was the name of Wednesday's beloved doll?
Oh.
I'll give you a hint.
It was missing a head.
Our
listeners are screaming. I've seen the doll.
Marie Antoinette.
And quickly, Munsters, who provided
the uncredited voice of the Raven
on the wall that went, Nevermore!
Remember the Raven
that was like a cuckoo clock? It wasn't
the guy from Citizen Kane.
Everett Sloan?
No.
It was Mel Blanc.
Mel Blanc.
Uncredited.
And later an actor named Bob Hastings
who was on McHale's Navy.
Mel Blanc.
Nevermore.
Did we talk about the address of the Munster's house?
It's on my list.
Okay.
What was Herman and Lily's home address?
Well, Mockingbird Lane, but I don't know.
1313 Mockingbird Lane.
The tour guide knows.
Well, it's the first stop on the Universal Tour in 64.
What was the name?
Here's a counterpart question.
What was the name of Eddie's beloved doll?
We talked to Butch about it.
Wolfie?
Wolfwolf.
Wolfwolf.
Very good.
Or Wolfie.
And yes, when he was on the show, when Butch Patrick was on the podcast, he said he made
up a bunch, he had a company make a bunch of extra Wolf Wolf dolls that he would sell
by mail and he would buy drugs.
That's a true story.
It's true.
Sad but true.
He's the only one left, right, from the cast.
He's the only cast member left.
Wow.
Well, Pat Priest, the second Marilyn, is still with us.
Okay, Gilbert, last one.
Which two beloved, and one of them is oft talked about on this show,
character actors, comedic character actors,
played the family physician, Dr. Dudley?
Ooh.
Not, not, not, I remember Louis Nye being on one.
Louis Nye was Zombo.
He was Eddie's hero, monster hero.
Oh, okay.
But the doctor was played by, one was Dom DeLuise.
Oh.
And the second one would have said, this place smells like, I don't know, ether?
Paul Lynn!
This place smells like cunt.
Paul Lynn was Dr. Dudley on the Munsters.
Last question.
I lied.
Which legendary comic or what legendary comic appeared on both shows?
We lost him recently.
One of the great iconic stand-ups of all time.
Gentlemen, you want to take a...
Don Rickles?
That is correct!
That's right!
For the win.
Wow.
So one other little nut.
We talked about how the Munsters
tried to recap the Universal Monsters,
but the producer, writer-producer David Levy,
said he wanted to capture the flavor of the old
Marx Brothers films.
Yes, that's why he hired Nat Perrin.
That's it.
Yeah.
Thank you for that anticlimactic note.
That killed the entire show.
The show was flowing along
too well.
I was going to say, I don't know if this
takes us out on a better note.
It has to be better
than my shot.
America's Dad, Tom Hanks,
actually
has been on our
Colonial Street several times. One of the
classic movies that we all love as
tour guides, The Burbs. Oh, yeah.
Hinkley Hills and The Burbs. That's the entire
Colonial Street. The Munster House is Corey Feldman's house.
His next-door neighbor in that movie, a podcast guest, God, I'm blanking on his name, Dern.
Yeah, Bruce Dern.
Bruce Dern is his neighbor in the movie.
So when Bruce Dern falls off of the roof in The Burbs, Corey Feldman jumps off of the porch of the Munster house and runs up to like, he's like, oh, man, are you all right?
We all saw that.
Oh, wow.
So it's in more movies than you think.
And again, it doesn't look anything like it used to.
But the one thing I wanted to tell you, and this might be more for the old Harvey house,
there is tell that part of the Harvey house and maybe part of the Munster house, because
they've changed so much, the cupola was actually taken and used to build the Psycho house.
That's cool.
Which is also still on the lot, the original Psycho house.
That's very good.
And I have to, don't quote me on that, but it's one of the two houses.
On the set of the Monsters, did Paul Lynn ever say,
Hey, Eddie Monster, come here and bounce on my lap?
He might have made a better Zombo.
Quickly before we go, and I hate to do this because it's nonsensical,
but if you had to pick, since people pitch one show against the other, pit one show against the other.
Chris.
I'm going to tow the company line.
Munsters.
Munsters.
Paul.
I'm going to go with the Addams Family.
Gil.
All apologies to John Ashton.
You were one of our greatest guests, but I was a Munsters fan.
I adore them both, and Al Lewis makes life worth living.
But I'm going to pick the Addams Family.
Oh, it's a tie.
It's a tie.
So we'll throw this out to the listeners.
We'll have Frank cast the deciding vote.
Frank?
Is it a tough one?
We're out of time.
I'm going to go with... I think I got to go with Addams Family.
All right. Sucking up to the Astons. go with I think I gotta go with Adam's family alright
sucking up to the Astons
alright Gilly, we'll put that out to our listeners
any
preferences, post them
or post any fun trivia you have about either show
thank you John Fokiakis for the
and this has been Gilbert Godfrey
Gilbert and Frank
did you just mispronounce your own name?
I did.
I did.
It's gotten to that point already.
It's like, give Gilbert his cocoa and put him to sleep.
Thank you, gents.
Thank you, guys.
Thank you for doing this show and all you do.
Thank you, Chris.
Really.
Did you sign off?
You're too kind.
Did you sign off?
This has been Gilbert and Frank's Amazing Colossal Obsessions.
I feel better already.
Bye-bye.
Bye-bye.