From the E-Mailbag…

Jeff Ash was not the 20th person to figure out the date of the previous clip. He was actually the first of about nine people…

Probably the 20th person to weigh in on this bit of trivia, but I think this clip is from May 14, 1980. Don Adams had been married for 3 years, which he says on air. Per IMDb, it was the last of his 32 appearances on the show over 18 years.

IMDB says Adams married in 1947, 1960 and 1977…so yeah, that makes sense. It's interesting, if true, that this was his last time on with Johnny because as you can see, he did very well and Carson looks delighted with his performance. (Why it might not be true: I don't think IMDb has the complete listings of Carson's shows and their guest lists.)

But Johnny could be very mercurial about guests. Someone could be in favor and appear often with for years…and then one day, some little thing banned them from the king's presence. Wonder what happened here.

Today's First Video Link

Here's Don Adams in I-don't-know-what-year visiting with Johnny Carson. If you had ever been in Johnny's guest chair, you couldn't score any better than to tell two anecdotes like the ones Mr. Adams told. In fact, if I was producing a talk show, I think I'd show this clip to guests and tell them, "This is what we want you to do"…

Dispatches From the Fortress – Day 50

Welcome to the half-century mark of my isolation and possibly yours. We had a great tune-in last night for me interviewing Sergio and the whole thing is being watched in replay today. If you missed it, all you have to do is scroll down and it's on this page not far below.

Note all the friends of Sergio and/or me who were watching and commenting like MAD writer Dick DeBartolo, actress Jewel Shepard, voice artist Gregg Berger, Disney Legend Floyd Norman and the other two members of the Groo Crew, Stan Sakai and Tom Luth. See? We can still gather with our buddies. We just can't do it in person.

Tonight at 7 PM my time, I'll be conversing with the amazing Shelly Goldstein, not be confused with any non-amazing Shelly Goldsteins there are in this world. This one writes funny scripts and funny songs and sings the latter and also occasionally some serious ones. She won't be singing tonight but she'll be telling you amazing show business exploits. Tomorrow night, another pal…Bill Kirchenbauer. Then on Saturday at 1 PM (again, my time), we try to do one of our Cartoon Voices panels online. You should be able to watch replays later but I'll bet it's more fun if you watch live.

I've been having trouble posting the interview I did with Paul Harris on Tuesday evening. Somewhere along a slightly-complicated recording process, things got a bit outta-sync and Paul and I both look like a redubbed foreign movie. I'll figure out how to fix that and put it online as soon as I figure out how to fix that and put it online.

I still don't know how much more I'm going to do in the field of webcasting. I appreciate the requests for more but they're not yet coming from within me. This is not me being coy. I just find that at certain intervals of my life, I find it wise to sit down and discuss with myself why I'm doing something I'm doing. I occasionally decide that I don't have a good enough reason. I'm going to webcast a little more and then try to determine what, if anything, I want to do with this technology.

And yes, I know there's going to be a lot more of it in everyone's future, either as a producer or patron of content. If you think toilet paper's hard to find these days, go online and try to purchase a webcam. Scarcer than hand sanitizer.

Stu's Show – Live!

In the unlikely case that I configured things correctly, the box below should contain the live feed of today's Stu's Show on which Stu Shostak is interviewing Ruth Clampett, the delightful daughter-person of the great cartoon director/producer Bob Clampett. Depending on what browser you're using, you may need to turn on the audio to hear what they're saying. The program starts at 4 PM (my time) and they have no idea when it will end but there's enough to say about Bob that "sometime next Tuesday" is not impossible.

If by some miracle they finish by 7 PM, come back and watch me interview my friend/partner Sergio Aragonés…

Peter Hunt, R.I.P.

Let's note the passing of the very fine director, Peter Hunt, who helmed not only the original Broadway production of 1776 but also the film version, as well. It's hard to think of a show that was more faithfully transferred to the screen. There must have been great temptation to "open up" the story and set more scenes outside the constitutional hall in which 90% (+) of the stage version takes place. Someone, and it was probably Peter Hunt, realized that the story was about what happened in The Room Where It Happened so most of the film just had to be in that room.

I got to meet Mr. Hunt once briefly at a screening of the film so I got to thank him for both versions, which I like tremendously. At that screening, everyone thanked him for both versions and many thanked him for the other fine work he did on stage and screen. This obit will tell you more about his impressive career. He was 81 years of age.

Dispatches From the Fortress – Day 49

Well, apart from not being able to figure out when we were "on the air," my first webcast interview didn't go too wrong. This was because I was wise enough to pick as my first guest, my pal Paul Harris, who has 40 years of experience in radio — which this almost is — so he's seen things go a lot wronger than anything I could do in front of about eighty people. Eighty people you can't see or hear is a comfortable audience size when you don't know what the hell you're doing.

More of you can watch it when it's posted later today to YouTube and I'll embed it here. We're going to have a lot of video embeds on the blog today.

The first time I was asked to speak in front of human beings — as most of them appeared to be — at the first Comic-Con in San Diego, I froze up. Even though someone had told me what to say, I suddenly didn't know what to say. Fortunately, someone else thought he was supposed to do what I was supposed to do and that person got up and did what, at that very moment, I didn't know how to do. (If that sounds convoluted, I told the story in slightly greater detail here.)

I was asked to do nothing on the program at the second Comic-Con in San Diego and then at the third, I was asked to moderate my first panel. I might have been scared but I'd seen the room and it only held about fifty people. Even if we'd filled it, which we didn't, you know that even if you make a total fool of yourself, not many people will see it. So I did make a total fool of myself, not many people saw it and in years after, I was asked to speak in increasingly larger rooms. So you work your way up.

Tonight, I expect a larger turnout as I ruthlessly interrogate my partner (and friend for 50+ years), Sergio Aragonés. We start at 7 PM my time, which is Pacific Time. Last night went almost exactly 90 minutes. I have no idea how long tonight's will go. I'm going to try and embed it live here but if it doesn't work — or if you want to type in questions or comments — go over to my YouTube page at the proper time. And you can always reach it via the NFM TV icon in the right-hand column here.

Sergio is tonight. Tomorrow night, I'll be talking with Shelly Goldstein, who has done amazing things as a comedy writer in this town and amazing things as a singer-performer in Los Angeles, Chicago, London and other cities that are now not allowing performers on stage. That is not because of her since she is very good at it.

Friday night, I'll be talking with Bill Kirchenbauer, a comic I've known since before he got on The Tonight Show and the guy behind the desk (someone named Johnny Carson) thought he was hilarious. I'll be asking Bill about how that moment changed his life…and believe me, it changed his life. Soon, Bill was everywhere, including two hit sitcoms. And yes, I'll be asking him about portraying lounge singer Tony Roletti on Fernwood Tonight — the first of many, many comics to "do" lounge singer characters.

Then Saturday, we have the Cartoon Voices Panel at 1 PM and after that, I'm going to give this whole webcasting thing a good think. I hope those of you who are tuning in to these webcasts are enjoying yourselves as I try to learn my new toy and figure out what I want to do with it in the future. If you figure it out before I do, lemme know.

Tomorrow on Stu's Show!

I still find it kinda hard to believe that I got to meet and know and in many cases work with so many people responsible for what entertained me for the first 1.8 decades of my life. In the Top Five of that list would have to be Bob Clampett, who directed so many of the best Warner Brothers cartoons and who later gave us the Beany and Cecil cartoons of the early sixties.

In between those two grand achievements, he also gave the world the Time for Beany puppet show on TV starring (initially) Daws Butler and Stan Freberg as Beany-Boy and Cecil the Seasick Sea Serpent. I was too young to watch that show when it was on but it may still have been important to making me whatever I am today. A few months before she died, I introduced my mother to Mr. Freberg and she told him, "I watched that show every day when I was pregnant with Mark and I think he somehow absorbed its sense of humor in the womb."

So I was pleased to get to know Bob and most of his wonderful family and to visit their home, often at his invite to come up and watch old cartoons with a bunch of young (compared to him) cartoon buffs and to talk about them. He was stunningly generous with his time. I think you could have phoned Bob at 4 AM to wake him up and ask about some obscure animator who was in his unit in 1938 and Bob would remember the guy, tell you all about him and not scream at you for waking him up. I am not entirely sure about that last part.

Bob left us in 1984. His kids have carried on his legacy, preserving and promoting, and guess what! His lovely daughter Ruth is the guest tomorrow afternoon on Stu Shostak's video/radio chat show. She'll be talking about her father's life and work and yes, there will be clips. She'll also be talking about her own work as a V.I.P. in the field of producing and selling collectible animation cels and other memorabilia and maybe she'll talk about the Bob Clampett Humanitarian Award, which is presented each year at Comic-Con International. (I'm told it will be presented this year even though there will be no Comic-Con International.)

You can watch or listen to Stu's Show many ways and they're listed show over on the Stu's Show website. If you have a Roku-enabled TV set, you can watch it there if you do what that site tells you. There will also be a live feed on that page and also on this page during the show, which starts at 4 PM Pacific Time and runs for way longer than Stu expects. It oughta be great if only because Bob was.

P.S.

I featured that clip of Jay Leno because Johnny Carson's company just put it up on YouTube. And I just realized that they must have put it up because today is Jay's 70th birthday.

Today's Video Link

We have today a clip of Jay Leno's first appearance with Johnny Carson after it was announced Jay would be guest hosting, switching off with Garry Shandling. This was after Joan Rivers was abruptly removed from that position, which happened the moment NBC and Carson learned she'd signed to do a competing show against Johnny on Fox. The folks at NBC were already annoyed with Joan and discussing replacing her…which was probably why she signed with Fox.

Upon learning of her Fox deal during a week she was sitting in for Johnny, they wanted her off their air A.S.A.P., lest she turn that week into a promo for her new show. Garry Shandling was suddenly drafted to host the next night on short notice. He was the first choice to be the new Permanent Guest Host of The Tonight Show and it was not necessarily something he had time to do, nor was it in his then-current career plan. I didn't know Garry that well but I knew he was a meticulous advance-planner and he was also fully committed to It's Garry Shandling's Show, which was then in production.

He filled-in for Johnny a few nights but someone else was needed. Leno was then under contract to NBC in one of those deals where they sign someone just to keep that person away from the competition…and then can't really find anything to do with that person. They signed Jay for that reason and also because, I suspect, they were fighting so much with David Letterman that they wanted an option in case Dave took a hike. Jay was kind of engaged as the guest host's guest host but I don't think Garry hosted very much, if at all, after the date of this segment. (And note Johnny's little joke reference to Ms. Rivers grabbing another offer).

I really like Jay Leno. I have since long before he ever set foot on the Tonight Show stage when I saw him at local comedy clubs. If you don't like him, you oughta see him perform live some day, assuming there is ever live performing anywhere in the future. He's always seemed like a genuinely nice guy to me and I never bought into the spin that he shoved Johnny or Conan off The Tonight Show. Ratings did that quite effectively. And one of the reasons I found myself rooting for him was that I kept hearing people predict failures that never happened.

When he became Johnny's guest host, they said he'd never be given the show. Then when he was given the show, they said he'd be canceled in thirteen weeks. And then when he kept the show in first place, they said NBC would wise up and replace him with Dave. And then when Dave went to CBS instead, there was a time he was clobbering Jay and they said, "Well, that's it for Leno. He'll be back opening for Patti LaBelle in six months."

And then after the first night Jay beat Dave in the ratings, it was "that's the one time it will ever happen" and then it happened almost every night for year after year after year. Jay only lost the show to Conan because someone at NBC fearlessly predicted that within the five years of his last contract, Jay's ratings would surely plunge…and five years later, they hadn't. Lorne Michaels was quoted in one of Bill Carter's books as saying, "Fortunes have been lost in this business by underestimating Jay Leno." I just enjoy that. Here's Jay with Johnny…

Dispatches From the Fortress – Day 48

The problems with my car turned out to be deeper than just the battery and I wound up having it towed into the dealership yesterday. I just okayed repairs that will total a bit over $2500…on a car I probably won't drive more than three or four times the next few months. My mechanic said they're shorthanded and asked if he could have a few days on it. I told him he could have a few months on it.

Aside from that, the big news here ain't terribly big at all. It's just me playing with online videos and doing these nightly chats for the next few days and then the Cartoon Voices Panel on Saturday. I honestly don't know how much of this I'm going to do in the future. This is kind of a learning experience for me. I want to learn how to do it and I want to learn how much I do or don't enjoy doing it.

And my iPhone just received breaking news that "sources" say Hillary Clinton will endorse Joe Biden for president. Shouldn't "breaking news" tell you something that you couldn't have just assumed? You and I could have been the sources for that story.

Lastly for now: A lot of folks have written in to ask why I haven't discussed or embedded the big online Sondheim Tribute the other night. I figured everyone who would be interested in it didn't need me to guide them to it…and I haven't had time to watch it yet. Mr. Sondheim has no greater admirer than Yours Truly and I recognize that given his age and past repertoire, we shouldn't expect or need more masterpieces from the guy…but wouldn't it be nice if every time he gets a birthday tribute, he gives Bernadette Peters one new song to sing?

Today's Second Video Link

Here's a replay of a live drawing lesson which my buddy Eric Goldberg did three years ago at a table in one of my favorite restaurants…

Tomorrow and the Next Day and the Next Day…

Each night for the rest of this week, I'm going to be online at 7 PM Pacific Time (9 PM Central, 10 PM Eastern, etc.) for a somewhat informal conversation with one or more friends of mine. It'll just be us talking as we might over lunch and you're welcome to listen in and send comments or questions. I have no idea how long they'll run but it's kind of an experiment and it's to give me practice playing host and director, plus I get to talk with someone I've enjoyed talking with in the past.

Tomorrow night (Tuesday), I'll be talking with Paul Harris, who has logged more hours as a radio host than anyone else I know. He's retired from that now but he posts great stuff on his blog. Once upon a time, you weren't anyone in this world if you hadn't been interviewed on The Paul Harris Show and I'm pleased to say that I was, many times. We'll be discussing the late night shows and how they're coping with the absences of studio audiences and even studios, and I also want to talk a little about Las Vegas, where Paul often goes to play poker and I often go to not gamble anymore.

In addition to not knowing how long each webcast will run, I don't know if I'll be making them available for later viewing online, nor am I sure yet who'll be on the other three webcasts this week or if I'll do them in the future. All I know is that Paul and I will be there tomorrow night starting at 7 PM my time. Hope some of you will be, too. Click on the logo above or here to get to newsfromme.tv.