Today's Video Link

I've long had an interest in a stand-up comedian named Dave Barry, not to be confused with the current funny columnist by that name. My Dave Barry had a long career doing occasional acting jobs — he was in Some Like It Hot, among other films — and a lot of cartoon voiceovers. He was they guy who did most of the celebrity impressions — especially Humphrey Bogart — in the classic Warner Brothers cartoons of the late forties and fifties. Here's a link to an obit I wrote about him in 2001.

As I said in that piece, his main line of work was doing stand-up and he worked constantly for about thirty years, mainly in Los Angeles, Las Vegas, New York and Miami Beach. Most of his visits to New York also involved an appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show. This is one he made in 1964 and I'm afraid it's not one of his best. The audience is pretty cold and he doesn't bother to wait for laughs and massage them and work the material. He just rushes on to the next line.  And the next line and the next line.

Also, it sure looks to me like he's working off cue cards. You can tell by his eye movements and even see what may be the cards reflected in his glasses. I don't recall noticing that often on the Sullivan program. Since this is undoubtedly material he'd been doing in clubs then, probably to greater effect, my guess is that Ed picked which jokes he wanted out of Barry's act and told him to do every one of them in six minutes…so he needed the cards to remember which jokes and to get them all in within the allotted time. Barry was a much better comic than this.

I wish I had a video to show you of when I saw him in Las Vegas in one of his last engagements there around 1992. He got more laughs in his first minutes than he did in the entirety of the clip below. In fact, if you watch the piece below — which I offer as a good example of what most stand-ups were doing in 1964 — watch a little of him in the clip I linked here from a 1991 appearance. I thought he was really good on stage — usually — and really good at adapting his act to changing times. Here he is doing what a stand-up was supposed to do in '64 before guys like Carlin and Klein changed the game forever…

VIDEO MISSING

Recommended Reading

David S. Cohen has just found the worst-ever argument against Gay Marriage…and as he notes, there are plenty of contenders for that honor.

I sure get the sense that even the folks fighting Same Sex Wedlock these days don't have their hearts in it…or any expectation that they can turn things around. I think most of 'em are just aware that there are enough people out there mad about this that one can make a very nice living, and perhaps advance one's political aspirations, by being a prominent soldier in this losing battle. Max Bialystock stood to make a lot of money if he really did put on the worst play ever. Pat Buchanan did make a lot of money running repeatedly for president without ever coming close to carrying one state. Lost causes can be profitable, especially when you can stoke the flames and keep people angry enough about something.

Today's Video Link

The best number in the 1959 Broadway musical Fiorello was "Little Tin Box." In it, a bunch of guys involved in New York politics imagine a scene in which several Tammany politicians are hauled before a judge and have to explain where all their ill-gotten money came from.

Here in concert with the BBC Proms Symphony Orchestra is British musical comedy star Nigel Richards and three other men to favor us with their rendition of "Little Tin Box." Maestro?

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  • It's been another good day not to be Chris Christie. Most of them are, lately.

Late Night Notions

Leslie Moonves of CBS has denied that they actually offered either late slot to Neil Patrick Harris. The way he tells it, it's kinda like I said: A general discussion in which they dangled the possibility as a way of letting Harris know they want to keep him in the "CBS family."

In the interview, Moonves knocks down the rumor that they're talking to Joel McHale about the 12:30 slot and also denies that Chelsea Handler is out of the running. Frankly, I don't see them offering the show to either one but I've been surprised before.

I wonder if they've considered not naming an immediate replacement for Craig Ferguson but doing what I believe they did when Craig Kilborn left: Trying out different hosts over a period of time. Ferguson did not take over right after Kilborn's departure. Instead, they tried out a bevy of guest hosts for a few nights here and a few nights there. Then they gave one whole week to each of four "finalists" — Ferguson, D.L. Hughley, Damien Fahey, and Michael Ian Black — before picking the Scotsman.

That obviously has some benefit in terms of picking the best host. Doing it now, if they brought in a lot of women and non-white folks to try out, would eliminate some of the sense that they'd only consider a white male. The downside would be that they probably want to have their 12:30 person in place and established for a month or two before they shake up their other late night slot with the new guy. And I don't think they want to yank Ferguson off before he finishes out his announced term.

We shall see, we shall see…

Thursday Afternoon

I don't know quite what causes Global Warming but I know why it's 105 degrees where I am right now in Los Angeles. It's because I have to write a Christmas story today.

This always happens to me. Between animation and comic books, I think I've written about eight Christmas stories in my lifetime. Without fail, every one had to be done on days when it was blazing hot. (In case anyone cares, I'm doing the lead story for whichever issue of the Garfield comic book will be out in December.)

I should be finished with the story tonight so expect temperatures to drop tomorrow. And I'm really, really sorry about this.

Today's Video Link

Warning: This video cuts off abruptly in the middle of something pretty interesting. But what comes before is interesting enough (and complete) so I decided to link you to it anyway.

A lot of people will tell you that the original My Fair Lady starring Rex Harrison and Julie Andrews was just about the most perfect musical to grace Broadway…and maybe it was. But the show had two major problems to solve before it could get to New York.

One was that Ms. Andrews, while ideal in the portions where Liza has learned to speak non-Cockney English, was having trouble learning the "before" part of that role. For the longest time, she simply couldn't speak Cockney in a convincing manner. It was so bad that at one point, Mr. Harrison either refused to rehearse with her any longer or so threatened. His position was that she would never "get it" and that it was a waste of his time to rehearse with someone who so obviously would have to be fired and replaced. Eventually though, the director Moss Hart and a vocal coach or two managed to do the reverse of what Henry Higgins did in the play. They taught her how to sound like an unrefined flower girl.

The other problem was that Harrison had never sung on stage before and while he was okay in the rehearsal hall with a lone pianist, he was terrified of having to sing with a full orchestra. It led to all sorts of temper fits and anxiety attacks and even after he overcame most of his fears, he had to pretend the orchestra wasn't there, couldn't even look at the conductor. (One night after the show had been running a bit, he came out and noticed the conductor was wearing a white coat. The first time Harrison exited the stage, he sent a note to the conductor that read, "Please take that coat off. I can see you.")

This video is an excerpt from a 1960 TV special in which Andrews and Harrison participated in somewhat fictionalized re-creations of what they each went through before My Fair Lady opened. The Andrews segment is complete but the Harrison part ends prematurely so don't be surprised. If I ever come across a link to the full video, I'll let you know.

Your host is Henry Fonda. The announcer you'll hear at the beginning is the legendary Jackson Beck…

Set the TiVo!

Tavis Smiley is airing a two-part interview with Mel Brooks tomorrow night and Friday night. Which could be Friday morning and Monday morning in some markets. Consult, as we say in the television industry, your local listings.

Late Night Latest

In an interview with Howard Stern, Neil Patrick Harris says he turned down being David Letterman's replacement on Late Show because he thinks he'd get bored with that format. He also ruled out following Craig Ferguson on Late, Late Show for the same reasons.

As you may recall, I predicted Colbert would get Late Show and Harris would get Late, Late Show so maybe I oughta do a partial victory lap and say, "See? I called Late Show right and they would have given the other show to Harris had he not made it clear he was not interested." But the truth is that we don't know exactly what was offered. There's a big difference between someone saying "Are you interested?" and someone making you the kind of firm offer where all you have to do is say yes and you've got the job.

And in-between those two extremes, there's also the matter of negotiation, which can turn what sounds like a real offer into no offer.

I'm not sure this is true but a writer for Jay Leno told me once that Jay has several times been called by the folks putting on the Academy Awards telecast and they asked him, "We're putting together a list for the network of people we want to have host the Oscars and we really want you…but we hear you don't want to do it. Should we leave you off our list?" And Jay said each time, "Yeah, thanks but I don't want to do it. Leave me off the list."

Assuming that story is true, would it be accurate for Leno to say, "They offered me the Oscars and I turned them down"? Well, sort of but not exactly. My first agent used to say, "Don't confuse interest for an offer. It's not an offer until they put real money on the table."

So we don't know if what N.P.H. said no to was a real offer or just an exploration of whether he might want such a gig. Maybe they were already talking to Colbert, weren't sure they could make a deal with him and began conversations with Harris just in case. Or maybe they felt that in order to keep Harris in "the CBS family," they should at least approach him and let him know they were thinking of him for that prestigious job.

It's been done before. Long before Johnny Carson actually did retire from The Tonight Show, there were times when it looked like he might leave and NBC dangled that job before a number of folks to get them to sign NBC contracts. It was a big reason McLean Stevenson left M*A*S*H and wound up doing sitcoms for the Peacock Network. He thought Johnny's job would soon come open and was positioning himself for it. Jon Stewart once thought he was being groomed for Dave's slot as well as being offered the one on ABC that Jimmy Kimmel got.

So…with Harris out of the running, who will get that 12:35 time slot on CBS? If I had to wager right now, I'd say Aisha Tyler…but I feel far less confident of that than I did of my previous prediction. Who, let me remind you, could have had it if he'd wanted it. It also wouldn't surprise me if they went with someone who hasn't been mentioned on any of the "Who'll Succeed Craig Ferguson?" lists. After all, Craig Ferguson wasn't on the "Who'll Succeed Craig Kilborn?" lists.

And frankly, I'm more interested in N.P.H. saying that he'd like to do a prime-time variety show for CBS. If anyone could bring back that genre, I'm betting it would be him.

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  • Just heard Chris Christie speak. Apparently, I am more to blame for Bridgegate and the economic problems of New Jersey than he is.

Happy Anniversary, Buck Turgidson!

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It's the big five-oh — fifty years! — since the release of the movie Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb, directed by Stanley Kubrick and starring Peter Sellers, George C. Scott, Sterling Hayden, Peter Sellers and Peter Sellers. A masterpiece of black comedy, it was not hailed as such by everyone back in 1964 because, I suppose, some of its premises and speculations were quite close and uncomfy.

As Eric Schlosser pointed out in this article earlier this year, an amazing amount of it was prescient at least about possibilities if not outcomes. I wonder if anyone could or would make a movie like that today…a film that toyed in that way with the concept of nuclear war or something similarly dire. Global warming is starting to look like a pretty formidable threat. I don't see anyone joking about that.

And in this new article, David Denby reminds us what the world was like when Dr. Strangelove (etc.) first debuted. The film also has a value in reminding us of that era and our fears of the time. I was twelve years old in '64 and a bit too young to be worried about what it was worried about. But I sure recall adults who saw it and thought they were watching next month's newscasts. Thanks to Greg Kelly for pointing me to Mr. Denby's piece.

Today on Stu's Show!

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Today, your amiable host Stu Shostak welcomes our mutual pal Vince Waldron to his audio extravaganza. Vince is the author of The Official Dick Van Dyke Show Book and…what's that? You say you love The Dick Van Dyke Show and you already own Vince's exhaustive history of that program? Well, not like this. Vince has released a new e-book version which adds buckets full of new information and photos. Ordinarily, I'd think, "Oh, he added some extra stuff to get me to buy it again" but in this case, the version I purchased and downloaded to my Kindle is absolutely worth the modest price. Vince will spend most of Stu's Show today sharing new information he's uncovered about our favorite sitcom. He thought he'd found everything but it just goes to show you: There's no telling what you'll find when Carl Reiner lets you rummage through his garage. If you're a fan of the series, listen today when Vince appears with Stu and order the new version. You'll be more than happy you did.

Stu's Show can be heard live (almost) every Wednesday at the Stu's Show website and you can listen for free there. Webcasts start at 4 PM Pacific Time, 7 PM Eastern and other times in other climes. They run a minimum of two hours and sometimes go to three or beyond.  Shortly after a show ends, it's available for downloading from the Archives on that site. Downloads are a paltry 99 cents each and you can get four for the price of three.  The ones where I guest should be cheaper but they aren't.

Today's Video Link

Hey, let's all watch a dog carry a cat into the house…

About Casey…

Several folks have written to ask me if I can tell them anything about Casey Kasem, the popular disc jockey and voice actor who has now been reported "missing" in a family dispute. I don't know anything about this family dispute other than, like all family disputes, it is probably not made any simpler or easier to solve by becoming a public issue.

Despite the existence of a few audio tapes on which Mr. Kasem got furious over something, I always found him to be a pleasant, nice guy who was really good at what he did. The worst thing I can say about him is that he seemed to be one of those people who you couldn't dine with without being told that whatever you were putting in your mouth was going to kill you.

He has not been well for some time and it would appear that family members are fighting over who'll take care of him and what should be done for him. I hope they settle it. I hope he receives proper attention and comfort for his remaining days and that a lot remain. And I wish this stuff didn't get into the news because it probably doesn't help.