In case you missed 'em over the weekend, C-Span has posted the video of several broadcasts about political humor. It's a little over three and a half hours and it includes on its various panels, Garry Trudeau, Stephen Colbert, Phil Hendrie, Drew Carey, Greg Proops and others. Here's the link and it should be there for about two months. (If that doesn't work, use their search function and look for "Trudeau.")
Lewis and Clark — Together Again!
It doesn't come out until next week but I just went and ordered the new DVD of Neil Simon's The Sunshine Boys. It's a fun movie but I think I'm ordering it as much for its special features as the movie itself. There's a commentary by co-star Richard Benjamin. There are make-up tests of Walter Matthau and Jack Benny. And there's a newly-found screen test of Phil Silvers! Silvers was one of many old Jewish comedians who tested for the film, and I can't imagine it won't be fascinating to see the footage of him playing — I presume — Willie Clark, the role Matthau wound up with. (The casting of The Sunshine Boys was complicated: After all those tests, they selected Red Skelton for the role of Clark, with Benny as his partner, Al Lewis. Skelton withdrew for reasons that no one ever quite understood, and he was replaced by Matthau. Then Benny died and was replaced by his old buddy, Burns. And it didn't stop there: Originally, Harvey Keitel was cast as the nephew but after a few days of shooting, Simon and director Herbert Ross decided he didn't fit with the other actors so he was dismissed and Benjamin got the role.) Anywho, before I head off to bed, I just wanted to tell you all about these special features and post this link in case you want to order a copy from Amazon. Nighty-night!
Tonight's Political Rant
The frustrating thing about Richard Clarke's revelations (if that's the correct word) on 60 Minutes tonight is that they will not, for the most part, be debated by folks with an eagerness to get at the truth. The Democrats will declare that Clarke's the man, he knows, that's how it was, Bush ignored warnings about terrorism before 9/11 and then after, tried hard to believe that Iraq should be attacked in retaliation. The Republicans will insist that Bush was focused; that Clarke's a disgruntled and/or partisan has-been who's saying "I told you so" when he didn't really tell them so. Somewhere between those extremes there's an interesting discussion and perhaps some truth but we'll never get near it, at least not this year. The debate will get drowned out by those eager to spin this to help their guy in the coming election.
I am inclined to believe Clarke's claim that the Bush administration wrongly — and this may be one of the largest, most deadly errors any White House has ever made — believed in an al-Qaeda/Iraq link despite a pile of intelligence reports to the contrary. I believe this part because Bush and his top officials once said there was a link and they now seem to arguing they never said it. (This morning on Face the Nation, Senator Arlen Specter insisted, "The Bush administration never made any claim that there was a connection between Saddam and al-Qaeda." He actually said that…and it was kind of surreal. Senator Specter had some sort of accident and his lip was all swollen and red as he appeared on the program. It looked like someone had worked him over to get him to say what they wanted him to say.)
I am also inclined to believe Clarke's claim that fighting terrorism was downgraded from the Clinton to the Bush administrations — fewer meetings, less attention, etc. — because we've heard the charge before and if untrue, it could so easily be disproved. Perhaps it will be.
Beyond that, it's hard to say from afar how much of Clarke we should accept. I'd love to hear someone non-partisan bat some of the other allegations around but like I said, this won't be about getting at the truth. It'll be about selling or assaulting the image of George W. Bush as a strong battler of terrorists. That's pretty much what this election is going to come down to.
Altercation
Last week, Eric Alterman (an author I like) appeared with Dennis Miller (a comedian I used to like). Unlike a lot of folks, I actually started to lose my taste for Mr. Miller years before 9/11 and his political conversion. I think the disillusionment began when I went to see him at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. Rita Rudner was his opening act and she was fresh and funny and everything you want a stand-up comic to be. Then Dennis came out, mumbled some very dated material with an absolute minimum of effort, got his check (one presumes) and left. I can't recall ever paying so much to see a performer who was so uninterested in performing. Miller had a line he later used about how the models on The Price is Right were getting old, asking if they could be rotated every two or three millennia. I thought that was an odd comment from a guy who was still doing a joke comparing Dan Quayle, a forgotten politician, to Dan Tanna's sidekick on Vegas, a forgotten TV show.
Miller's occasional attitude of "I'm too hip to even try" was on display at the MGM Grand, and also on his show the other day when he had Alterman on. If you'd like to see a few minutes of it, this website has posted a video excerpt. If nothing else, it demonstrates why Miller's CNBC show is one of the lowest-rated things to ever appear on a network that's had some pretty low-rated shows.
What I find interesting is that if you cruise right-wing websites, you'll see plenty of messages from folks who loved the way Miller treated Alterman. They're happy Miller didn't dignify the guy's charges by responding to them and instead just treated the guy with disdain. There's a certain segment of the population out there that doesn't want to hear an exchange of ideas…doesn't even demand wit of its entertainers. They just want to hear someone saying Hillary Clinton is ugly or George W. Bush is a drunken fratboy or otherwise insulting whoever they've decided they don't like. Way too much of today's Talk Radio is about this. It's a shame that Dennis Miller, who once had clever material, has devolved into just calling people idiots. It even bothered me one day when I tuned in and heard him dumping on Joe Lieberman, a politician I like less than anyone who's recently gotten within spitting distance of the White House.
On his weblog here, Alterman tells of his experience on the show from his point-of-view. And here, he says that Miller later phoned him to apologize. If so, good for Dennis…and more so if he has the integrity to apologize on-air.
Leaving aside the political end of this and dealing only with the issue of creating watchable television, I think Miller made a bad mistake. Nothing has hurt David Letterman's ratings more than occasionally acting like he was bored with his own show and/or that he thought the guy in the guest's chair was a jerk. Sometimes, the guest is a jerk but in that case, you shouldn't have them on…and if one does get through, you try to do what Mr. Carson was so good at, which was making a stiff look good, steering him or her away from their jerkier behavior and making the spot work in spite of the subject. The coward's way out is to act like you don't know what this guest (whose appearance you approved) is doing there. I also think Miller is making a mistake if he thinks that he can outdo Fox News at their own game and attract the right-wing audience to CNBC.
Quick Comment
Just watched the East Coast telecast of tonight's 60 Minutes interview with Richard Clarke. Oh, my God.
Recommended Reading
Here's Frank Rich on the new (and, I think, inane) movement towards censorship of radio and television. Here's one key section…
The strange history of Bono and the Golden Globes is a case in point. It was 14 months ago that the front man for U2 inadvertently used a contraband seven-letter word as a modifier preceding the word brilliant in expressing his joy upon winning a best song award for the film "The Gangs of New York." The F.C.C. received only 234 complaints nationwide and ultimately ruled that Bono's word, free of carnal innuendo, was not actionable. But that was in 2003. In 2004 the Bush-chosen F.C.C. chief, Michael Powell, having failed to achieve much else in his job, has reopened the case to reverse the original verdict.
In other words: The Bono matter never really bothered anyone at the time and it's long since been forgotten. But we have to go after the guy now because we need to intimidate some people and to show the Religious Right we're fighting for their values.
Incidentally, I'm using a new means of linking to New York Times articles. It should allow you to read them without registering over there…though for the life of me, I can't understand why some folks object to doing that. It should also cause the articles not to become unavailable as quickly…but I wouldn't count on it.
TV Funnies – Part 1
A few months ago, this site presented a stirring history of the little-known comic book version of The Dick Van Dyke Show published in the sixties by Gold Key Comics. Some of you have written in to ask me about some of the other comics Gold Key did based on popular TV shows so in the coming weeks, I'll try to present some of them here. The two featured above all lasted one issue apiece.
In the case of Gilligan's Island, this was probably due to the show being cancelled. The last episode of the TV program (before it achieved eternal life in syndication) aired in August of 1967. The comic book came out the previous June…so I'm guessing Gold Key purchased the rights late the previous year, put an issue into work around February and then heard that the show would not be getting a fourth season, so they aborted the comic book. The story inside ("The Castaway Cookbook") was about Mr. Howell getting bored with the food on the island. In the tale, he announced a contest — one million dollars to whichever of the others could cook up the best dish. Naturally, they all went scampering to win. Gilligan found some tasty plants on the far side of the island and whipped up a stew…without realizing that the plants were a rare breed that had very odd side effects, transforming everyone the way Red Kryptonite used to change Superman. The story was silly but then so was the TV show, and the comic was nicely drawn by Warren Tufts, who was best known for his work on the newspaper strip, Casey Ruggles. (He later drew the Gomer Pyle comic book for Gold Key, which I'll feature here in a few days.)
The one issue of The Odd Couple was prepared out of Gold Key's New York office. There is no official record of the writer but the artwork was obviously done by Sal Trapani, who earlier had done the Get Smart and Hogan's Heroes comics for Dell. The story was very clever but apparently when Neil Simon heard about this, he had his lawyers inform Paramount Television that they did not have the right to turn Oscar and Felix into comic book characters. Kind of a shame, really. The story in this issue — "Murray's Manhunt" — was a good one. The Odd Couple's pal, Murray the Cop, hasn't arrested a real criminal in something like ten years and a new Sergeant orders him to make a bust or get into a new line of work. Oscar and Felix try to help him but one investigation after another goes wrong. Finally, he manages to break up a bookmaking ring and arrests his first actual criminal in quite some time…Oscar Madison!
That's it for this time. In the future, I'll be showcasing more obscure Gold Key comic book versions of great TV shows. If you have any requests, send 'em in.
DVD Diagnosis
I've received a number of suggestions and explanations regarding the problem I've been having with my Panasonic DVD Recorder. One gent — and I'll thank him by name once I'm sure he's right — told me to switch from 4X disks to 1X. The Panasonic manual doesn't seem to say what kind to use (other than to recommend "Panasonic brand") and neither does their website. I started using 4X since that's what what my Pioneer DVD Recorder likes and for more than a month, they worked fine in the Panasonic, too.
Today, I went by CompUSA and bought a batch of 1X DVD blanks of their house brand, and also some 2X from TDK. So far, I've dubbed about three of each in the Panasonic with no problem. So things are definitely looking better. If I get through another dozen or so without a problem, I may declare the matter solved.
TiVo: Love It or Lose It?
We love TiVo about as much as this author in the New York Times. And we'd like to believe that this author is incorrect that TiVo may not be long for this world.
DVD Dilemma
As mentioned here, my Panasonic DMR-E80H DVD Recorder is not working properly. I know this because after spending too much of yesterday watching it crash and destroy blank DVDs, today I spent an hour on the phone — most of it on "hold" — before a nice lady at the Panasonic Help Line told me, "Your machine is not working properly." She suggested I take it to an Authorized Service Center, and I sure got the feeling I was speaking to someone who knew a lot less about my machine than I did.
Several folks who own Panasonic DVD Recorders have written to ask me what the trouble is, and the rest of this post will probably only be comprehensible to them. It worked fine for the first month but yesterday I wanted to dub two groups of programs — a group of five shorts of 5-6 minutes onto one DVD-R, two half-hour shows onto another. When I tried to do either, the machine went into an annoying ritual it has suddenly learned. The dubbing aborts after about twenty seconds, then the machine stops recording and locks up (it even seems to turn itself off for an instant), then it comes back to life and the front panel says "Recover" for a while, then displays — in some order — "An error occurred, please check the media" and "Press Enter" and "Bye." I wrecked a lot of blanks this way, then cruised the Internet for folks with similar problems. Some said it was due to incompatible media, which I suppose is possible, but that would mean that after successfully handling 50 or 60 blanks of the brand I use, the machine suddenly decided it didn't like them. Others in discussion groups suggested that the Panasonic's harddisk gets fragmented and that periodically, you have to forget about all the stuff you've recorded on it, reformat and start over. And still others suggested it means the harddisk is simply faulty.
Anyway, I was able to dub the group of five shows to a DVD-RAM disk but not to a DVD-R so I did that and unplugged the machine overnight. This morning, I plugged it in and was able to dub the 2-show group to a DVD-R. In fact, I made two copies. Then I turned my attention to the 5-short group, tried to dub it to a DVD-R and the machine began performing its crash ritual again. I rebooted, reformatted the harddisk, dubbed the 5 shorts from the DVD-RAM to the harddisk, then dubbed them without problem to a DVD-R. When I tried to run a second copy of the same shows, the machine crashed…and there the matter stands. I'm starting to think it may be a bad harddisk but maybe the machine just doesn't like the shows I'm dubbing.
The Thousandth Oddball
Today, the unique creature known as Scott Shaw! presents the one-thousandth installment of his Oddball Comics column over at his page. It's not the one I was expecting but it's a goodie: Jacky's Diary, a comic book version of a very funny, short-lived comic strip with the same name. Written and drawn by Jack Mendelsohn (age 32½), it was a one-of-a-kind creation and I hope some enterprising publisher will someday get around to republishing the entire run of the newspaper strip. Scott's column will tell you all sorts of fun facts about our mutual friend, Jack, but I do want to add my endorsement of both the comic and the column. (I told Scott which bizarre funnybook I thought he'd pick for #1000 and he said, "Hmm…that would have been a good one." If he's any kind of friend, he'll feature it soon.)
Hey, Paula!
Here we have an article about what's happened to Paula Poundstone, a comedienne who oughta be working a lot more than she's apparently working. Last time I saw her perform live, I became a big fan.
Recommended Reading
If you'd like to know how close the coming presidential election might be, take a look at this article by Ronald Brownstein.
TiVo Alert!
Saturday evening, C-Span says they're broadcasting an hour-long panel discussion entitled, "Political Humor and Campaigning" that was taped in Aspen at the recent U.S. Comedy Arts Festival. The dais includes Garry Trudeau and some people who don't draw comic strips. The current schedule says it airs at 8 PM Eastern time and runs 65 minutes…but C-Span has been known to juggle shows around so I'd suggest checking their website as late as possible if you want to catch or record it.
DVD Dilemma
Hey, remember how I waxed (somewhat) enthusiastic about the Panasonic DMR-E80H DVD Recorder? It was back here if you don't recall. Well, the machine has worked flawlessly until today when it has begun working…well, whatever the opposite of "flawlessly" is. Suddenly having big problems. I'll let you know if and when the Panasonic folks straighten things out but for now, I hereby put my recommendation on hold.