Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - Mini Ep #117: Bad Movie Musicals
Episode Date: June 22, 2017This week: Burt Reynolds sings! Gene Kelly skates! Carol Channing covers the Beatles! And Gilbert meets Mr. Baseball! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...
Transcript
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Tennessee sounds perfect. Hi, this is Gilbert Gottfried
and I'm here with my co-host
Frank Santopadre
and we're once again recording at Nutmeg with our engineer, Frank Ferdarosa.
And we've got someone who one day I'll figure out what he actually does for a living.
For a living.
Paul Rayburn.
Yeah.
Yes.
It's not this.
Yeah, no, I know.
I've never done this for a living.
Colossal Obsessions. Hi, I know. I've never done this for a living. Colossal Obsessions.
Hi, Paulie.
Hi.
Hey, we're going to do something different this week for Amazing Colossal Obsessions.
We're going to let Paul came up with an idea.
Oh, can I just throw one thing in first?
Go ahead, sure.
One actor who, you know, you kick yourself like, oh, we should have asked him.
Uh-oh.
Powers Booth.
Yes, also Roger Moore.
Yeah, and Roger Moore.
We didn't talk about them in a previous episode.
Powers Booth was, he got famous from being Reverend Jim Jones in the TV movie.
Oh, that's right, the Guiana.
Oh, geez.
Yeah.
And then he was in a movie that I guess I can recommend
if I haven't recommended it.
And that was called Southern Comfort.
Oh, Walter Hill's movie.
Yeah.
I know that movie.
Yeah, good actor.
Yeah, it was similar to Deliverance.
Yeah, he could do a lot of things.
Yeah, he was a really good actor.
Powers Booth.
We should acknowledge his passing also, Roger Moore, and also a really good actor. Powers Booth. We should acknowledge his passing. Also, Roger Moore.
And also, a universal horror actress.
Elena Verdugo died.
Oh, my God.
Yeah, did you see that?
I think she was 92.
And she's in The Wolfman?
Yeah, she was either in The Wolfman or House of Frankenstein.
I'm thinking of Evelyn Ankers.
Wow.
She passed away at 92.
Also, Gilbert did some play-by-play at the Met game yesterday.
Really?
How was that?
I saw you.
Oh, yeah.
I saw you.
I walked by the TV.
I saw you on the TV, and I kept walking.
Yes.
Mr. Met, the mascot, gave the finger.
It's in the press.
It was on the cover of the Daily News.
And I said to my wife, that has to have something to do with Gilbert being at the park.
I don't know what the connection is.
And while I was there, because I don't understand baseball at all, I saw in big letters on the screen it said KKK.
On the scoreboard.
Yeah, yeah.
I was telling you and Tara, those are strikeouts.
Yeah.
That's for people keeping score in your scorecard.
You write a K.
It means the batter struck out.
I don't think Gilbert's going to buy that.
No.
But you were on the Met game.
You did a little play-by-play with Howie Rose.
Yes.
And Bob Uecker.
Bob Uecker was there.
Yeah, that's great.
Mr. Baseball.
Did you ask him to confirm or deny Mr. Belvedere sitting on his balls?
Oh, jeez.
Well, now we'll have to have him on.
Get him back.
Get him back.
Oh, jeez.
I didn't even draw the connection.
Yeah, sure.
No, this is, these things kill me.
Number one, I didn't ask Bob Uecker if Mr. Belvedere sat on his balls.
Not on Bob Uecker's Mr. Belvedere sat on his balls. Not on Bob Uecker's balls.
Right, that's different.
Because then that would have been fine.
Yeah.
But I had, you know, we had on Norman Lear.
Norman Lear.
You didn't do Damn, Damn, Damn.
Is that what you're lamenting?
No, no.
The Damn, Damn, Damn, I'm sorry I didn't do with John Amos. John Amos
is going to come back for a mini episode.
Oh, okay. He'll have to say
damn, damn, damn.
But
we were talking and it seems like
Norman Lear
worked with Milton Berle.
Yes. And I didn't ask
about Milton Berle's dick.
It's in the book.
It is?
Him and his wife, I guess wife two, they went backstage to see Miltie,
and he said Miltie was touching himself and sitting there in his boxers with his robe open.
So he saw two legendary comedians' dicks.
He saw Milton Berle's dick
and Jerry Lewis's dick.
Well, that's why he's remembered
the way he is.
All right, so enough of the housekeeping.
Paul has a premise for us
for this mini episode,
and we're going to let him steer it.
So this was suggested by La La Land,
which you either love or you hate
La La Land.
Nobody's Luke Warman.
I happen to love it.
I liked it.
I've seen it three times.
I worked with the star of that when he was a little kid.
Ryan?
Yeah.
Ryan Gosling.
On the Mickey Mouse show?
No.
Well, he may have been like a teenager.
Right.
I worked with him on this show, Are You Afraid of the Dog?
Oh, I know that show.
That's cool. It is. That's great.? Oh, I know that show. That's cool.
It is.
That's great.
So anyway, I assume you guys haven't seen it.
I saw it.
Nobody in it is over 90.
I saw Screener.
I watched it on Christmas Eve, I'll have you know.
Yeah, what did you think?
Are you a lover?
I loved the beginning.
I didn't think the story, I don't suppose there's any reason to look for a story in a musical like that.
But I very much admired the ambition and the filmmaking of it.
It was bold.
Well, so even for those who hated it, in this episode, we're going to go way deeper.
Okay.
So your premise, as I understand it, is not good musicals like La La Land.
No, bad musicals.
Some of the worst musicals.
In fact, we're going to start with not only one of the films that's acclaimed as one of the worst film musicals of all time,
but many people can consider it to be the worst film of all time.
Wow, that's tough talk.
And what's interesting about that is it was directed by a former podcast guest.
Well, I now know what it is, but don't tell Gilbert.
You know, you queued up some music, too. We queued up, so can we, I think we can. Henry Winkler. No, no, I guess the idea here,
Gil, is you're going to hear the song and try to name the musical. So let's hear the song from the
musical and see if you can tell. This would be the, yeah, okay. Bob Costas. No. Bob Costas.
Here it comes.
At words poetic, I'm so pathetic
That I always have found it best
Who's the singer?
Instead of getting
a nice chance
to let them rest
and spread.
You mustn't do that.
I hate parading my serenading
and I'll probably
miss a bar.
But if this city
is not so pretty
at least it'll tell you how great you are.
You're the top.
You're a Waldorf song.
You're the top.
Now, see, it was, what's that, the director, he directed the movie I was in with Richard Pryor,
Bogdanovich.
That's right.
Very good.
Long Last Love.
Very good.
Who was singing?
Burt Reynolds.
Burt Reynolds.
God damn it.
No stumping it.
Unbelievable.
It took you 42 minutes.
Yeah.
Now, here's an interesting thing.
His co-star was?
Sybil Shepard.
His girlfriend.
And at the time they made the movie, he was 39 and she was 25.
Yeah.
So this turns out to be, when I was doing the research,
there's an interesting theme.
Music man, Robert Preston, is about 15 years older than his co-star.
And Shirley Jones.
Shirley Jones.
It happens over and over again.
I don't know why that is. It's an epidemic in the movies, not just musicals.
Not just musicals yeah yeah well it it's like um in on the waterfront uh what carl malden is the old priest
yeah and uh ava marie saint is the young girl virginic little. And then a few years later, they were in a TV movie as a married couple.
Oh, my God.
That's disturbing.
Yeah, there's a lot of that.
The thing about A Long Last Love, and I'm going to go out on a limb,
it's not as absolutely dreadful as people say it is.
It's well-directed.
It suffers from having two leads that are not really able to sing and dance convincingly.
Which is a problem in a musical.
Yes.
It's kind of like we have a baseball team.
Their only problem is they don't know how to play ball.
But other than that, we've got a basketball team, but they're very short.
There are things to like about it.
It turns out many of the critics agreed with your opinion.
Yeah, Ebert defends it.
John Barber in the Los Angeles Magazine said,
Burt Reynolds sings like Dean Martin with adenoids
and dances like a drunk killing cockroach.
Yeah, I've heard that.
Which is pretty good.
Well, you know, she's very lovely to look at.
Madeline Kahn brings a lot to the table.
And the Cole Porter songs are wonderful.
The movie just needs Gene Kelly.
Okay.
Eleanor Powell.
Here's something with Cole Porter.
And I say that Malcolm X plagiarized Cole Porter.
Because, you know, Malcolm X has that speech where he goes,
we didn't land on Plymouth Rock.
Plymouth Rock landed on us.
Yes, sure.
And that's in the beginning, the opening verse of the song,
what's that famous, oh, God.
Which, where are you going with this? What about it's a it's one of the it's
one of the very well-known yes yes uh oh let's misbehave oh god what was this one it was i could
i could look it up but i'd lose the trailer anyway well all right, can you look this up? This is horrible.
What do you got?
Cole Porter's song in the verse.
There's something about Plymouth Rock.
I think they may have sung it in Sleuth.
They recited it.
Wow.
Oh, the original Sleuth with Michael Caine and Lawrence Olivier.
Late remade.
Well, let's come back to it.
Okay, so.
Oh, anyway, in the opening verse to that song, he says, and we won't land on Plymouth Rock.
Plymouth Rock will land on us.
What's that?
In olden days, a glimpse of stocking was looked on as something shocking.
Oh, it's anything goes.
Yeah.
The best way to sum this up is Burt Reynolds in a Cole Porter musical is like Gene Kelly in Deliverance.
Yeah, well, there you go.
There you go.
That's a fair comparison.
I was watching parts of it today doing a little research when you sent me this idea.
It's got some nice things in it.
And I don't think Reynolds and Shepard were taking themselves all that seriously, fortunately.
Did you watch it on Netflix by any chance?
No, I just watched clips on YouTube.
Well, it was recut several years ago, and everybody seemed to like the recut better,
and Bogdanovich even added an extra 90 seconds or something to the new version.
He's a great director.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing amazing colossal podcast after this.
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And now back to the show.
Well, let's jump to the next one.
All right.
So now we have...
We'll get mail about that.
Within our family, we have some disagreement over this, but the next one I have is Xanadu.
Yes, there's some unrest.
There are some who disagree.
And that's got Gene Kelly in it.
There you go.
On skates.
And that's got Gene Kelly.
That's right.
Everyone's going to start arguing over, like, these movies that are terrible,
and there's always going to be someone who's going to start arguing over like these movies that are terrible and there's always going to
be someone who's going to say no no in this case my wife yeah like who likes anna do oh it was
horrible it's not much of a movie but it does have those wonderful jeff lynn songs olivia newton john
is cute yeah we can give her that now joe montagna yes and olivia newton john said jew right Now, Joe Mantegna. Yes. And Olivia Newton-John's a Jew.
Right.
We covered that discovery in previous shows.
Joe Mantegna was also in the movie, but all of his scenes were cut out.
Interesting.
Oh, wow.
Joe Mantegna and Xanadu.
I think he never got over it.
Joe Mantegna's not a Jew.
Are you sure?
Are you 100% sure?
We're still looking into it.
He was in Three Amigos.
Does that make him Jewish or not Jewish?
I went to see Xanadu on Broadway at my wife's
request. Oh, geez.
And who turned up in the Gene Kelly
part? Our pal Tony Roberts.
Oh, my God.
And I was crestfallen that he did not put
on roller skates.
It turns out, I asked Tony and we had him on the
show. It turns out that was part of his agreement.
There was one part of Xanadu that annoyed me even more than the other parts,
which is every single part, where one guy's on roller skates
and a guy in a car goes, come on, I'll give you a lift.
And so the guy in roller skates holds on to the back of the car
and he pulls.
And I thought, oh, God, stop it.
Stop it.
Some good songs.
Stoops.
Some good pop songs in Xanadu, although it doesn't hold together much as a movie.
What else you got on that list?
One of the critics says you want to scream Xanadont.
Xanadont.
Oh, you've also compiled the bad reviews.
Well, I wanted to make my case.
I know this is a tough crowd.
Xanadont.
Xanadu. And this brings us back to an old joke.
What's the hardest part of rollerblading?
Telling your parents that you're gay.
Where'd you come up with that?
That's funny.
All right.
Is this where we go to our inserts here?
Or do we have one more first? I think you have another one.
I've got one more.
Okay.
So raise your hand if you think sequels are ever as good as the original movie.
No, no.
In fact, a man we're about to interview, Richard Benjamin, says you should remake flops, not hits.
Well, I mean, Godfather 2 was great.
Godfather 2 is an exception.
And Bride of Frankenstein is a great movie.
There you go.
There you go.
Xanadu 2 is awesome.
Xanadu 2.
And, of course, Grease 2 was brilliant.
That's exactly where I was headed.
That's where you headed to, Grease 2?
Grease 2, produced by Ellen Carr and Robert Stigwood.
Yes, sure.
Right?
Also the man behind Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club.
Oh, my God.
Was that with George Burns?
Yep, you bet.
Well, Stigwood was involved with Grease 1.
He managed Cream and the Bee Gees.
That's correct.
And he was also involved in Saturday Night Fever.
Yes, he was.
Yes, he was a mogul.
He was probably sorry he was involved. Now, Night Fever. Yes, he was. Yes, he was a mogul. He was probably sorry he was involved.
Now, who was the female lead, Gilbert, in Grease 2?
Something Pfeiffer?
Michelle Pfeiffer is right.
Something Pfeiffer.
Most people know her as something.
It was Michelle Pfeiffer, not her sister, Dee Dee.
Oh, Dee Dee, I was thinking of.
Michelle Pfeiffer.
Should I cue up the song Cool Rider?
No, that's okay. My wife, again, likes Grease 2. My wife's Dee I was thinking of. Michelle Pfeiffer. Should I cue up the song Cool Rider? No, that's okay.
My wife, again, likes Grease 2.
My wife's going to get mail now.
And then it's that Australian guy.
Maxwell, the immortal Maxwell Caulfield.
Oh, yes.
And he married whom?
He was involved in a May-December marriage.
He married Juliette Mills from Nanny and the Professor.
Okay, homosexual. I didn't say Martha Ray. He married Juliette Mills from Nanny and the Professor. Okay. Homosexual.
I didn't say Martha Ray.
Alleged.
Juliette Mills.
Alleged.
Some other actresses who were up for the part were Lisa Hartman, Christy McNichol, Andrea McCardle, and Pat Benatar.
Wow.
Which would have been an interesting choice.
Very interesting.
But she didn't get it.
Very, very interesting.
Michelle Pfeiffer probably. Pat Benatar would have been an interesting choice. Very interesting. But she didn't get it. Very, very interesting. Michelle Pfeiffer probably.
Pat Benatar would have made sense.
Yeah.
Ron Dante, by the way, another podcast guest, instrumental in Pat Benatar's career early.
Now, I think we go to clip number three.
Do you?
I think so.
You're on your own, kid.
Yeah, I don't know.
Clip number three, Frank.
Okay, so Gilbert has to guess this one.
Okay.
He's going to guess it pretty quick.
Maybe he'll drag it out for us.
I'm fixing the hole where the rain goes.
Oh, well, isn't that the one we just mentioned?
Sergeant Pepper?
That's Sergeant Pepper.
Yeah, yeah.
We were just talking about it.
Who's singing Fix It?
George Burns.
George Burns.
Very good.
I was shocked to discover that George Burns.
Steve Martin was in that, too.
He is.
He is.
You know what's strange about that film?
A lot of things.
Yeah.
For one thing, it's truly terrible.
Oh, my God.
Horrible.
Yeah, Donald Pleasence was in it.
Donald Pleasence sings.
And Aerosmith, Alice Cooper.
Yeah.
These are the good parts.
Aerosmith, Alice Cooper, Earth, Wind, and Fire.
Yeah.
The Aerosmith cover of Come Together is good.
But George Burns, I wondered whether you studied George Burns' work, vocal work.
Ah.
And what was George Burns' real name, Gil?
Nathan Birnbaum.
Look at this guy.
Yeah.
Matt Birnbaum.
Yeah.
There's the, go ahead.
George Burns, I still remember this.
He would sing these songs on The Tonight Show.
He goes, my kid brother was a lazy kid.
Three days work was all the work he did.
Wrote a song entirely wrong.
Up and young cause it's going strong.
George M. Cohen and the other gang heard my brother and the song he sang.
Said it cannot miss.
It's bound to be a hit.
How can it miss? How can it miss
when the chorus goes like
this? That's nice.
Will you do that for
Richard Benjamin when we get him on the line?
They were buddies. They did the Sunshine Boys
together. Here's the other thing about
the C. Martin scene is fun, by the way, in Sgt. Pepper.
I mean, he looks like he's having fun.
The song is not much.
Right.
But I watched clips of it today.
There's a finale that you simply have to watch to believe that has something like 70 stars
in it singing Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.
Oh, geez.
And it's this gigantic collection of people, I guess, on a studio lot.
You know the clip I'm talking about?
No, I haven't seen it.
And you can see Wolfman Jack is in it, Carol Channing, Jose Feliciano.
Wow.
Connie Stevens, Dame Edna turns up.
It's like they called in every favor, got every celebrity that was on the lot to sing the finale.
It's surreal.
Yeah, yeah.
The movie's not good.
I passed by, I saw an ad on a bus for some Broadway or off-Broadway show, and the blurb on it was,
Fantastic RuPaul.
on it was fantastic RuPaul.
Is that not a ringing
endorsement?
Not quite
the New York Times, but
still, very impressive.
You want to see a pretty good musical
with Beatles music, Julie Tamer's
Across the Universe. Yeah, I've seen
that actually. It was good. Ambitious. It's odd. It's unusual the Universe. Yeah, I've seen that, actually.
It was good.
Ambitious.
It's odd.
It's unusual.
It's odd, but it's hard.
Yeah, that's right.
The only thing those movies are missing, really, are the Beatles.
Yeah.
That would help.
I did see, I remember one of those movies you heard about,
and then I finally saw it, and it was just a mess.
It was with the Beatles.
Yellow Submarine?
No, no, no, no.
The Beatles were actually... Hard Day's Night?
No.
Oh, Help?
No.
Oh.
There was a third...
With Six You Get Egg Roll?
Yeah.
There was that one and they sing in it,
Mother Should Know.
Oh, the Magical Mystery Tour.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's a mess.
That was a fucking mess and a half.
Yeah, I saw that at the Paley Center.
But again, good moments in it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
All right, so we've got, let's see, if I get the right one, clip number three, I think,
is coming up here.
Okay.
And this is another Identify the Singer, right?
Oh, yes.
Right?
You'll impress me
if you know this one, Gil.
Yeah.
I was pretty impressed
with George Burns.
The answer is, nobody sings.
We'll be back after this.
We've got to do a better job of queuing up these clips.
Here it comes.
All right.
The strings are beautiful.
Just a little tip.
When I cue these clips up, I usually listen to them first.
So it's basically an instrumental. Who's the second cellist?
Hugo Montenegro.
Does he sing at any point, Frank?
There's four minutes left.
Four more minutes.
He might sing.
Here it comes.
Okay.
I was born under a wild dream star. Okay.
Is it kind of a day song?
Yeah.
It was a novelty song.
Lee Marvin?
Oh, my God!
Oh!
Oh!
That's actually Coldplay.
Sorry.
Oh, wow.
I quit, too.
How did you know that?
I don't know. I was listening. I said listening i said oh that voice i definitely know that voice yeah well what would the musical be then oh
oh wait wait what the was that the one he did with clinty's you bet uh paint your wagon nice With Clint Eastwood. You bet. Paint Your Wagon. Nice.
You are a ringer.
I'm telling you, man.
I thought we'd had a chance on musicals, but so far, nothing. He's pretty good.
That one had a 14-minute lead-up.
There was a story I heard that Roger Ebert was interviewing Lee Marvin at his pool.
Ebert was interviewing Lee Marvin at his pool and Lee Marvin's there in a bathrobe and a bottle of scotch and a cigarette and his dog is running around. I know this one. Yes. And right in the
middle of his interview, Lee Marvin's wife comes home and she says hello to everyone.
And she looks down at the dog and the dog is biting something in its mouth.
And she pulls the thing out of his mouth and it's a pair of women's underwear.
And she holds them up and she goes, these aren't mine.
And Lee Marvin looks down and goes, bad dog.
That's a great show business story.
I think that's in the Dick Cavett Live episode.
Oh, yeah.
But certainly worth retelling.
All right, as time runs short here, Mr. Rayburn.
Yeah, so here's what I'm going to give you a gradual reveal on this one.
This is a movie.
The main character was a shy Harlem school teacher.
Is this The Wiz?
Oh, my God.
Jesus.
I didn't even get to...
Don't give him any hints.
Don't you know
what you're dealing with?
It's also a send-up
of The Wizard of Oz movie.
I worked for days on this show.
Welcome to my world.
It featured Michael Jackson.
Paint Your Wagon, by the way, is pretty bad.
Yeah.
And the screenplay was by, of all people, Paddy Chayefsky.
Oh, my God.
Which I found out while doing a little research.
And what you want in a bad movie is you want it to be 159 minutes long.
Paint Your Wagon delivers.
So who was the, now this should be easy, who directed The Wiz?
Well, of course.
Sidney Lumet.
How did that happen?
And Nipsey Russell was in it, too.
Nipsey Russell, Michael Jackson was the scarecrow.
The music was supervised by Quincy Jones.
Of course.
There were new songs by Ashford and Simpson.
Yeah, A-list talent.
This had everything.
This should have been fabulous.
There's a tie-in between Gilbert's side job last night and several parts of the movie.
How so?
Although it wouldn't have been at Citi Field, but there were big scenes that were filmed at Shea Stadium.
That's correct.
Oh!
That's correct.
And the sets cost a fortune.
I was doing a little research.
The sets are massive on that movie.
It's also not very good.
And I know we talk a lot about Lumet, and he's wonderful.
It is my favorite Nipsey Russell musical.
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
I will say that.
These new cut-out fashions cause me to wonder in doubt,
are they outside trying to get in or inside trying to get out?
According to Dan Cupid's plan, there is a girl for every man.
I'm here to say if this is true, then some guy's shacking up with two.
He is good.
Was that like a match game episode that stayed in your head from 1976?
How do you remember this stuff?
That reminds me of the other day.
How do you retain it?
And there was another one.
Children today are different.
As you already know, they used to ask where they came from.
Now they tell you where to go.
We should do an all poetry episode.
We really should.
We're going to have to wrap this one tight.
We have time.
I don't think we should get out of an episode without Gilbert singing one song.
Well, we'll do that.
Can we do that?
Sure.
Sure.
The next cue would be a good one, I think, which would be a chorus line.
You want to talk about your...
You want to...
We didn't cue up chorus line, did we?
I think we should just go out on the whiz because it's such a great movie.
Yeah, we'll go out on the whiz.
We'll go out on the whiz.
And we'll do chorus line next time.
We'll continue this because it's a fun idea and we barely scratched the surface.
Sounds good.
And we should get Jenny Lumet on the show to talk about her song.
Oh, that would be great.
We'll look into that.
I think our next mini should be a super montage of all the times we say barely scratched the surface.
Do we say that a lot?
Oh, my God, yes.
Only every episode.
But I think that could be a really fun, you know...
Make something out of it, buddy.
Make a montage.
We barely scratched the surface.
All right, so we'll do this again because it was fun.
And we barely scratched the surface.
And we failed to stump Gilbert.
So next time, we've got to work harder.
We would have had more time in the show
had not the paint your wagon clip.
17-minute intro. We could have had more time in the show had not the paint your wagon clip. 17 minute intro.
We can go out over this wonderful clip.
Here you go, Gil.
You recognize this?
If you don't have STDs, Chris Cole will do just fine.
It's from The Wiz, right?
Chris Cole will do just fine.
That should have been a deliverance. Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha an instrumental from Lee Marvin.
And I still don't know what the fuck Paul does here.
He produces now.
Oh, okay.
Come on.
He stayed up nights.
He read in bed with a flashlight.
Cut the guy some slack.
Thank you, Paul.
We'll see you guys next week.
I'm not sure I want to know what Paul does in bed with a flashlight. Get down my throat and let me lubricate my
mind.
Slide some oil to me.
Go ahead.
Hit my shoulder blade.
Those
who don't have to lubricate
sure
got it made.
Slide
some oil.
Here we go, boys.
One, two, three, four.
Give it up, friends.
Colossal Obsessions.
Give it up, friends. Colossal Obsessions Give me that fract Colossal Obsessions
Give me that fract
Colossal Obsessions