Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - Mini #214: REAL Bands of 1960s TV (with John Fotiadis)
Episode Date: May 2, 2019This week: "Far Out Munsters"! Paul Revere & the Raiders! The Peppermint Trolley Company! Mannix meets the Buffalo Springfield! And Chad & Jeremy tangle with Catwoman! Learn more about your ad choices.... Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The world is yours to create.
I'm Gilbert Gottfried and I'm here with my co-host Frank Santopadre
and this is Gilbert and Frank's amazing colossal obsessions
with our special guest John Viven Vivenvital.
He gets honorary Paul Music.
He gets the Raybone music.
But he's not disabled in any way.
Yet.
Raybone disintegrated.
That's why I'm here.
Our musician in residence,
John Fotiatis.
Wyman!
At least your name isn't Cliff Nesteroff.
Yeah, correct.
John is back for part two.
John has very generously done all this wonderful research
and come up with his own premise,
which I host, this co-host appreciates greatly.
Last week we did, you know, people seem to like the music episodes.
People like One Hit Wonders.
We love them.
Oh, and the death one.
We did the death songs of the 70s, which really took off.
People liked them.
Terry Jacks.
Terry Jacks, Seasons in the Sun.
So John is an architect by day, a very talented musician by night.
You know his tunes for this podcast.
Listener mail theme.
Many others.
Producer of the month theme.
I don't want to leave any out.
No.
And John called me and he said, hey, I got a premise.
Let's do all the Beatles-inspired bands that turned up on 60s TV shows.
And there were many, and we did that last week.
So now we're going to do part two, which is basically the same premise, but these are actual bands.
Right.
I think somewhere along the line, these bands said, hey, this premise worked.
We should just appear as ourselves.
Yes, because they were fictional bands pretty much.
Or in the case of Gilligan's Island, the people who sang the theme song.
People were drafted into the cause to play these bedbugs and mosquitoes.
And I also think that given the fact that they started touring and they were in California and in L.A.,
it was easier for them to actually get on these shows.
Right.
Yeah.
So the first one you have here is from a Batman episode from season two, my favorite show.
Right.
Season two, His Honor, The Penguin.
Yes.
The Penguin runs for mayor.
That's right.
The Penguin appears to have gone straight.
Later used in the plot of Batman Returns.
Right.
Strangely enough.
Right, right.
What I find funny about this episode is that there's some kind of some kind of provision in the charter of Gotham City
that permits felons
to run for elective office.
Where have I heard that one before?
And the mayor
the mayor who's facing
certain defeat
his name in this episode
is Mayor Lynn Seed.
He's in every episode.
Mayor Lindsay.
He's in a bunch of episodes.
I think it's very funny.
So Paul Revere and the Raiders
make an appearance
as themselves
and in this case
they don't even sing anything
they're at the Penguins fundraiser
I don't know what kind of fundraiser
this is
with a belly dancer
with a belly dancer
and they're playing some trippy
Middle Eastern music
it's weird
it's wild
it's certifiably weird
yeah
so I guess that was
must have been around
the time the Beatles
were getting
with the Maharishi.
Maybe.
Quite possibly.
It's getting trippier.
The music is definitely getting trippier.
Yeah, yeah.
We have another Batman episode coming, so we'll do a clip of that one.
But Gilbert liked to talk about Chad and Jeremy on the Dick Van Dyke Show.
This is one of the classics, right?
And this is that classic premise where the mop top English guys come over.
They're known as the Redcoats. that's the name of the band okay a british rock doer that's all the craze uh
performing on on alan's show alan brady right so which causes issues for the show's staff
uh they can't keep screaming female fans at bay so um they need to hide them out somewhere and
of course the petri home is the natural place for them to go.
So they show up and they do a number of musical performances, which are actually quite fun.
And their banter back and forth is very funny too.
Right.
And Chad and Jeremy were a British Invasion act.
They are.
And their banter is very much hard day's night banter.
You know, that kind of quick-witted repartee when they're speaking to Alan Brady's staff.
So it's quite entertaining.
Yeah.
You remember that one, don't you?
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Do you remember when Harry Twizzle came on the Dick Van Dyke show and introduced the new dance craze, the Twizzle?
I remember.
Does anyone remember that?
There's a word.
It was a spoof of Chubby Checker and the twist, the peppermint twist.
Do the Twizzle.
Did I dream this
or is it an actual
Dick Van Dyke episode?
Yeah.
February 10th of 65,
the Redcoats are coming.
Did you find that
that premise was used repeatedly
of the band
that needs to hide out?
Not only that,
but the other half
of the premise
is that the hosts
can't tell anybody.
I see.
So they have this great
moral dilemma that they have to deal with. This is fantastic. Yeah, it's very anybody. I see. So they have this great moral dilemma
that they have to deal with.
This is fantastic.
Yeah, it's very funny.
I miss 60s television so much.
Speaking of Chad and Jeremy,
they also turn up on a December 66 episode of Batman.
Yeah.
The Bats Kowtow
with the lovely Julie Newmar
who was on this very show.
Right.
I might add.
What was the premise of this one?
As if I didn't know?
Well, this is the most outlandish one I've heard,
where somehow Catwoman, who's involved here,
steals the voices of Chad and Jeremy,
forcing a blackmail on the British government,
who somehow can't collect tax revenues on their performances, so she wants a million pounds from the British government who somehow can't collect tax revenues on their performances.
So she wants a million pounds from the British government and somehow Batman and Robin.
To return their voices.
Eventually capture them.
But what's cool about this episode is that they actually perform in a theatrical setting.
And for a gear geek like myself, they're using all this great 60s gear and guitars.
So you enjoyed doing this research.
I really did.
I got a chubby on this one.
A little bit of trivia from that episode.
They appear on the Alan Stevens show, who was played by Steve Allen.
How funny.
Oh!
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And they played Teenage Failure, which was one of their songs.
It's a pretty good song, actually.
Let's hear a little bit of this Batman episode, Frank.
They got the screaming girls.
Went up to my boss today.
I said, hey man, can I have more pay?
I said, will ya?
Please, sir. He took one look
at me and then he said,
if you ask me that again, I'll
kill ya. Aren't they great, Alfred?
Well, they
certainly do sway.
Very hip, Alfred. It's. There he has Alfred.
It's hip and hurried.
They changed it.
Former podcast guest Bert Warwick.
Oh, God, I want that guitar.
Same sort of thing with the birds in this town.
I pick them up, they put me down
Still you can't complain
Much if I had a fancy car
Here comes Commissioner Gordon.
Well, Bruce Wayne!
Commissioner Gordon, how nice to hear your voice again.
Former podcast guest Adam West.
Everybody's been on this podcast.
That's the show. Former podcast guest Adam West. Everybody's been on this podcast.
It's a fucking show.
Do you remember this episode, Gil, where Catwoman steals their voices?
I remember a voice stealing thing that happened with the monkeys.
Really?
Yeah.
That one I don't know.
That's a whole other world to drill into. That's another world.
Actually, The Monkees is kind of the culmination of all of this.
Yes.
Where at some point, somebody finally decides, you know what?
Let's just make a show about a band.
Let's go for it.
Let's go for it.
Next one up, The Beverly Hillbillies.
I did not know this one.
You didn't know it because it's so weird and bizarre.
Robin Hood and the Sheriff was the name of the episode. I did not know this one. You didn't know it because it's so weird and bizarre.
Robin Hood and the Sheriff was the name of the episode. I tried watching this, at least clips of this episode, three or four times.
It was a total shit show.
I couldn't understand what was going on.
Jethro was in a Robin Hood outfit.
He's in a public park.
Played by former podcast guest Max Beardry.
Former podcast guest George Washington.
Yeah, so these guys, the peppermint trolley company that were
actually an american kind of sunshiny pop they were real the peppermint trolley company gilbert
they had a single called baby you come and roll and cross my mind also performed on manix love it
and um they did an arrangement of performance of the brady bunch theme. So there you go. Like this weird intertwining stuff.
The Peppermint Trolley Company.
Exactly.
On the Beverly Hillbillies.
And here they're just playing in this public park in the background while Jethro is doing his weird Robin Hood stuff.
How about a little of this, Frankie?
This man needs peace and quiet.
Here they are.
Here they go.
These are all on YouTube.
That almost sounds like Bo Diddley.
Sounds like Magic Bus.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What was that Bo Diddley beat?
The laugh track is so obtrusive.
I just want to get the laugh track.
Who looks good and moves so fine?
Oh, Mary.
There's Ellie Mae.
She's as sweet as cherry wine. Oh, Mary. Oh, Robin Hood. There's Ellie Mae.
That little break with the guitar,
it seems like that was played no matter what kind of music.
No matter what.
You always had that structure.
Whether it was jazz or anything, it always had that beat.
This band showed up on Mannix, too?
That's right.
Yeah.
The Peppermint Trolley Company.
And speaking of Mannix.
Yes.
So this is where... Take it, John.
This is where things get a little dark.
Because, you know, Mannix is a detective show.
Yes, sure.
And there's violence.
And so the Buffalo Springfield, a real band and a quite important band of the period,
appear as the bar band in a Mannix episode called Warning Live Blueberries.
I don't know if that's some kind of obtuse drug reference.
I'm not really sure.
But Mannix is hired by an old friend to find his college-aged daughter who's living in a commune.
So, you know, it involves hippies and, you know, Charles Manson type stuff.
And he penetrates this commune to try to find involves hippies and you know charles manson type stuff and uh he he
penetrates this commune to try to find out what happened to this person and there's this one scene
where you see them playing in the background you see stephen stills and neil young with the fringe
and the gretches and the whole yeah the whole i watched the the clip you sent me it was dark
by the way there's a there's a monkey dancing in this beverly hillbillies episode
in a robin hood outfit which will make Gilbert happy.
And Abraham Lincoln
is dancing next to a monkey.
Well, you should be okay with that.
Yes, yeah.
Excuse me, the monkeys. The Manix
episode was disturbing. It really was.
And dark, but it was nice to see the Buffalo Springfield
on Manix. And they're singing for quite
a while. So they're kind of doing a
Yardbirds thing in Blow Up, you know, where the Yardbirds are in that film and they appear as the they're singing for quite a while so they're kind of doing a Yardbirds thing
in Blow Up
you know where
the Yardbirds are in that film
and they appear
as the house band
that's what Buffalo Springfield
is doing in this episode
and what about this
My Mother the Car episode
from 65
yeah this is just
I was going really deep
this is a deep cut
this is why you know
this show failed
so miserably
because the name
of the episode
is My Son the Ventriloquist.
That's the name of the episode.
Oh, geez.
Season one, episode 10, and the name of the band is called The Spats, which it turns out was a real garage band out of Garden Grove, California.
How did you even find this stuff?
Amazing.
They performed on Shindig.
They released a couple of albums.
That's the same one they're on Shindig.
Including a single called Gator Tales and Monkey Ribs.
Had you heard of the Spats, Gilbert?
That sounds like Gilbert's next book.
Yeah.
Right.
It could be.
The Sea Woke Up.
The Sea Woke Up to Rubber Balls and Liquor?
Yeah, exactly.
I didn't have to mention bestiality.
Gilbert woke up.
But anyway, so yeah,
so this is a horrible show,
and I think like the show and the band, they're both relegated to the ash heap of history.
Did I send you a clip for this one, Frank?
Or do I have a clip?
There was a clip here.
I don't know if you sent it to him.
I don't know if I gave him that one.
Nope, nope, nope, nope, nope.
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So what's the next episode?
Well, I've got a few more.
Sometimes I didn't use the clips because it was an entire episode that you sent me.
That's right.
And I couldn't find any isolations.
That's fine.
Talk about the flying nun.
Flying nun.
I'm just proud that Gilbert has said nothing of the chimp that was on the screen all that time.
I know.
I expected a big reaction.
Bait waiting to be cut.
Because he's normalized Simeon's in clothing.
That's why.
It's no longer an issue for him.
That was one of the cunnilingus chimps.
You had to say it, didn't you?
You couldn't help yourself.
And one of the first ones we played,
one of the guys' outfit in that Beatles-esque band
with the hat and the glasses
was like the outfit they wore for the
Nairobi
Nairobi Trio
Can you play the
Cunnilingus Chimps music please?
Throw the episode completely off the rails
We'll add that in later
Tell us about Song of Betrill
from the Flying Nun
They're still pushing this thing
Unbelievable
and this one is the weirdest most psychedelic song out of them all from the Flying Nun. So this is very funny. They're still pushing this thing. Like 68. Unbelievable.
And this one is the weirdest,
most psychedelic song out of them all.
It's a band called the Sundowners that I believe were also a real band.
It turns out one of the guys in the band
was a friend of Sister Betrill's
before she becomes a nun.
Sister Betrill had a musical interest
in trying to raise money somehow.
So she writes a song. They decide to to perform it but of course it's performed in this very tripped
out psychedelic way that nobody right appreciates and sunny and the sundowners were a real band
and it's a very trippy uh trippy rock song what's funny about it is that the guy singing it sounds
like the lead singer of stealer's wheel he He's doing like a really bad Dylan imitation.
Wow.
Jerry Rafferty.
Wow.
Gilbert, was The Flying Nun a show you watched?
No.
No, huh?
No.
Never watched The Flying Nun.
I would think that would be one of your favorites.
Yeah.
How could I have gotten that so wrong?
He was big into Alejandro Rey.
Yes.
She's a matril.
She's a matril.
She's a matril.
Okay.
But you never heard an Alejandro Rey.
What about this other Beverly Hillbillies episode?
So the other Beverly Hillbillies is featuring a band called The Enemies.
You talk about a proto-punk garage band.
I've never heard of these bands.
And in this case, hoping that a party will help Jethro and Ellie Mae meet people their own age,
the Clampets want to hold an old-fashioned hoedown.
So they enlist the help of Miss Hathaway to go out and find a band.
Somehow they wind up in this club,
and they hire this band that probably sounded more at home
playing on the docks of Hamburg than they did in Southern California.
I almost feel guilty forcing you to sit through every one of these episodes.
It was oddly fascinating
because they do a couple of songs.
They do a version of Pretty Woman,
which is okay.
Really?
And then they do a version of
I Got My Mojo Working,
you know, the old blues standard,
which is actually, you know,
it's got some-
I laugh thinking about how the writers
would, you know, submit scripts for that season.
Yeah.
And everybody had their rock and roll episode.
You know, everybody had to submit an episode with,
oh, the band's hiding out.
In the case of the Munsters,
they rent the house out to the fucking standouts.
Hey, let's hear it from the Jolly Green Giant.
We'll get to that one.
But it's like, it was almost mandatory
to have your rock episode.
And these guys, what's interesting also
is that they were mostly garage bands, too.
I mean, they were out doing like on B-record labels.
Nobody wanted to put out the money to get Voice of Heart.
I'm sure they were available for like $20 or whatever.
So these guys were a garage band from Buffalo, New York,
and then they went on to do different things.
I think one of them wound up in the Three Dog Night,
one of the members of the Enemies.
Oh, was it Corey Wells?
Yes, Corey Wells.
Bravo, Frank.
Would have been a great podcast guest.
We're going to try to get Chuck Negron for Three Dog Night.
Never heard of these bands.
I love that you did all this research.
What about Ben Casey?
So Ben Casey features the Standells, which is a band that turns out appeared on many episodes.
They kind of get my award for having the most exposure.
There's an episode called Three Little Lambs, which actually also features Marlo Thomas.
There you go, Gil.
And Carol O'Connor's in that episode.
That's right.
So he's trying to lasso in three neurosurgeons that he's responsible for.
And he needs to give them all
a talking to about how they're living their lives and of course he does it in a bar listening to a
garage of course did you watch ben casey gilbert uh yeah and with with sam chaffee yeah yeah dr
zorba yeah yeah so uh so yeah they're playing in the background and and i always found you know
the black and white shows kind of weird you know because this should have playing in the background and I always found you know the black and white shows
kind of weird
you know
because this should have been
in the color era
but this was
still a black and white show
what's fascinating
is that you wonder
if the Standells
representation
were on top of this
like how many shows
can we put you guys on
because it was
three shows
in
a year
that's right
they did
Ben Casey
they did they did the Ben did the ben crosby show
in january ben casey in march right and the monsters in march months was in march and the
other thing i found out about them you know how they kind of have this 50s clean cut look with
the suits and and the pompadours but it turns out they were much more of a hippie band kind of coming
out on the scene and their management forced them to look a bit cleaner almost what what brian epstein did with the beatles because they were
trying to book them on all these shows and they want to be too outlandish it's amazing how many
shows got mileage out of this idea and the sandals as we said turned up on the bing crosby show which
is a clip you sent me that i couldn't really watch because it was yeah this was the only out of all
of these episodes out of all the
series was the only one i couldn't really find any premise for there's not a lot written on i think
it was a very short-lived sitcom do you remember the bing crosby show no i mean he had done like
three or four of these types of shows there were there were a few weird shows like i remember they
had the henry fonda show the smith family. Yeah, and the Jimmy Stewart show.
Yep.
Ron Howard was on that Henry Fonda show.
Yeah.
He was the son.
That was a weird time when they had these movie stars.
Yeah.
Well, and they were the twilight of their careers.
Yes, yeah.
And they would give them a TV show to front.
I mean, Fred McMurray, too.
Yeah.
Right?
Yeah, my three sons.
And we saved the best for last.
My absolute favorite. Mine, too. Oh, yeah. Yeah. My Three Sons. And we saved the best for last. My absolute favorite.
Mine too. Oh. Yeah. Far
Out Monsters. Oh!
Okay. Okay.
Eddie comes up with a new musical
taste rock music. Okay.
After putting a record in the phonograph,
Herman and Grandpa get very angry about the
noisy music. Later, a rock group manager
sees in the paper that the Munsters' house is
a perfect shelter for the Standells.
So they rent the house.
Of course.
The Munsters go away.
The Munsters come back.
And it turns into this whole beat generation, Allen Ginsberg poetic party thing.
It's great with Zalman King.
With Zalman King doing some great spoken word poetry.
Yeah.
But I love Herman's poetry the best.
I watched the whole episode because I had to see Grandpa hanging in the closet.
Me too.
I did it.
This is the only one I watched from start to finish.
We lead sad lives, Frank.
We really do.
Well, you know, we share an Al Lewis obsession.
I'm going to get you back here at some point
to do some kind of All Munsters episode.
I don't know what it is yet,
but we'll come up with some kind of premise.
You need to get Billy West for that.
Yeah, we'll get Billy West.
When he comments on the room tone.
Frankie, let's see a little of this wonderful clip
of the Standells on the Munsters.
We'll all wing it.
We'll all sing it.
Kyle Lombardo's back in town.
That's the poet known as the hermit.
The jokes are so hip.
Kyle Lombardo joke.
He sure cuts away the hermit. So hip. The hip jokes are so hip. My Lombardo joke. He sure cuts away the tinsel, don't he?
He sure cuts away the tinsel.
Isn't this a fun party?
Yes.
I haven't seen so many good-looking people in one place since we closed down the mausoleum back home.
Let's hear from the Jolly Green Giant.
Are you going to hear this?
Oh, no, not me.
Bibbidi-bibbidi.
I wrote it down.
This is great.
It's Harman's poetry?
Yeah.
I think he's going to recite.
Ibbidi-bity Sibbity sab
Ibbity bibbity canal boat
Dictionary
Down the ferry
Mary Mary quite contrary
Fuzzy wuzzy was a bear
Fuzzy Wuzzy lost his hair
Scuba do and scuba die
That chicken's not too young to fry
Remember the scuba?
That's great
Life is real, life is earnest
If you're cold, turn up the furnace
Fantastic I thank you Real life is earnest. If you're cold, turn up the furnace. Fantastic.
I thank you.
That's great.
Can we go back and hear a little of the Standells?
Are they before this or after?
It's so weird that it's supposed to be Beatles,
but they're still thinking in terms of the beat generation.
So it's kind of straddling you know
go back a little bit frank we'll see if we've marked 11 43 but that was what we just yeah i marked it i marked it wrong do the ring go and they also do a beetle truck i want to hold
you no we don't want to hear lily singing with the harp go back to the standells yeah
the Standells.
Nope, nope, nope, nope, nope.
Right here.
There we go.
It's a little bit after this. Yeah.
It's coming. Did you dig that crazy getup?
Man is that way out.
You see the hairdo on the tall one?
It's the greatest thing since Carl Sandburg.
It's references.
Carl Sandburg. Guy L references. Carl Sandburg.
Guy Lombardo.
Here's the Stan Bells.
Yeah.
Any memories of this, Gil?
I vague.
Do I remember smoke coming out of Grandpa's ears at some point?
That's when they do, I want to hold your hand.
I see.
Fantastic.
John, this was a great premise.
A lot of fun.
Yeah.
And fun to do the research? Yeah, yeah, it was a great premise. A lot of fun. Yeah. And fun to do the research?
Yeah, yeah.
It was great.
I mean, it kind of rekindled my interest in garage rock.
There's a whole, it's a deep mine to go down.
Are there any you missed?
I think probably there was a My Three Sons.
Okay.
Because I remember still images of them holding guitars.
Okay.
And like I said, Flintstones and I'm sure some other cartoons covered as well.
I think they were covered in every
form of the medium. This man loves
Al Lewis, Gilbert, and we have to come up with a
Munsters premise. We'll come back
and bring him back. Here's one
that's not a band that I remembered
but a 60s artist
on Batman.
Does this ring a bell?
Jim Windhoff.
I recognize this.
Jim is here.
Maybe he knows.
This is from a Catwoman episode.
Gilbert?
Oh.
It's Leslie Gore.
Oh, wow.
Gymnos.
It almost sounds like a Brian Wilson type of track.
Little Beach Boys kind of thing.
California Nights.
Sunshine Pop.
Yeah.
It's great.
I remember this song.
Leslie Gore playing Pussycat on Batman.
So I had to find one and throw it at you.
Not a band.
Fantastic.
Gil?
Ah.
Okay.
I'm Gilbert Gottfried.
I'm my co-host, Frank Santopadre.
And this has been Gilbert and Frank's amazing
Colossal Obsessions with our
special guest, John
Feivenweibel
John, this was fun
Thank you, thank you guys
Let's do more, absolutely
Monster, go home sky above just you and me and we will whisper
words of love while
the firelight softly
flickers in the sun
Oh
California
love
with the
breeze blowing in it's not the love to begin, I would live.
California night, if I went a mile away, thinking I would stay. Thinking now that I've stayed