Toronto Mike'd: The Official Toronto Mike Podcast - Muffy Mouse: Toronto Mike'd #360
Episode Date: July 27, 2018Mike chats with voice actress and puppeteer Nina Keogh about her work at CBC and TVO, especially her performance as Muffy Mouse on Today's Special....
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Welcome to episode 360 of Toronto Mic'd, a weekly podcast about anything and everything.
Proudly brought to you by Great Lakes Brewery, a fiercely independent craft brewery located here in Etobicoke.
Did you know, Nina, that 99.99% of all Great Lakes beer remains here in Ontario?
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And our newest sponsor, Census Design and Build,
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and turnkey construction services across the GTA.
I'm Mike from torontomike.com,
and joining me this week is voice actress and puppeteer Nina Keough.
Welcome, Nina.
Thank you.
I'm not going to ask you to do this entire interview in rhyme.
I considered having you do it in rhyme, but I thought that's disrespectful to Nina.
And it's going to be hard, right?
Well, sometimes I fall into it.
Have you ever received that request, though?
People are talking to you like, can you rhyme?
Yes, I do get that.
I get people asking me, can you do Muffy's voice?
Well, if I do Muffy's voice, then I always feel I have to do it in rhyme.
Stay in character.
Of course, you've got to be true.
So thank you so much.
Of course, you've done many great things.
We're going to hear some awesome clips.
But you are the voice of Muffy Mouse. Like, did she have a last name? Muffy
Mouse?
How convenient. Are all mice, I have a question for you. Are all mice, do they all have the
same last name?
Yes, because her cousin Mort was also named Mort Mouse.
Oh, well, that's, they're related, of course.
They are related.
So Muffy from, of course, today's special.
Yes.
And people of a certain age,
this is like one of the pillars of their childhood,
today's special.
Like when people find out you're the voice of Muffy,
do you watch like, I don't know,
like a 40-year-old just light up like a Christmas tree?
I watch a 40-year-old become a six-year-old
or a seven-year-old.
Yeah, absolutely.
They freak.
Yeah, I bet.
I bet.
So there's a whole bunch of today's special talk and clips coming soon.
But your neighborhood, I find Toronto is like a city of neighborhoods.
It's just a bunch of neighborhoods collectively.
By the way, we should point out there's somebody else in the room.
Just in case people are wondering who's in the room.
Who else is in the room with us?
It's Teodora Luisa, who is
my dog. We call her Teddy.
And what
kind of dog is Teddy? She's Havanese
from Havana, Cuba.
So you got these and a bunch of cigars.
Is that what you got from Cuba?
Well, this is, I think I'm trying to remember.
Okay, Splash and Boots
are children's entertainers
and Boots brought her dog.
So it seems like only people who voice
like children's programming want to bring their dogs.
Oh no.
So I don't think Fred Penner brought his dog.
I'm trying to remember.
So you're from, you live in the Danforth area of the city?
I do, Danforth and Bravue, yes.
How is the Danny doing?
How are they doing?
Well, there's sort of a, it's a sad kind of place right now. There's no doubt about it. And today, as we are broadcasting or recording this, all the owners of the businesses are going to come
out and stand on the Danforth and there will be a couple of minutes of silence.
And it's very moving.
I was there the other night.
I went to a vigil and visited the sites
where these terrible things happen
and it was pretty overwhelming.
I hope the city just comes out to the Danforth
and supports it like never before.
When is the Taste of the Danforth?
That's coming up,
right?
Soon.
I think it is soon.
I'm not sure,
quite frankly.
You don't represent the,
uh,
BIA,
the Danforth.
No,
not yet.
Not yet.
But,
uh,
so welcome from the,
from the Danforth.
I mean,
I got a lot of friends who live in that neighborhood.
Uh,
Troy from Great Lakes,
uh,
my buddy,
uh,
Bob,
Bingo Bob.
A lot of my friends live in the Danforth area
I mean, it's so sad what happened
but I don't think that kind of thing
it's not the kind of thing that picks on a certain neighborhood
it's sort of a part of a big city
I want to say, it's sort of like
part of the fabric of a big city
It seemed to be random
so, you know, we were
just in the
wrong place at the wrong time.
It could have been any neighborhood in Toronto.
Yes, I think so.
Can I ask
who Howard the Turtle
was in Razzle Dazzle?
What is Razzle Dazzle?
Well, Razzle Dazzle was a daily series
on CBC
back in the 60s for about six years.
And it started out live.
And it had Michelle Finney and Alan Hamill and Howard the Turtle, who was played by my dad.
Crazy.
John Keogh.
John Keogh.
So I got this fun fact about you, about your dad being Howard the Turtle and Razzle Dazzle.
And I was like, I got to find out what Razzle Dazzle is.
And Teddy, I got a third microphone.
Let Teddy know.
I could open this up and I don't mind Teddy chiming in
whenever Teddy needs to chime in.
So this was always like in your bloodlines, right?
Yeah, I'm third generation, actually.
So my grandparents, my dad's parents parents were puppeteers and puppet builders. And my grandfather was actually the very first member of the Puppeteers of America back in the 30s. And they built very large marionettes and they did big shows at Massey Hall on stage. And it might be with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra.
And so, yeah, it's definitely in my blood.
I could not escape it.
Do you have any children?
I have one son, yes.
That's all it takes, one.
Is he a puppeteer?
I was hoping he would be.
He definitely has the skills.
He has the humor, the voice, the voices.
And he's a very good puppeteer, but it
was not something he wanted to pursue. He did a commercial when he was little, where I operated
his little hand coming out of a box of Cracker Jack or something. So that was it. And that was
it. He had his taste of it. And he said, this is not for me. No, and I didn't want to do it either. When I was young, I didn't want to have anything to do with whatever my parents were doing.
Did they gently guide you in this direction or you just saw it and at some point you realized you'd like to try to make a living at this?
Well, from the moment I was born, I was surrounded by puppets because they were display artists for Eaton's and that sort of
thing. And then they got into the more animated stuff and into the puppets. And when I was,
they were doing a show called The Friendly Giant. Oh my God. And so when I was 11,
they needed another puppeteer. They were doing a special. My dad would write a special every once in a while, a half hour special for Friendly.
And so I came in and I was the extra puppeteer.
And then about when I was 11 and about seven years later, I became a permanent puppeteer on Friendly until it ended.
Let me just say that that was my jam. So I was a little bit,
I was a little bit too old for today's special. How old are you? 44. Okay. Like I remember it
because I watched a lot of TV Ontario and I definitely remember it and I remember it fondly,
but I felt, but the Friendly Giant, that was my jam. Yeah. And Mr. Dress Up. Mr. Dress Up for
sure. So without further ado, since we've now said the magic words, Friendly Giant and Mr. Dress-Up. Mr. Dress-Up for sure. So without further ado, since we've now said the magic words,
Friendly Giant and Mr. Dress-Up,
I want to give you some gifts for coming all this way from the Danforth.
Okay.
Great Lakes Brewery, local craft brewery.
Everybody who listens to the show knows that that's where we all collected last Thursday.
We're going to do that again on September 12th.
They've been sponsors for years now.
They want you to have the six-pack in front of you.
Oh.
So you're here on this unnamed street in southern Etobicoke.
Yeah, nice.
And a few blocks away, you have a friend, right?
Yes.
And you're going there for dinner.
Yes.
Oh, this is so perfect.
I didn't want to ruin the surprise.
Oh, that's very nice.
I thought we were just going to sit here
and drink this now
well you're welcome to I'll just get more
I think Muffy Hammered might be
Muffy Hammered rhyming
that's when she stops rhyming
just so you know
I think people would pay to hear that to be honest
which is patreon.com
slash Toronto Mike
but that six pack is yours courtesy of Great Lakes Beer
but you're going to need,
if any of it makes it home to the Danforth,
it might all get spent in Southern Etobicoke.
But there's a pint glass in front of you.
Oh, yes.
That is courtesy of Brian Gerstein,
who is a real estate broker at PSR Brokerage.
And his website is propertyinthesix.com.
That is your official propertyinthesix.com pint glass.
Thank you.
And beer tastes better in a pint glass.
Absolutely, it does.
Yes.
And go ahead, sorry.
That's very nice.
And Brian has a question for you.
And the reason I wanted to jump into this
is because you mentioned The Friendly Giant,
which I loved, and Mr. Dress Up.
The Tickle Trunk, I mean, Casey and finnegan those two shows i think uh they were such you know and
there's another one polka dot door which we'll get to but you might know a thing or two about
that program as well so uh let's hear from brian Hi, Nina. Brian Gerstein here, sales representative with PSR Brokerage and proud sponsor of Toronto
Mic'd. For any of your real estate needs, be it buying and or selling or investing,
give me a call at 416-873-0292 to discuss. Nina. I grew up with both the friendly giant and Mr.
Dress up.
So it is indeed a thrill for me to ask you a question about those shows.
Their direction had a gentle pace kids.
Attention spans back then were able to thrive in that environment.
If these shows were introduced today,
how do you think kids would respond?
Oh, wow. Yeah, that's, that's a great question. It is a great question. introduced today, how do you think kids would respond?
Oh, wow. Yeah. That's a great question.
It is a great question. Because at some point, children,
their attention spans became two nanoseconds. I think that's now the current.
So could a show like, and those are my shows,
Friendly Giant, and I'm repeating Brian's question, except to say that they were,
they're not like today's shows,
which are frenetic.
Yes, yeah.
And that's the way I feel.
A few years ago, I was interviewed on TVO,
Steve Paikin's show,
and I was asked that question,
do you think these shows would fly now in light of the fact that everything is such, you know, nanosecond kind of thing. And I
said, I really felt that probably they would now, especially a 15 minute show like Friendly was
actually 13 minutes and 28 seconds or something. And I think that children love the pace of that
it's it slows everything down. And unless kids are just already addicted to an iPad,
which you see a lot of, I think they would love to just sit in front of the TV and watch Bob Homme
tell one of his lovely stories or go to the music room, which is where I was involved with the
little cats and raccoons that played musical instruments. And children were introduced to different kinds of music,
like jazz and classical piano.
Yeah, there's a lot of clarinet, I think,
and flute stuff going on in the Valley Giant.
There were vibes.
I worked with every top musician in the country
because they would come into the studio and pre-record the music.
And my favorite days were the jazz days
and Peter Appleyard and Haygood Hardy
and a lot of Mo Kaufman.
I mean, just a lot of big names would come in.
Mo Kaufman did Curried Soul,
which is the theme song for As It Happens on CBC Radio.
Do you know when I...
That opening theme, the Toronto Mike theme,
which is an original composition by Ill Vibe, a local
rapper producer, but when I met him and said,
hey, I'm going to start a podcast and I want
you to do my theme song, I told
him I want it to be like Curried
Soul, but a little more modern.
That was how I described it. I wanted the As It Happens
theme song. I like your theme.
I hadn't heard it before. See, it's as good as As It Happens.
It's very nice. You haven't heard it before?
No, I haven't. You have
359 episodes to catch up on.
I listened to a couple of your
interviews, but I don't think I heard the
intro music. Well, I'll forgive you.
So you worked on
The Friendly Giant,
which is amazing. I loved it when he put out
the chairs and I'd be at the TV
waiting for him to put out a chair for me.
And I think that's very comforting. I mean, when I meet people and they find out that I the chairs and I kept maybe at the TV waiting for him to put out a chair for me like yeah and and
I think that's very comforting I mean when I meet people and they they find out that I that I did
the show it's that same thing people just kind of calm down and go into this childlike state and
talk about how the chairs were really important the way he he was included everybody and he was so gentle and and so on and uh the
same with uh with ernie coombs who played mr dress and bob and ernie were was ernie american
or canadian they were both american and originally and then they both uh got their citizenship so
tell me tell me everything you can about uh working with ernie coombs on Mr. Dress Up. And tell us what you did on that show.
Well, I knew Ernie already
because he was always doing his show in Studio 1
and we were in Studio 2 doing Friendly.
So we all knew each other.
And Judith, who was working Casey and Finnegan,
she was retiring.
And so the puppets were not going to be on the show anymore
because nobody else was going to operate them.
And so they wanted to have more characters.
So they asked me to build a character
who would come in and overlap with Casey and Finnegan.
And so that's what we did.
And then Casey and Finnegan gradually left,
and I became sort of the constant.
And then they introduced more characters, more puppet characters as well.
So there were quite a few.
There were about four or five different characters ultimately.
And then you get guys like Brian's age.
He's a little older than me, and I bet you he's like,
you mean at some point Casey and Finnegan leave the show?
Right, I know.
I know.
I said, I didn't kill them, honestly.
I didn't kill them.
I can't imagine.
Casey and Finnegan.
Holy smokes.
Yeah.
So they live out on the west coast of Canada.
And they're enjoying that, apparently.
Oh, is that where they went?
Yes.
What show was I watching?
Oh, yeah.
Mike.
So I have two sets of kids.
I mean, the four kids.
But there's like teenagers and there's little, little ones.
So I'm kind of familiar with all this stuff.
I remember my oldest son, who's 16 now, he was the biggest fan of Blue's Clues.
Oh, yes.
Blue's Clues.
And the original guy in Blue's Clues, I guess he wanted to leave the program and do something else.
So I remember the whole story arc was that he was going to college.
That was it. Like Steve, I think story arc was that he was going to college. That was it.
Like Steve, I think his name was. Steve is going to college. And I still remember watching Elizabeth,
oh, Steve's cousin's going to come now. And Steve's going to go, like explaining to the kids,
why has a guy changed? This is what we do, you know, because we have to wean our audience and
there's a transition. Right. So Casey and Finnegan went to the West Coast.
Yeah. Is that what they did? went to the West Coast. Yes.
Is that what they did?
I think the explanation was they'd gone off to school,
so now they can't hang out with Mr. D, you know,
or that's another show, Mr. Dress-Up.
That's right.
There's only one Mr. D to us. Yes, absolutely.
And I think the show that takes over for Mr. Dress-Up,
I think, is Fred Penner's Place.
And I just remember Fred telling me that. I think that was the next
one in the CBC...
Well, I remember. I mean, I certainly knew
Fred, and I saw him not
that long ago.
And, yeah, so
I can't remember when his show
was on. Was it...
Mid to late 80s, I think.
Mid to late 80s. Okay, well,
was it on at the same time as us? I think maybe it was.
I don't think he shaved since then either.
Yes.
Did he have the pork pie hat on when you saw him?
Is that stapled to his head?
No, I don't think he had that on when I saw him last year.
Oh, that's funny.
Yeah.
Speaking of West Coast, Raffy, Raffy's gone all political.
I don't know.
And that's just great and all,
but if you follow him on Twitter,
he's awfully political.
I haven't followed him,
but I did hear something to that effect.
The word's got out.
Let me please talk about some of my other friends here.
Census Design and Build.
So if your home in the Danforth
needs some work or some additions
and some renovations,
if you're not going to sell it,
so here's the deal, Nina.
If you're going to sell that lovely home
in the Danforth,
you contact Brian, okay?
He gave you the pint glass.
But if you're going to fix it up,
you contact Census Design and Build.
They provide architectural design,
interior design,
and turnkey construction services
across the GTA. To learn more about the possibilities for your home, call them at 416-931-1422 and tell them Mike sent you,
or visit their website at censusdesignbuild.ca today and schedule your zoning and cost project feasibility study.
That's what you do. You fix it up. So if you're not going to sell, sell with Brian,
fix it up with Census Design and Build. And just before we dive in, I can't wait. Like,
I can't wait to play these clips. This is like the most fun out of the 360 episodes. It doesn't get
any more fun than this one i'd say
and nina if i accidentally call you muffy during this episode please do not be upset with me no
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Nina, do you mind if I take you back to the wonderful decade that was the 1970s?
Oh, my goodness.
Do you remember the 70s?
Yes, I do.
Nina, if you remember the 70s, you weren't there. You weren't there.
I thought that was about the 60s.
I had to change it.
I had to change it. I had to change it.
You know, when I'm watching like TVs and movies,
I always prefer that it takes place in the 70s.
Like I like how it looks on film.
Even when it's filmed now and they're just faking it.
They do such a good job in post now.
Like they can really like make it 1970s. Like I like it when my movies and films take place in the 70s.
I'm just throwing that out there.
And I barely, I do remember the 70s,
but only like the tip of the end of the 70s.
Yeah, yeah, it was very cool.
So the early days of TV Ontario.
Let me play a song for everybody.
And let's dive right in.
The polka dot door, the polka dot door.
Let's peep through the polka dot door.
Songs and stories and so much more through the polka dot door this is the time we always say get ready get set for imagination day
we'll tell some tales we'll pretend and play so come in the polka dot way nina feel free to sing along.
Are you kidding me?
In fact, this one flies in nice.
Just a little bit more.
This is the episode I want to talk about the very early days.
Hi.
We're glad you came through the polka dot door today.
Because today is Imagination Day.
And this is the day when we make up stories and do all kinds of special different things.
Well, for instance, today,
I'm going to pretend that I'm the best tapper in the whole world.
That's a little taste of a show I watched daily on TV Ontario.
And please tell us all,
what was your role on Polka Dot Door?
Well, I was the very first host.
So we're talking, I think it was 71.
It was.
70 or 71.
70, yeah.
And I had already done some series at TVO as a puppeteer.
So like read along and read all about it.
Oh, that was before 1970?
No.
Because Polka Dot Door, before those, I believe.
But who am I to tell you, Nina?
No, no, you're right.
You're right.
I was trying to remember how I got to TVO,
but now I remember.
I was hosting a series for CBC at the time,
and then I was asked to audition for this new show that was coming up based on a British show.
And so I went in.
They said, do you play a musical instrument?
I said, I play the recorder.
So I played the recorder.
And anyway, so I got it.
recorder and uh and anyway so i got it and my the first year i was with gordon thompson who went on to be an actor on dynasty and and so he was the first male host yes is that the voice i just heard
yes yes okay yeah and in those days um the one host would say well'm going to go away for a while and do something. And then would don the, the poker ruse costume and come back.
And the other host would say, oh, oh,
I'm so sorry that my co-host isn't here to see you.
So there never were the two hosts there at the same time. Yeah.
And as, and as of course, uh, cause I was watching in not,
I wasn't there in 70. Uh, it was not, I didn't live yet. And as, and as of course, uh, cause I was watching in not, I wasn't there in 70. Uh, it was
not, I didn't live yet. That was, this was not my fault. Okay. I wasn't born yet. It's okay then.
But late seventies, I'm watching polka dot door, like I said, every day. And yes, uh, at some point
you gain the, uh, wisdom, the intelligence, and you realize the guy and the polka, they're never
together at the same time. Did kids figure that out time did you hear that out i figured it out i
figured it out at some point but i'm like i was an extremely bright child you know not your average
i was a gifted child i figured it out and i always thought that was really like smart like uh because
because some kids will just think oh he missed him again and he always had that line oh i missed him
again yeah but did people really think did kids really think that the other host was inside
that costume? I thought, yes, I
thought. So am I the only one who thought that?
You are very smart. I thought the male host
went away
and went in the costume
and came out as Pokeroo
and that they were just pretending.
It was only the male host later on
I heard, but certainly in the first, I did
the first two seasons.
Right.
And I always got to,
oh, what a pleasure that was,
to wear the Pokeroo costume.
So you were actually in the Pokeroo costume.
Yes, and I'd come back and I'd go,
Pokeroo, Pokeroo.
You know, that was it, right?
Whew.
That's all it said.
There was gender equality at the beginning before it became so misogynist, right? Whew. That's all it said. There was gender equality at the beginning
before it became so misogynist, polka dot door.
So I have so many things I could do an hour with you
and polka dot door.
I know we don't have the kind of time you have drinking to do.
But the original polka root costume you would go into,
that wasn't the same one that I would remember
from the late 70s, early 80s.
It was a different costume, right?
I would imagine they would have had
a couple or maybe three
that would be built over the years.
Well, I heard, okay, so we have a mutual friend.
Let's give him a shout out. Ed Conroy.
Yes, hi, Ed.
Mr. Retro Ontario, who was great help
when I was sourcing out clips for this show.
Ed's the best. He tells me
the first, the early Polka Roo costume,
his words,
really scary, he says.
Oh, really?
I'm guessing it was radically different
from that cute one I remember.
I don't remember it as being different, though.
Ed, we need photo evidence of this.
Maybe when you were little, Ed,
it was scary, but...
I'm trying to do Ed's age.
I don't even,
Ed I don't think was around
in the early 70s,
but if Ed,
if you could provide me with some images,
I can see for myself.
Yeah, I don't remember it as being different.
Isn't that funny?
Yeah.
And how long were you on Polka Dot Door for?
I did the first two seasons,
and I was signed up for the third.
And they decided that they wanted to use multiple hosts.
And so they went on to hire many different people over the years.
And a lot of those people continue to work and, you know, do really well in the business.
Well, one of them I saw on ER.
Yes.
Right?
Please remind me.
What is her name?
Is that Tanya?
No, actually.
I think Tanya went to General Hospital, right?
Oh.
God, I wish I could Google it quickly.
But the actress in the early years, I watched ER.
And she, yes, what was her name?
Now, Nina's trying to come up with it.
This is a...
I know who it is because she's a cousin of a friend of mine.
But you're...
Here, you keep talking.
And I'll do a quick Google search.
And of course, Dennis, who I'm trying to remember last names now.
Of course, I can't because I didn't really do any homework before I came here.
That's okay.
Neither did I, apparently.
And my friend Rex Hagen was also one of the hosts.
He's my best friend.
Oh, yeah, okay.
Oh, I didn't know.
I'm still trying to come up with this name.
That's terrible, but terrible.
But please, remind me,
what was the name of the gentleman
that you hosted with those first years?
You said he went on to have a soap opera career?
Yes, that was Gordon Thompson.
And he ended up going out to LA
and he was on a show called Dynasty.
Jeannie Boulay is the name of the character, I believe.
So I'm now going to click in and find out who she was.
Gloria Rubin.
That's who it is.
Gloria Rubin.
Yes.
Come on, Mike.
You should have pulled that name out.
Yeah.
Gloria Rubin. Yes. Come on, Mike. You should have pulled that name out. Yeah. Gloria Rubin definitely went on to.
And yeah, so many of them are, you know, wonderful, talented people for sure.
It's again, I mentioned those first two shows.
I mentioned Friendly Giant and I mentioned, of course, Mr. Dress Up.
But Polka Dot Doors right there, there too that might be the big three if i had to
do my mount rushmore of uh then i'd have to put sesame street as the fourth one but those four i
guess are my on my mount rushmore i did some sesame park as well oh yeah but uh we're going
in chronological order by decade this is uh so we're gonna get to that for sure for sure here's
a show i want to ask you about it's a a CBC show and it had Gilda Radner
and Dan Aykroyd
and John Candy.
And I'm going to play, this clip was,
let me see if I load it up.
I don't even think there's words,
but let's play the theme.
Ed shared this with me.
It's really a visual thing.
Because, you know, Dan Aykroyd's
in this thing.
So this is the theme for a show a CBC
kids show called Coming Up
Rosie oh well I thought
you were going to say the original name of it
oh okay it's a
spin off of a show called Dr. Zonk
and the Zonkins that's right
and I created the
Zonkins
and yes Gilda
was there
and Danny and John Candy.
Oh, it was an incredible,
it was an incredible time
to work with those people.
And I could certainly tell you
stuff about them.
And you will right now.
I need to know.
Dan Aykroyd once held the door open for me at a restaurant
on Avenue Road.
I can't remember the name of the restaurant anymore,
but he opened the door for me once, and I was
like, Dan Aykroyd just opened the door for me.
That might brush with fame right there. Yeah, they're human.
Well, until now.
Until Muffy Mouse came over. That was my biggest
thing. So coming up,
Rosie, those are big names.
I mean, Ackroyd, Candy, Radner.
It's amazing that all these people,
and you created Zunkins,
and I don't think people talk enough
about Dr. Zonk and the Zunkins,
but coming up, Rosie.
No, I wonder why.
We got to bring it back.
I think we got to bring it back.
Okay, great.
Here's another,
you mentioned the show already, but I think we're in chronologic order, but here great. Here's another. You mentioned the show already,
but I think we're in chronologic order.
But here's another theme song of a show on TVO I used to watch. I love that.
I love that theme.
And who composed that theme?
Do you know?
I'm putting you on the spot there.
That's a tough one.
Gee, I might be wrong if I say Eric do you know? I'm putting you on the spot there. That's a tough one, eh? Gee, I might be
wrong if I say Eric Robertson,
but I'm not sure.
And that show, of course, was called?
Read Along. Read Along.
And tell me about what you can about working
on that show.
Well, I, there was,
I was one of the
very few puppet builders
at the time. This was in the 70s. And a colleague of mine named Noreen Young, who lived in Ottawa, she was also somebody else who built and she was building for things she was doing in Ottawa. And then they got her down to build puppets for read along.
long. And so I knew her and because our puppeteering community was very, very tiny, especially for television. And puppeteering for television is very different than puppeteering for stage.
And so I was I came in on that. And, and I did that, that show. And then there were a couple of other shows as well that were puppet oriented um so and and
because we were a small community i just worked solidly i would go from one series to another and
with the polka dot door i was overlapping that with with my show drop in so um anyway yeah it so anyway it was a much smaller community
then
did Bob Dermer work on
Read Along? Yes
is that where you met Bob?
that is where I met Bob and I just
spent the last three days at a cottage with him
and some other friends
we have to tell because people might not know
the name Bob Dermer
what voice did he do that
people listening to this program
might know very well?
Okay, so they would know him.
TXL!
And he was played
Sam Crenshaw on today's
special. Sam Crenshaw
on today's special. The Night Watchman?
The Night Watchman. Yeah, the Night Watchman.
Exactly.
By the way, in the opening credits to today's special,
Sam Crenshaw is playing solitaire on some kind of a computer.
Yes, that's TXL.
Grounds for Dismissal.
That's the TXL, right?
That's Grounds for Dismissal.
On company time, he's playing solitaire.
Somebody should report that to HR.
Nowadays, security guards are just looking at their iPhones.
Oh, yeah, now they're playing Candy Crush or something like that.
Candy Crush, yeah.
So you spent the last three days.
This is breaking news.
You spent the last three days at...
So Sam Crenshaw, if I may call Bob that,
he has a cottage and you were there for three days?
We were at a friend's cottage
and I haven't seen him for a long time.
He's the father of a two-and-a-half-year-old kid.
Sam Crenshaw has a two-and-a-half-year-old? Yes. I have a two-and-a-half-year-old kid. Sam Crenshaw has a two-and-a-half-year-old.
Yes.
I have a two-and-a-half-year-old, but Sam Crenshaw is twice my age.
Is that correct?
Almost.
Good for you.
He's 70, yeah.
That's good for Bob.
Yeah.
Keeps you young.
Keeps you young.
He's a very interesting guy, for sure.
Ed Conroy wants me to ask you about how it was.
And this is a name I have to apologize.
I'm not familiar with the name,
but he tells me this person is a genius.
And I trust Ed with these things.
He knows his geniuses.
He once told me I was a genius.
So I trust him.
Ken Sobel.
Yes.
Ken Sobel was at TVO.
I think that's where I met him.
And I think he was a writer.
Is he a genius?
Is Ed correct?
Or is he overrating? I'm sure Ken. Ken's a writer. Is he a genius? Is Ed correct, or is he overrating?
I'm sure Ken was a genius.
There's a commercial I'm going to play now.
Let's play the commercial, and then we'll talk about this.
Hello, Ontario, and all the ships at sea, let's go to air.
And cash for life gives a chance indeed to be a millionaire.
Well, boys, pretty good show so far.
And exciting.
One of these tickets is worth at least a million bucks,
because I'm going to win $50,000 a year for life.
You and who, Sawishu?
Well, fellas, his $2 ticket could win him a million, easily as you and me.
Hey, turn it up.
It looks like draw time.
Get your tickets ready. You could win a million. Hey, turn it up. It looks like draw time. Get your tickets ready.
You could win a million.
Oh, my goodness.
Okay, so that last voice is Gord Martineau.
Yeah, the one before that was Bob Dermer.
And the one before that, yes,
I did sound like Sam Crenshaw.
Yeah.
But this is a commercial for Cash for Life Lottery.
Yes.
And you're in that ad?
You're a puppeteer?
I built the puppet.
You built the puppet. I built the puppet, yeah. Did you i built the puppeteer you built the puppet i built the puppet
yeah did you also do the puppeteering oh yes okay so but your voice is not in that i didn't hear if
it was a sausage fest that ad there's no that was no no and the the kind of puppets that i
very often build are two-person puppets so one person would do the head uh and the lip sync and
do the left arm of the puppet and then the second
puppeteer would come in and do the right arm because you're talking about a life-size puppet
character so i i built a lot of those for commercials yeah okay cool cash for life and i
watched that commercial uh because i ripped it to audio but i watched it and uh oh yeah we need more
i realized like so of course we're all familiar with the Henson puppets, okay? Yeah. Jim Henson, a bunch of Muppets and Sesame Street and Fraggle Rock and this and that.
But we need more puppets going on.
We need more puppets, right?
It seems like puppets had its big day and now there's less puppets out there.
Is animation stealing the...
Well, I can tell you that...
Please tell me.
Animation at one point did become very popular in the commercial business
because it meant, you know, you can control it, you can control where the characters go,
and you don't have to pay residuals to performers except the voice person. And so a lot of puppet
work really, it just, you know, the whole thing just kind of dissipated because of
the animation thing. But I find that I'm seeing puppets here and there. I can tell you at one
point, Jeff Hislop from today's special and I, after our show was done, we wanted to do a series
that was more adult. And we would use a combination of puppets and people.
We went to Eugene Levy, who I knew,
and thinking he would be perfect.
He said he could not at that time,
he couldn't wrap his head around puppets and people
interacting and it being a viable kind of a thing for an audience.
And sitting on his shelf, by the way,
kind of a thing for an audience.
And sitting on his shelf, by the way,
was what was the movie he wrote about The Mermaid?
Oh, Splash?
Splash.
And we had already seen Splash.
There was Splash 2, the scripts,
right on the shelf next to my head. Which didn't have Tom Hanks in it, as I remember.
So as wonderful as Eugene is, I mean, he just, at that time, he just couldn't see it.
And I understand, you know.
But then, you know, a lot of that stuff happened.
And I think there is something on now with puppets.
And remember Alf?
Of course.
Gordon Shumway.
I thought that worked.
You know.
I thought it did too.
But Alf had to be an alien, right?
From Melmac, I believe.
Yes, from Melmac.
He ate cats, so the dog is safe.
That's right, from Melmac.
And Jeff and I wanted to have various characters.
Some were human and some were puppets,
but you couldn't tell the difference
because they were all kind of strange-looking characters.
Which is like, that's the Muppet Show, right?
The Muppet Show was humans and Muppets coexisting.
It was Sesame Street.
And that was, you know, that was family oriented
with the humor being really quite adult.
And, you know, the kids, if the kids got it, they got it.
But very often they didn't.
The parents did.
And that's why it was such a successful show, I think,
because it appealed to the whole family.
But it sounds like you're seeing,
you said you're seeing puppets here and there now.
So maybe it's making,
maybe puppets are making a little comeback here,
a little bit maybe,
in the heels of maybe, I don't know,
Muppet Show, Muppet Movie reboots and things.
I don't know.
I'm wondering, you know.
And anyway.
Okay.
We'll see.
Here's a, I dug this up.
So Ed Conrad gets no credit for this.
But this was, okay. So of course, I dug this up, so Ed Conrad gets no credit for this, but this was, okay, so
of course, TV Ontario would have these, like, sponsor, pledge drives, I guess, is that what
you call them?
Pledge drives?
Yes.
Can I call them that?
Here.
Absolutely.
Here's a short clip.
Okay.
Dr. Poisson.
Hello, I'm Nina Keogh, and I'm the voice and the puppeteer behind Muffy the Mouse on today's
special, and I'm also the creator of Norbert, Zazie, and Leon
on the Magic Library, which is one of our
daytime shows. Welcome to
TVO's public membership campaign.
That's what they're called.
Public membership campaign.
Oh, it's so weird to hear that.
You sound the same.
So now we're leaving the 70s,
if you don't mind. Let's come to the 1980s.
So put on your, what did you wear
the bright neon colored
socks, everything was neon
you remember this period, everything was like bright neon
orange and neon green, we really liked our
neon there in the
flash dance stuff going on, okay so we're in the 80s
and this is the decade that brings
us today's special
now where I'm going to play, let's start with
the theme and then we'll you know we have a million questions on today's special. Now, I'm going to play, let's start with the theme
and then we'll, you know,
we have a million questions on today's special.
I hope you're okay with that.
Imagine you told me before I started recording,
you said, I'm happy to talk about anything
except today's special.
I would have had to kick you and the dog out of here
and say, you're not getting the beer or the pint glass.
Nina, get out of here.
But here's the theme that people know and love.
Well, it looks like everything's all packed and ready to go.
I'll be on my way soon.
Oh, I wonder how my two little elves are doing.
It's a Christmas special, apparently.
Every Christmas, I let them go and see whoever they want.
I hope they're not getting into any mischief.
And I hope they're having a very merry Christmas.
Today's special, it's forever new one.
Today's special, come join in the fun.
With magic everywhere, a world for us to share.
And friendly faces hoping that you will want to meet us there.
For today's special, it's about to appear.
It's about to appear.
Today's special.
Shout it loud and clear. Today's special Shout it loud and clear
Today's special
Today's special is Christmas, part two.
Oh, that's what this mouse likes to see.
Presents right beside the trees.
Oh, I can hardly wait till tomorrow.
Yeah, neither can I.
Muffy had a very cute laugh.
Okay, that was great.
I'm feeling a little teary.
Don't do it.
There's more to come.
Are you kidding me?
My goal is to make you
blubber.
I want you blubbering
by the end of this episode.
So where do I begin?
How about this?
Does today's special
have an origin story?
Like, where did the idea
for this show come from?
How did you get involved?
Tell me everything
oh my gosh uh i'm well um clive clive vanderberg was our producer director and
i imagine he was involved in the creating of the you know the concept. And I just remember, because I was known to TVO,
and they asked me to come in and just show them what Muffy might look like.
They called her Murphy, actually.
That was her name originally, and then they changed it.
Even when we did the pilot, and her name was Murphy.
I had to go back in, or other people had to go back in and redo the name.
Interesting.
Originally, the mouse was straight from Dublin.
Murphy.
An Irish mouse.
Murphy, that's right.
By the way, that was a good move to change it.
I can't imagine Muffy Mouse as any other name.
it was a good move to change it. I can't imagine Muffy Mouse as any other name. Well, you can't now. But I did like Murphy because I thought it had a very kind of, well, what we used to call a
unisex name, you know, like it could have been male or female, sort of gender neutral, whatever.
Sure. But anyway, they changed it to Muffy, which I thought was cutesy-wootsy. But then, you know,
you get used to it, whatever it is, and you love it. So, yeah. So I just remember, I don't even think I auditioned.
It was like, there's this show, you know, are you available?
And I said, yeah, okay.
Yeah, sounds great.
So we went in the first day.
We had a table read in a church basement near TVO at Young and Egg.
And it was the first day meeting the other cast members.
Okay, tell us the other cast members.
So Noreen Virgin played Jodi,
and Jeff Hislop played Jeff,
and Bob Dermer was Sam.
And Noreen Virgin, we would know her as a newsreader now.
She did a bunch of...
She did Eye on Toronto.
I think she hosted that for a while.
And then she worked as a newsreader.
Newsworld, maybe?
Newsworld International,? Newsworld International.
Right.
Yeah. And then I'm not sure now. I think she got very politically involved in where she lives now.
So it was really a wonderful day to sit around and meet each other, do a bit of a table read of the pilot, and call me Murphy.
Murphy Mouse.
Yeah.
But the voice, so tell me, how did you come up with the, can you do any of it now?
Would you do any Muffy now that we're in, should I get you some water?
My voice, okay, let's see.
Is your name Mike Boone?
Do you eat with a spoon?
Yeah, we got to write everything in rhyme.
What rhymes, you're listening to Toronto Mike.
But he, Mike rides a bike.
That's true.
I don't know.
Sometimes it just comes out.
So this is a little kind of an interesting story.
I always like to tell that we were going to do the pilot.
And so I said to our director, Clive,
Clive, I think I have to tell you something.
I think I'm pregnant.
And he said, that's okay. We'll work around it. And they did. And so
I worked through my pregnancy. And even when I was this huge, huge thing, I was stuffed in a trunk
where I had to work Muffy, Mouse. And it was some pirate show we did. And they had dug a hole in the ground. And we were
down in the ground. And I don't know, it's just kind of crazy. And then I got toxemia as I was
getting towards the end of the pregnancy. And so I was going to have to go into the hospital. And
we were still shooting. So what Clive did was he put me in a sound room, he rented a hospital
bed. And I laid in the hospital bed because I had to get bed rest, and had a mic hanging over me,
and I had to read all my lines, you know, looking up at my... And then what happened was,
for those shows that I could not do, the sound was already there.
And my friend and colleague Bob Stutt came in and he did Muffy's movements in sync.
Bob played Mort Mouse.
So he was already, you know, with the show.
But it was interesting to watch the shows that Bob did playing Muffy because
his movement of Muffy was totally different than mine. So how is it different? I'm curious. Well,
you know, there's a certain way you work. There's a certain way that you move your puppet. And
Bob's was a little bit more frenetic. You know, I mean, everybody has their own walk and their own way of moving.
So it was, you know.
There's a clip I've shared recently on Twitter,
but again, it's on retroontario.com,
I think where you can find it.
But it's Muffy's riding a bike.
And she ends up on Yonge Street.
She's on a scooter.
A scooter, of course, a scooter.
Yes, it wasn't a bike.
Very, very cool.
I'm very trendy right now. I notice a lot of adults riding uh scooters right now we were actually on avenue road close
and at rush hour why i don't know and so i'm working muffie with a remote control panel
and standing nearby i figured how you did it okay yeah and so she's got one foot on the scooter and the other foot is is sort of
moving and and it looks like it's walking walking and paddling you know and it was just a rotating
kind of a leg thing um and her head was turning you know around and so these were long shots of
her coming up Avenue Road.
I don't know how there weren't more accidents
on that street
because it was kind of bizarre.
By the end of Muffy's journey,
she went the last two seconds.
She's actually on Yonge Street,
I think, the last two seconds.
But it's pouring rain in that scene.
So as I recall,
it didn't look like it was some kind of,
it wasn't an effect or something.
It just looked like it was pouring rain on Muffy.
I don't remember that.
I'm going to throw you the YouTube clip to refresh your memory.
Yeah, I think so.
And I almost think we need to step back just a moment here because, of course, I'm assuming
people listening now, I'm assuming they all know today's special, but maybe just set the
table a little bit.
Let's talk really briefly about the premise of today's special, right? So this is a Simpsons department store.
It was called Simpsons. It then became the Bay for people who, you know, whatever age group you
are in, but, um, it was Simpsons department store. And it was, so the whole, the whole premise was
that it was after the store closed at night, uh, Jodi was going to set the mannequins up. And
she was, you know, she was in charge of all the display. And Sam would go around and check all
the doors, make sure everything was closed up. And then we had our mannequin who she,
in the opening, she carries the mannequin up the escalator.
And when Muffy comes up and says the magic words,
Muffy the mouse, the mannequin comes to life.
And so during the day, the mannequin would just be like a mannequin.
But at night, this is what would happen. But I remember the hat was important, right?
Yes. When the hat came off, the mannequin froze.
Jeff froze.
Right, right, right.
By the way, how's Jeff doing?
Is he on the West Coast too?
He's on the West Coast too, yes.
I know that he was directing.
He was with the Vancouver Playhouse.
I think he was the artistic director there for a while.
Cool.
You know, so he says, I talked to him not that long ago,
and he said he just can't kick as high as he used to
when you watched him on today's special.
Okay, there's a question here and there.
This is Pete M.
Pete M is a listener of Toronto Mic.
Pete M says, Jeff is an accomplished dancer.
Did he walk normally on set,
or did he shake and move everywhere he went?
That's the question from Pete M.
No, but he had incredible posture.
I'll bet, I'll bet.
And he knew how to, the thing about dancers,
and my parents were both professional ballet dancers,
so there was a way, there's a way that professional dancers
know how to move around other people.
They know how to get out of the way.
They know how to maneuver, and it's really quite fascinating to watch around other people. They know how to get out of the way. They know how to maneuver.
And it's really quite fascinating to watch people like that.
I just,
no grace at all for me.
I mean,
although my,
my daughter who turns 14 on Sunday,
so happy birthday,
Michelle.
Uh,
she's a competitive dancer and she does ballet and she's,
she's got what you're describing there,
like a sense of movement that I just don't,
I don't have it at all. I don't know where she got it from her mom, I guess. But, uh a sense of movement that I just don't have it at all.
I don't know where she got it from, her mom, I guess.
But the grace is what I just, the grace and the fluidity.
There is grace.
There's an elegance.
And just, you know, I just find the posture is always amazing
and the way they stand, they stand.
And I'm an artist, so I love to draw dancers.
I love that.
We'll get to art soon, of course.
Yeah, because you're not doing puppeteering anymore.
Or will you still do it
for the right...
somebody opens up the wallet and says,
I do a little stand-up here and there.
I gotcha.
Now, one more question from Pete M.
This kind of ties in nicely to what we were
talking about earlier of Noreen.
He says, more of a statement.
Noreen Virgin, Jodi.
By the way, there's somebody on Twitter
going by the handle Jodi's Jumpsuit.
Are you aware of this?
No.
Yeah, Jodi's Jumpsuit is on Twitter.
She's a good follow too.
I hope she's listening.
But more of a statement.
Noreen Virgin could have been my MPP
in Hamilton East Stony Creek in 2007.
Yep.
If it weren't for those commie pinko NDPs.
So that's a fun fact.
So that answers the question.
And I'm just going to make sure.
Don't unplug us here.
If we lose power, I'm blaming Teddy here.
Teddy the dog is underneath my feet here.
And here's another question.
Daryl Samuel says,
don't have a question,
but seeing this photo,
I put out a photo of Muffy,
Muffy Mouse.
You immediately had me flipping
into the voice of Muffy
and then immediately thinking
of the voice of Sam.
Ha, ha, ha, ha.
And again, this goes back to nostalgia
is a potent drug.
And you said you see like 40 year old peopleold people become six-year-olds again.
And that's something like you can do it with music.
Like music can do that to you.
And something like this, a television show you watch can bring you back.
It's got to be amazing wielding such power.
You have the power to make a 40-year-old a six-year-old.
That's amazing.
You know what?
So I got to tell you, just generally speaking, when people find out, and it could be they're
a cop or a guard or, you know, or somebody in power, like a border guard, when they find
out, when I come back into Canada and they find out, and I do drop this sometimes because,
and I used to have a license plate that
said puppet on it and so i'd get police not that i was stopped a lot or anything when you're
speeding you just speak in rhyme and what is that and i tell them and they go oh my god and all of
a sudden this police officer is again you know like this little seven-year-old kid and it's
really quite moving to watch because they just soften up completely.
Their body language changes.
That's the power.
Yeah.
That people go back to a time when they were happy
and they were children and things were, you know,
were good for the most part, not for all kids.
You don't have an ID.
You don't know what a mortgage is.
You don't know what a job is.
Like that really is the brief moment in your life
when your responsibilities are zilch.
Like you get your food prepared.
I mean, I got a four-year-old and a two-year-old.
They don't realize how good they have it.
You know what I mean?
Yes.
Our children are all entitled.
Here's your food now.
I know.
Oh, that's amazing. That's amazing. So that was daryl samuels and here's another one i got so many uh i got so many questions about today's special but
mike gregotsky were you this is for you nina i almost called you muffy but you're nina were you
on set during the voice or did you record it after the episode was over so i guess he wants to know
the logistics of the puppeteering and the voiceover.
Are they happening?
You're doing it, like, how is that working?
Yeah, it's live to tape.
So absolutely.
Oh, just like this podcast.
Just, yes.
Live to tape.
They're not supposed to know that.
We're supposed to be live.
But yeah, we always, almost always,
except for doing commercials.
So if they hired a voice person to do a puppet character,
they would do playback of that for me as a puppeteer
for a character I had created for the commercial.
But on shows like this, we typically would,
and we also sang live for the most part.
Every series I ever did, I had to sing on.
And if you're off key,
they make you do it,
you have to do it again
and everyone ticked off, right?
You're never off key.
No, can't be.
You're pretty well live to tape.
If there's a real awful,
awful noise that comes out,
yes, they might do a pickup
or something, yeah.
I once, so, I mean,
I'm not in the industry,
but I once watched the taping
of a Conan O'Brien late night program.
I watched it at the Winter Elgin Theatre
downtown Toronto.
I was shocked at how it was live
to tape completely.
Even they stopped for the commercials
and they stopped for the length of the commercial.
It was all as if it could have been live.
It wasn't live, but it could have been.
There was zero, oh, I flubbed that line, I, it wasn't live, but it could have been, there was zero like, Oh,
I flubbed that line.
I'm doing it again.
No,
no,
but that's the fun thing about live anyway is that,
you know,
it's especially for a show like that. I think when you're,
when you're an interview show,
no,
that's,
that's,
you don't want to,
that's why this is,
that's why I'm not,
that's why this is all,
whatever you say now,
I'm just letting you know,
if Muffy accidentally swears,
it's on the program.
You can't take that back.
So be careful. Don't ever slip in Muffy's on the program. You can't take that back. So be careful.
Don't ever slip in Muffy's voice, okay?
I can't promise anything.
The 40-year-olds who turn to six-year-olds will be...
I know.
They'll need therapy.
I know.
I just thought of Muffy going blue.
And it's like, holy smokes.
So Mike Rogotsky...
Oh, yeah.
I already did that one.
Here, let's hear the origin.
So I have a few clips from today's special.
Okay.
This is actually the Muffy origin story.
So let's listen back to the Muffy.
Our story.
Our story, right.
Okay, what's the big idea?
Busting in here, little mouse?
Sam, please, maybe she's hurt.
I hope you haven't broken any bones.
Oh, a bruise or two, I think that's all.
No bones broken in my fall.
Hey, that's a talking mouse, Jody.
That's mighty strange.
Don't you know mice aren't supposed to talk?
Well, this mouse talks all the time.
Not only that, I talk in rhyme.
Still kind of strange if you ask me.
Well, forgive me for being talkative,
but I'm looking for a place to live.
Oh, well, you're going to have to look someplace else.
After all, this is a store.
This isn't a hotel, you know.
Oh, come on, Sam.
There's plenty of places for her to live here.
Anyway, I think she's kind of cute.
And they kept her.
They let her stay there.
And they kept her.
So you're great.
You're great as Muffy,
but I got to give Bob some props.
That's Sam Crenshaw.
That's a kick-ass voice he's doing.
It is a kick-ass voice.
He's always done great voices
for all the puppet stuff he's done,
and he's also a very fine stage actor.
Okay, so Simpsons,
and anyone who remembers today's special
remembers Simpsons.
I don't know when they disappeared.
The 90s, I think, that The Simpsons disappeared maybe.
But I'm just – so, okay.
You recorded – you didn't do this at The Simpsons.
Like, you were doing this at Young and Eglinton.
Is that right?
Or, like, were you in – like, is it a set?
Okay, so we were in many different studios around the city.
many different studios around the city. And, and we, for the actual store shots,
we were in the store. So we would go into Simpsons at about nine o'clock, the store closed,
we came in with our gear and our props and costumes. And you know, the whole,
that became our studio. And then if we were doing like we did a show on, I, you know, the whole, that became our studio.
And then if we were doing, like we did a show on, I don't know what it was,
sleep or beds or something, and we were up in the bedding, the bed department,
that was fun.
I think I have some pictures of the crew all lying on the bed when we had our break and jumping on the beds and stuff.
And it was really spooky too
because all the lights go down really low at night, right?
They're not going to leave these bright lights up.
And so you'd say, okay, where's the washroom?
Because you would have to go onto another floor.
So somehow you had to go down some stairs or something
to another floor.
And it was incredibly scary and creepy
because you're not used to being
in a big department store like that,
huge department store.
And there was just something kind of really eerie about it.
And yeah.
I'm just glad Sam could have like got a bunch of mouse traps
and set them up or something.
I'm just thinking of how ugly that could have ended.
Oh, you're going back to that.
I went back, I went back to that.
And I guess this is the right time for this.
I just got a flashback memory flush of 14 years ago Sunday.
So my daughter was born 14 years ago Sunday.
And the night she was born at Women's College Hospital, and I was driving.
This is like four in the morning, okay?
She was born early in the morning.
Four in the morning.
I'm driving like south on, where am I?
I'm on Bay, okay?'m on bay street yeah and i look to my left where and the
simpsons was dressed up to be madison square garden so the simpsons the store that we're
talking about was dressed up to be madison square gardens and there were cars from the 1930s there
and people were dressed up like it was the 30s. And it turned out they were filming a scene
from Cinderella Man
that night.
That was happening that night. It was happening at
four in the morning.
It looked like I was driving
by Madison Square Gardens in the 1930s.
And that was The Simpsons.
Was that Russell Crowe?
By the way, very good movie.
Maybe I'm a little biased because I have that memory,
but I thought it was a really strong movie.
And there's a lot of scenes.
I don't know.
There's a St. Cecilia's Church near Annette and Runnymede.
That pivotal scenes happened there,
and there were scenes around there.
So you recognized a lot of these places
because they filmed it all here.
Yeah.
And I like him.
I like him as a character.
And there were no puppets.
I was disappointed in that.
They could have put some puppets in there.
There are puppets in many movies, though.
Team Police.
Team America.
World Police.
That has puppets in it.
But you didn't work on that one.
No, I didn't.
America.
Yeah.
Beep.
That was amazing.
So that's the Muffy origin story for people who needed that.
And here's a question from Chris.
So that's the Muffy origin story for people who needed that.
And here's a question from Chris.
Are you still as emotionally scarred as I am from the episode where a fire broke out in Muffy's little apartment?
Yeah.
That was something to shoot, I'll tell you. Those six-year-olds, they probably were afraid to even have a controlled fire at a campsite after that.
Don't even want barbecues.
We traumatized everybody.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's, well, first of all, when you're working in the studio and there's fire or
smoke or any kind of effect, it's, you know, they're very, very cautious.
There are, sometimes there's even a firefighter standing by, you know, with a, and they certainly
have their extinguishers and all that stuff. So
lots of care taken for that. But yeah, I think that was one show where, yeah, that that was
very dramatic. And you do feel it as the character. And, and there was another show with,
with Phil, the show called Phil, who came in, turned out to be an alcoholic,
and it was a show on bullying,
where Muffy was bullied by him.
Do you want to hear some of the Phil?
I have some.
Oh, do you?
So now we're talking about
what I would call very special episodes.
Yeah, yeah, very, yes.
There's a couple here.
That's where I'm going now.
Let's hear Muffy and alcohol,
but Muffy's not drinking the alcohol.
I just want to point that out.
Muffy couldn't drink much, right?
Like a little teaspoon of alcohol
and she'd be plastered.
Is that fair?
She'd be way very much.
If she indulged, probably.
But, you know, it was Phil
who was the photographer
who came into the store
to shoot some of the displays.
And he and Muffy would end up, she kind of saw something.
Here's Phil.
I have to ask, have you been drinking from that flask?
If I were you, Muffy, I'd mind my own business and just do like I've asked you and move that thing over.
Now, come on, move it over.
More, more.
No, stop.
You've gone too far again.
No, back.
Over.
What's the matter with you?
Well, just say which way.
That way, that way.
Back, that way.
Now you've done it.
Oh, I didn't know which way to go.
Some helper you are.
Get out of the way.
I'll do it myself.
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Muffy, look what you made me do.
Look at this mess.
You've ruined the whole shoot.
You've ruined everything.
The whole evening is wasted.
Oh, please, oh, please.
You needn't shout.
I only tried to help you out.
Well, you didn't try hard enough.
Now get out of here.
I don't want to ever see you again.
Oh, oh, this breaks my little heart.
I should have told Sam from the start.
From the start.
Broke my heart.
That was one heavy episode to do.
I'll never forget it because it seemed to affect many, many people on our production
who had experienced something.
And the pall over our studio for three days was really,
you could cut it with a knife, honestly.
And playing that character did take a toll on me.
Absolutely.
It was horrible being the victim, playing the victim,
because you do get into the character.
It doesn't matter that it's a puppet character.
You're still an actor, and you still have to get into that character. And it was just so horrible. And everybody, like there was
just silence. Like usually we're laughing all the time. The cast and crew were kibitzing and laughing
all the time. There was nothing on this set. It was just like crickets, right? And Gerard Parks,
who played a wonderful Phil, stayed in character during our
lunch and our breaks. Well, like that's method acting there. Yeah. So it was really, you couldn't
just friendly up to him over the shoot because he was, he wanted to stay in character. For today's
special, that sounds like he's going for an Oscar there. That's above and beyond, right? Well, it's interesting because, I mean,
different actors have different ways of working, but you also have to realize that we had as many
writers on our show. You know, we had five to six, seven writers on our show, like some talk shows,
you know? I mean, it doesn't matter whether you do a kid's show or an adult show
the same professionalism and the same level of uh you know expertise comes in with everybody
on the production so uh yeah you treat it as a professional gig absolutely did you consider
possibly nina i don't i don't mean to burst your bubble, but maybe he wasn't acting. Maybe he was wasted.
Maybe he was in character during lunch
because he was hammered.
I won't comment.
I have no idea, you know,
because you know he was on the Fraggle Rock.
You know, he played that lovely character.
Yeah, he was, Sprocket was the dog.
I can't remember, but I remember him as the dog.
Yeah, and then under the floor were all the...
Speaking of shows where you had the puppets
and the live action
kind of intermingling.
Yeah.
I loved Fraggle Rock.
Yeah.
And that was going on
while I was shooting
Today Special
for all those years.
A lot of my buddies
were shooting on Fraggle Rock.
So we were all working.
It was incredible.
We were working.
I remember the garbage heap.
That was a scary character
on Fraggle Rock
was the garbage pile
or whatever he was called.
Yes.
Yeah, it was a very good show.
Okay, so that episode there with the alcoholism at show.
When you have these writers, at some point,
is there a child therapist or psychologist
who kind of goes through these scripts
to make sure that it's properly presented to us vulnerable children?
Clive was really an amazing
director and um he wrote a lot of the music as well and the phil show was one that he was
really afraid to uh he was afraid to put it on the air he it was so heavy but uh
he got really good feedback from it.
And if we save one or two kids, great.
Right, it was presented in a way that will help the children
instead of making everyone afraid of when their dad has one beer
or whatever watching the hockey game.
Yeah, I think it was really well done.
And I think Clive would definitely have run this by a psychologist for sure.
Now, a bit earlier than that episode
was a PSA that would run
with a father who had one too many pops,
as we say,
had one too many
and his son asks him to help him fix his little car.
It was actually a little General Lee
from Dukes of Hazzard
and I related to this
because I was about the same age as the boy
and I had a General Lee like that
because that was my favorite show was Dukes of Hazzard and the dad to this because I was about the same age as the boy and I had a general lead like that because that was my favorite show
was Dukes of Hazzard and the dad can't
fix it because he's had one too many and then the dad
snaps at the kid and says something like
go to bed now
and to this day we're 40 years
later and
by the way if my kids are misbehaving I'll drop
that line on them but they know I'm joking
the older two but I'm still
kind of scarred
by that dad's reaction it's pretty hard on on us you know whether we're kids or adults but as kids
it's pretty pretty scary now sesame street is famous for uh sort of how it dealt with death
like it was one of the first children's shows to kind of like, Mr. Hooper dies in real life.
Yeah.
And in the show he dies
and there's that famous scene
where they're trying
to explain to Big Bird
and I could tear up
just thinking about it.
I remember, yes, yeah.
And then I think Maria
or somebody says like,
he's not coming back.
Yeah.
And Big Bird's like,
okay, well I guess
I'll see him later.
And it was like,
no, you won't see him later.
So you did something similar
on today's special.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm going to play a clip.
I call this clip Butterfly.
Yes.
Jeff was so thoughtful to get this box.
And I love the way Jodi did my name.
I'm glad you're delighted.
But me, I'm excited.
You are?
How come?
Well, Jeff and Jodi said okay when I asked them if you could stay.
You don't have to fly away.
You'll get better, and then we can play.
That would be wonderful, Muffy, but...
But what?
I'm not going to get better.
I'm dying.
You're dying? You're lying.
No. I told you I'm dying. You're dying? You're lying. No.
I told you I'm old.
And it's time for me to die.
That's all there is to it.
But I'll always remember you, Muffy.
And Jeff. And Jody.
And Sam with his silly net.
You've all been such good friends.
Oh, Hazel, no.
I don't think we can continue, Nina.
I think we have to shut this down.
That's the saddest thing I've ever heard.
Yeah, another kind of tough show to do.
Is that the most crying you've had to do on today's special?
That one, that scene?
That's a lot of tears.
Probably, yeah, probably.
Oh, yeah, and you do, I mean, you do get into it.
There's no doubt about it.
That was another one where, you know, again,
Clyde was like, oh, it's going to, you know,
because when you present something like that to children,
you're always going to get some nasty blowback.
But you know that it's really important to do that, right well it's real talk like this is reality and i mean you guys did it in a very gentle way because it's a butterfly right right
you used a butterfly and right yeah and uh they used mr hooper but uh of course mr hooper uh was
such a method actor he died for the cause he had to die in real life i'm sorry that's not mr hooper
i'm sorry you're dark if you, I'm sorry. You're dark.
If you're listening.
But back to the butterfly.
Who voiced that butterfly?
Do you remember?
I think it might have been Nikki Tilrow.
I'm not sure
who had played the mime.
So I think it might have been Nikki.
But the visual,
of course,
you can't see it
because this is a podcast,
but you see the butterfly die.
The wings come down for the last time. Yes. And I think she may have operated it. And here's something can't see it because this is a podcast but you see the the butterfly die like the wings yeah for
the last time and i think she may have operated and the here's here's something uh about the
butterfly the butterfly was made for especially for us by a very special kind of artist and
it costs a lot of money and uh was beautifully painted and. And so after the show aired, of course, you know,
you're waiting for all these people to write in,
or in those days it was writing in because we did not have the Internet.
And so we're getting all these lovely messages about,
oh, what a lovely way to let children know about death and so on.
But then the one message that came in that just kind of cracked us up
was from some
butterfly expert
who said that they'd gotten a color wrong on the
wings.
Buzz kill right there.
Kind of a buzz kill.
At least they're paying attention.
Yeah, they're paying attention.
I'd frame that letter if I got that right.
Oh, man.
I like this comment.
Anne Caster Jeff says,
wouldn't it be ironic if Muffy was an orange, silver, or purple wolf?
Now, Jeff is being very clever here
because I believe these are the words in the English language
that nothing rhymes with.
Orange, silver, or purple wolf.
I don't think those rhyme.
Oh, my God.
But, of course, Muffy was a mouse,
so lots of things rhyme with mouse.
But I thought that was a clever comment from Anne Castor Jeff.
Yes, very clever.
You got me.
I didn't write the stuff, okay?
No, no, no.
But you know what I have?
Because I get a lot of requests for pictures and the poster,
the Today's Special poster, that's all on it.
And I still get tons and tons.
I should say tons and tons, but I still get a lot.
And so I have Webster's rhyming dictionary at home
so I can write things in rhyme.
Good.
But at one point I got,
I had to write a whole bunch of these things.
I think my son's friends all wanted them.
And I'm writing,
Dear Mary,
at least you're not Larry.
You know,
and I'm starting to get so tired of going,
and I hate your guts.
And I'm not going to rhyme anymore.
Goodbye.
That's the one I want.
I hate your guts.
I put that up here beside my
public animation. One of my friends has,
one of my son's friends has that one.
That's funny. That's funny.
There's a guy named, I think it's a guy. I shouldn't say that.
It could be a gal, but it's the person on Twitter
is named The Key. That's the name of this
person. They said, loved this show
so much. Does she know
what happened to Jeff's mannequin?
So, and there's a few. We'll start with that. Do you have any idea like what happened to jeff's mannequin so and there's a few we'll start with
that do you have any idea like what happened to the mannequin of jeff or the uh muffy puppet
like where's the muffy puppet is in a museum somewhere okay so there were several of them
uh one of them was the main one that i operated all the time it was a hand and rod puppet
there was another one that was just a doll that i'd use to throw through the air. If you saw Muffy flying, there was one, a super Muffy
or whatever she was called. There was the other one that was the remote control one. And then
there was an extra one for quick costume change or whatever. So I have a Muffy. My son has a Muffy.
I have a Muffy. My son has a Muffy. And I think probably Noreen Young, who created Muffy, has one. And I'm not sure if there's one in the Museum of Civilization in, well, it's called Museum of History now, I think.
Gatineau, right?
Yes, over the bridge. People think it's Ottawa, but I believe it's Gatineau.
It's over the bridge, in Hull.
It's over the bridge. It's in Hull. Right, right. Which they now call Gatineau for right? Yes. Over the bridge. People think it's Ottawa, but I believe it's Gatineau. It's over the bridge in Hull. Over the bridge.
It's in Hull.
Right, Hull.
Which they now call Gatineau
for some reason.
Oh, do they?
They've rebranded it.
Oh, it's not Hull anymore.
When I was a kid, it was Hull,
but now it's Gatineau.
Yeah, I thought it was Hull.
Okay, yeah.
So, yeah.
So, there are a lot of,
I've got a lot of puppets in there.
How are the turtles in there?
And the kittens and cats,
raccoons from Friendly Giant
are in there too.
I think there are a lot of different characters
in there from different shows.
And I guess you don't know about Jeff's hat.
Jeff got the hat.
Jeff's got the hat.
Jeff owns the hat.
Bobby owns it.
He stole that hat, right?
No, no.
At our very, very final wrap party,
which was quite moving and wonderful,
and I've got a lot of it on video, Jeff was presented with the hat.
What did Doreen get?
I don't know.
Maybe she got her…
Her jumpsuit?
Her jumpsuit or her character shoes, her pink character shoes.
I got a Muffy and Bob got Sam.
Cool.
And the mannequin, I don't know where that is, but
a lot of these things all go into a
big props warehouse and they get reused
and so on.
Now,
she
writes, I vaguely remember an episode
with a more glamorous version of Muffy,
a mouse named Buffy,
or am I making this up?
Please tell us, did this exist this exist yeah there was a show
that I did with Jeff and I we were all dressed up in very fancy fancy glamorous outfits so I
I can't remember what it was that you know listeners might might know but I remember being
dressed up and uh and then I was dancing with
Jeff and that was a really fun show to do because Jeff had one of the he had Muffy in his arms so
for the long shots the wide shots she had her legs on and he was dancing with her in his arms and it
really looked great and then they'd cut to and this is where we had to stop and, you know, cut and start to get, you know,
and I'd get down on a puppet stool with Muffy and you'd see Muffy from, you know, her waist up and Jeff dancing with Jeff.
So I was actually operating her and looking around and talking.
And then they'd cut to wide shots with the doll Muffy.
Why can't we buy this series on DVD?
This is really quite the issue.
The cast have for decades wanted to get this put out there.
And TVO has resisted.
And part of, you know, I mean, they're not supposed to make a profit, right?
Because they're... They're a public broad? Because they're a public broadcaster.
And so, you know, there's never really been a good reason
why they wouldn't release it.
I mean, we've been going on about this well before the big internet,
you know, thing.
This show is on YouTube.
You can probably find them all.
There's no way of controlling anything like that.
And one of the issues for TVO to do this was they would have to pay step up fees to the
musicians, the writers, the performers. And it's a lot of administrative work, blah, blah, blah.
But you know, we were just thinking it would be great to release online where
maybe you subscribed or something
or they do
something with a sponsor like
Milk or, you know,
some sponsor.
Somebody came up
with a couple of suggestions about how...
TVO is the roadblock here. They're the
bottleneck here. TVO.
Come on.
What do we have to do? Write our MPP?
Is that what we do here?
Well, we were encouraging, you know, for a long time,
encouraging people, write in, write in, and
say you want it released.
Because we did have, we had video
cassettes. We had... Yeah, VHS.
I saw there's VHS, but no DVD,
right? Is that the...
No, no DVD.
And we had an album
that was then put out
on vinyl and...
Yeah, you're forcing
what you've done
and it's not you, of course.
You're the talent
who wants it out there.
Yeah.
But they forced us
to pirate it,
which is where
the Ed Conroys of the world
come in.
Yeah, that's basically...
We have no choice.
And you know,
like I say,
in this day and age,
it's very hard to control a pirating of what you know things that are going on it's just it's just
it's like whack-a-mole just out there yeah you know it pops up somewhere else now you mentioned
the you know compensates of course there's talent like yourself on these shows and then there's
these musicians who worked on these shows and a couple i understand uh you've had some big names
that worked on it uh bruceburn worked on today's special.
Yeah.
That's amazing.
Yeah, yeah, that was fun.
It was just kind of cool, you know?
And the other person who, for me, was really big
was Oscar Peterson, the jazz pianist,
Canadian, famous Canadian jazz pianist.
There's actually, really close to where we're sitting right now, there's a big
mural of Lakeshore
residents who went on to big fame.
Dave Boland and these kind of...
Oscar Peterson, his face is there
in the mural. Didn't he come from Park Credit?
Yeah, but I guess
they've taken him as
their own because he's a
Lakeshore resident.
He was, of course, of some note. Yeah, but he's a big deal.hore resident of some who was of course of some note
yeah but he's a big deal he is a very big deal if you're into jazz and you know uh we've got so
many wonderful musicians in our in our country and my thrill was actually being able to have
Muffy sing next to him he did when we brought in somebody big like that they would do we'd get them
to do a couple of shows
because while they're over there let's get them for a couple of episodes so i got to sing with
him and then at the same time i got to uh buy a grand piano for myself that he had played down
a bourbon street on queen street west get out of here so I owned... That's in your Danforth home. No,
it's in my Newfoundland home.
You have a Newfoundland home. I did, and
I had to leave my... I sold the house
and I had to leave the piano there.
Yeah. So that's a whole other
part. Did you go
to anything at the Beaches Jazz
Festival?
Did you attend any of these events?
I was going to go and it rained and a friend
of mine was singing.
Just to promote my next guest
Bill King.
Bill King. It's okay if you don't know.
I'm excusing you if you don't know the name.
I probably do. I'm better with
photographs, faces.
He's a jazz
pianist and he's one of the
organizers of the Beaches Jazz Festival there.
And yeah, so if Bill...
He's also on the radio and stuff in the city.
Yeah, I'm sure he was playing actually
with Debbie Fleming, my friend,
who's a singer, one night at the 120.
Probably, yeah, the 120.
I know that name.
Yeah.
Very exciting.
So, okay, so I won't...
I think that's enough.
I could do, for example,
I could do hours,
but we have to get you to a dinner,
so I can't go forever on today's special,
except to just make sure that you,
and it sounds like you have a good grasp
on the enduring legacy of the show.
It sounds like you appreciate that
and understand that, yeah,
if a 40-year-old finds out who you are,
you're bigger than, like, that's bigger than saying,
oh, hey, there's Tom Cruise over there,
or that's Brad Pitt.
I think Muffy's a bigger deal for some reason.
Let me tell you something.
This is just freak me out.
I was invited to, I lecture at different universities.
So every year at Ryerson, I was doing that.
I went to York University.
I'm talking to the kids who are coming out of the drama.
And so they had been told that I was coming.
And so I brought Muffy in a big green garbage bag, which, you know, we call the green room. They, as I walked into the room, they
literally screamed and yelled like I was a rock star. I couldn't believe it. It really, really
chills you, you know? Oh, for sure. sure for sure uh of course the 80s is also when
you since we're doing this by decade the 80s is also when you did your mr dress up and friendly
giant but we covered that earlier but here's a show this is a series about a punk band a punk
band of bats that moved to toronto okay and i mean one of the voices on this thing is Billy Vann, okay? Yeah. So Billy, hilarious house
of Freidenstein
and a whole lot.
Billy Vann,
he was a legend.
But let me play
something from this.
Which might be instrumental,
but this is...
It's from back? Oh, here we go. Yeah. which might be instrumental, but this is, uh,
it's from back.
Here we go.
Yeah.
86.
Yeah. 86. Yeah.
Okay, so they made a pilot episode.
CBC did this.
They made this pilot episode, Bats,
but it never went to series, I guess.
No.
It didn't get picked up.
I don't think it did.
It's so interesting
because you're the first interviewer I've been with
who's brought this up.
No one else.
I'd totally forgotten about it.
Well, you know why?
It's because I'm close friends of Ed Conroy
of Retro Ontario.
He's a walking...
They didn't do their homework like I do.
He's a walking encyclopedia.
We shot this in Noreen Young,
Noreen Young who made,
who built Sam and Muffy. We shot this in Noreen Young, who built Sam and Muffy.
We shot this in her studio near Ottawa.
And yeah, it was a lot of fun.
It was, the puppets were terrific.
And I, you know, I don't know whatever happened to it.
Why didn't they pick this up?
I'm so upset now to hear that CBC didn't pick this up.
Because I mean, a punk band of bats
that moves to Toronto
with voice talents
like yourself
and Billy Van.
Come on.
That's a no-brainer.
I don't know.
Come on, bats.
Who knows?
Who knows?
86, ahead of its time, too.
Maybe too far ahead of its time.
And the 90s,
okay, you mentioned
we talked about Sesame Street
a few times,
but there was a Canadian
Sesame Street, right?
Sesame Park?
Yes.
And you worked on that series. I worked. I was sort of a guest puppeteer there was a Canadian Sesame Street, right? Sesame Park? Yes. And you worked on that series?
I worked, I was sort of a guest puppeteer. I wasn't a regular, but they, it was really
fun, you know, just working with Henson Muppets. And the reason they called it Sesame Park
was that Canadian kids tend to play in parks, whereas they were talking about New York kids played in the street.
So they kind of just renamed it.
But that was one of many things that Jim Henson shot in Toronto that we all did.
We worked on specials like Emmett Otter's
Jug Band Christmas that we shot at CTV
and another show called Dog City.
Bruce McAuliffe, right?
Am I right? Maybe that's Dog Park, actually. That might not be Dog City. I wrote Bruce McAuliffe, right? Am I right?
I got the wrong...
Maybe that's Dog Park, actually.
That might not be Dog City.
I think I had the wrong dog show.
Okay, sorry.
That's Teddy's fault.
You got me turned around.
But please, sorry.
Ignore that.
Yeah, so it was great fun working with his puppets, yeah.
And here's a theme song to another show you did in the... Actually, in the 90s, of course. We're in the 90s here. Yeah. And here's a theme song to another show you did in the,
actually in the 90s,
of course,
we're in the 90s here.
Yeah.
Oh, no.
Not again. Oh.
Book mice.
Book mice.
They live inside the library.
Book mice.
Behind the wall where no one can see, look twice.
Three curious mice who love to read, book mice.
There's Norbert, Dazzy, and Lea.
They've got a lot to say to them.
Book mice.
Look twice.
Book mice.
Book mice.
So briefly tell us about Book Mice.
Well, Book Mice came about after a series we did called The Magic Library.
And it was about mice who lived in a library.
But it was called The Magic Library.
And I had these three mice characters I built,
and then some bigger characters that were operated by two people.
And they told stories.
And then they had, I think they had some animation.
But they had these puppets.
So that series was over.
And then a friend of mine called me up, who was a producer at TVO.
And he said, Nina, he said, I have just inherited three mice and a series called The Book Mice.
And I went, oh, you're kidding oh my gosh great more work and you are you
are the mouse like that is like your your thing is to be a mouse yeah i can't get away from it
anyway so um so the mice were already there and now uh jeremy is gonna produce and direct this
new show with the mice because the feedback was so
good on the characters they gave them their own show so that's pretty cool and here's a commercial
for it this is 1993 okay I'm Norbert I'm Zazie I'm Leon we're the book mice there are lots of stories
and music and magic in the library on book mice and of course there are lots of stories and music and magic in the library on Bookmice.
And of course, there are lots of laughs and lots of fun.
So join Leon and Zazie and Norbert and all their friends.
Monday morning at 1030.
Get ready to learn.
Bookmice.
Yes.
Bookmice.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's great.
That's great.
That was a fun show.
I'm going to just put this on the background while we find out what you're up to these days.
And then I have a fun fact for you about today's special to leave you with.
But we're listening to Guido Basso.
Oh, thank you.
And Guido, tell us who Guido is and why you love Guido.
Guido Basso is a wonderful musician.
That's him.
He plays brass, plays the horns.
And I've got his albums.
I know him.
We were CBC people way back in the day, in the 60s and 70s,
and he's my Facebook friend, and so, you know, go and see him when he plays.
He's, I think, 80 years old.
He is just a wonderful, wonderful musician.
Awesome.
And I love his music.
And you mentioned art.
So tell us, like, what are you up to these days?
You're an artist?
So, yeah, in 2000, I had a studio and a gallery.
I became a visual artist.
And I've been doing that ever since.
And I lived in Newfoundland for five years, and I had a gallery there.
And then I came back.
So, yeah, I'm exhibiting and solo shows and group shows.
And it's, it's wonderful. That is wonderful. That's fantastic. And here's the very fun fact
I'm going to leave you with about today's special. So there was a series, I think it's over now,
but there was a series called The Leftovers. Have you ever heard? There's a show, I think it might
be HBO, but it's a big, big, big time American series called The Leftovers and how do I even set this up
because I didn't watch this but it was brought to my attention
but there's a character
in this show The Leftovers
and
let me just read this here
her final intro
Tommy and Jill are these children
of a character and they
couldn't remember the name of a show they used to watch when they were children,
but they knew the theme song,
and they would play the theme song in the show, The Leftovers,
and the theme song was Today's Special.
The show was Today's Special.
You're kidding.
Yeah, I'm not kidding.
This is modern stuff.
Theoretically, and I don't know how popular The Leftovers is,
I don't think it was like, it's not like we're talking Breaking Bad here,
but this is a big-time production.
But the theme song to, this is an American show, right?
The theme song to today's special was brought to life in this series
in a very interesting way, and I wasn't sure if you were aware that today,
so for Canadians watching who hear this song,
it's sort of a whole different reaction, because this show was on Canada only, right?
Today's special.
No.
Okay, tell me where the heck we could have seen it outside of Canada.
You would have seen it on Nickelodeon in the States.
It was the number one show.
I'm so ignorant.
No, you're not.
I just don't know what they're watching.
And we've sold it all over the world.
Oh, my God.
Okay.
I know that my wife, who I just heard come in upstairs, she's from Alberta, and
she knows today's special.
So, I knew it wasn't just an Ontario thing.
Alberta, Access TV in Alberta is their, you know.
Their TVO.
Their educational channel.
Right.
But certainly, it was sold all over the world.
Of course, it was. And why didn't I know that?
For some reason, I thought this was our little treasure that we sort of like it's tragically hip.
We have today's special and the tragically hip.
We had to share today's special of the world.
Thank you so much for doing that.
Nina, what a pleasure. I can't believe I got to talk to Muffy Mouse.
Amazing. And those stories were amazing.
And I think I got you out in time that I can
walk you to your friend's house
and you're still going to be in time for dinner.
And now you're bringing a six-pack of Great Lakes beer
with you. I know. I'm glad I brought my little grocery
buggy with me.
It's almost as if you knew
there were treats coming.
And Teddy, thank you. You started
off a little unsure, but then Teddy settled in and was amazing.
She's resigned, yes.
So that's a she.
Yes, she.
I've been thinking Teddy was a guy.
Theodora.
Theodora.
Theodora, that's right.
I've got to remember the A.
So thanks so much for doing this.
Amazing.
Thank you, Mike.
I'm really, really happy you invited me.
And that brings us to the end of our 360th show.
Congratulations.
Thank you.
360.
I saved it for you.
Nina Keough.
And you can follow me on Twitter.
I'm at Toronto Mike.
Nina, are you on Twitter?
Yes.
Twitter, Instagram.
Okay.
What's your handle on Twitter?
Probably Nina Keough.
That would be good.
I'm glad you got it. People can find me. So find Nina Keoughh. That would be good. Glad you got it.
Find Nina Keogh on
all the social media channels, but especially
Twitter. Our friends at Great Lakes
Brewery are at Great Lakes Beer.
Propertyinthe6.com is at Raptors
Devotee and PayTM
is at PayTM Canada.
See you all next week.