Kelly Ripa; and Jennie Finch.
PLUS:
George W. Bush Pretends to be Interested; George W. Bush Tries
to Pronounce "Donor"; a guy eating a cockroach; Tom
Hanks vs. a skiing camel; and a top ten list.
George W. Bush Pretends To Be Interested - We
see the President at a function, listening to a woman who is
trying to enlighten. She doesn't.
George W.
Bush Tries to Pronounce "Donor."
-"You know, I checked with Colin, I think this is true.
We're now the biggest 'doe-noor' to the North Korean
people."
Since he is the President, we questioned
ourselves. We were right. It's spelt "donor" but
pronounced "doe-ner." In this case, the President
was wrong. Unless, of course, we are North Korea's biggest
"doe-noor" and I simply don't know what a
"doe-noor" is. If that's the case, I apologize to
the President.
Audience Choice! The
audience has a choice tonight. They can either see Tom
Hanks come out and say hello (see Tom Hanks in the Green
Room), or they can see footage of a skiing
camel.
It's obviously been a long time since
Forest Gump because the audience decided on the skiing camel.
Sorry, Tom, but thanks for coming.
On Monday we had
"Magic Brian," the guy who ate a light
bulb.
Tuesday we had Magic Johnny Fox, who
ate a martini glass.
Wednesday was Tyler
Fyre night and his eating of a lit cigarette.
Whom do we have tonight? Magic Todd Robbins, a
man who will eat a cockroach, swallow it, then urp it back up.
And as always, I ask the same thing. Fine, you can do this.
But how did you do this the very first time?
Magic Todd
places the large live cockroach on his tongue and
draws it into his mouth. Making swallowing motions with his
face and neck, Magic Todd opens his mouth to reveal its
emptiness, then opens again moments later to show the
cockroach's return. Magic Todd performing this stunt in this
manner is both entertaining and economical. Imagine the
cockroach cost run-up without the urp.
Todd Robbins
produces his own Broadway show, "Carnival Knowledge"
at the Soho Playhouse and is nominated for a Drama Desk Award
for his performance.
At the top of the ACT 2, Dave says
he's feeling 'fuzzy' tonight. He's on the Bextra,
some kind of inflammatory. He doesn't seem inflamed so I guess
it's working.
Bextra? My guess it's provides extra
Vitamin B.
TOP TEN: sponsored by
sink-hole.com.
Top ten things you don't want to
hear at Hooters - we sent a guy as a Hooters server and a hidden
camera to a local Hooters restaurant.
#8. "Don't
worry, your waitress is taking a load of penicillin. I'm sure
she's not contagious."
#6. (bringing fries)
"See if you can tell which one of these I sneezed
on."
#1. "Here's your wet-nap." (spits
into napkin, hands to customer.)
I once had a wet-nap,
but I'd rather not talk about that now.
During the Top
Ten Dave admits to feeling a little 'off' tonight. He's
searching for something. That's what's bothering him. I
"Played the Dave" and said "the warmth the
spotlight can't provide." Dave says, "I'm looking
for the love the spotlight can't provide." DING!
KELLY RIPA: Looking great! Dave says she
looks remarkable. Kelly says she may look small but "I'm
deceptively heavy."
Dave asks Kelly what her
all-time low weight is. I "Played the Kelly" and
said, "7 lbs, 9 oz." Nope. Kelly said
"110." BUZZ.
Her all-time high? 130 lbs.
What made her decide to go on a diet? When the producers of the
Soap she was on told her to.
And how tall is Kelly?
5'2".
Kelly's 6-year-old recently got his maiden
stitches in his head when he fell into the safety fence at
school. In Manhattan, many of the school playgrounds are
located on the roof and fenced for the children's protection.
Dave says it sounds more like a prison yard. The young Ripa
kid was running and playing as children do and fell against the
fence. The boy received a "special band-aid" to
close up the cut. This "special band-aid" is also
known as stitches, but don't tell little Ripa. The young'un
didn't realize he was getting the stitches until he was on the
doctor's table and saw the reflection of his head in the
doctor's glasses.
Dave recaps: "So your son
injured himself on a piece of equipment that was supposed to
provide safety? That's actionable." Kelly laughed, and
although she somewhat agreed, she's decided not to take action
since she has two more children she wants to get into that
school.
To close out the segment, Dave offers, "I
got a great guy if you want to go after this
school."
I found this very funny because it's all
so true.
In the next segment, Dave again marvels at
Kelly's appearance. "There isn't a thing big on
you." Of course, Dave means this in only the best way.
I again, "Played the Kelly," and said "I hear the
same thing about you." But I was wrong. Kelly went in
the opposite direction and said, "That's now what they say
about you," or something like that.
So how much
does Kelly actually weigh? There's only one way to find out.
Bring in the scale.
Kelly: 108
Dave: 190
Paul: 175
JENNIE FINCH: pitcher for the U.S. Olympic
Softball Team and co-host of the long running, "This Week
in Baseball. Plus, she's one of People Magazine's 50 Most
Beautiful People. Yowzer! Beautiful, athletic, and
talented.
My blue card info:
-attended the University of Arizona, 1998-2002
-set an
NCAA record with 60 consecutive victories
-was the 2001
and 2002 National College Player of the Year
-was a
three-time first-team All-American
-Jennie Finch also
hit 50 career home runs
-Selected to the 2004 U.S.
Olympic softball team
-Her fastball has reached 71 mph
(43 feet from mound to home plate) - this is the equivalent of a
major league fastball at 100 mph (60.5 feet from mound to home
plate)
The Olympics are in Athens, Greece the last two
weeks in August. What teams does Jennie expect to give the
U.S. the hardest fight? Jennie says Australia and Japan.
Jennie can throw 71 mph, and from the 43 feet distance from the
mound to the plate, it's equivalent to a 100 mph fastball from
the major league distance of 60 feet. Only one or two major
league pitchers today can reach that speed. And with her
pitching style, by the time she releases the ball, Jennie could
be only 35 feet from the batter. In fact, she can strike out a
batter and then pat her on the back all in the same
motion.
She is able to get so close to the batter
because of her height (6'1") and by what is called,
"crow hopping." I think the "crow hopping"
is the lunging off the pitching rubber as you release the ball.
Anyway, there is a limit to how much you can "crow
hop" so you don't end up behind the catcher when you
release the ball.
Is their more stress on the arm
throwing overhand or underhand? Jennie says it's always been
said that throwing overhand is more stressful but now that the
softball underhand pitch has become so fast and hard, it is
becoming equally as stressful. Jennie will be demonstrating
her pitching prowess up on the roof of the Ed Sullivan Theater
by pitching softballs at some 8th floor office windows.
ACT 5: "Attention Late
Show viewers! Has Billy Joel smashed a car
into your house? We'd like to hear about it! Send your story
to 'Billy Joel Smashed a Car Into My House!',
c/o The
Late Show
1697 Broadway
New York,
NY 10019
If we choose your entry as the winner, you'll
receive a bucket of premium spackle! Good luck and get
going!"
Up on the roof, we see Jennie Finch in her
softball attire. The distance from the pitching rubber to the
window is a little further than she's accustomed. This
distance is 55 feet. After one or two misses through an open
window, Jennie is keyed in and makes a handful of perfectly
placed pitches right through the window. Oops, that last one
got away and smashes a nearby closed window, shattering it
completely. Back in my day when that happened, all us kids
would cheese it.
Nice job, Jennie, and good luck to you
and the U.S. Olympic Softball Team. Also on hand in case needed
tonight was U.S. Softball Olympian Jenny
Topping.
Jenny Topping played her college career
at Cal State Fullerton and was a 3-time Big West Conference
Player of the Year.
To close out the show, Dave asks
Paul "Can you tell I'm on the pharmaceuticals?" He
then looks at the camera and gives an endorsement: "I can
ride my bicycle again. Thanks, Bextra!"
And that
was our show for Thursday, April 29, 2004.
Wahoo
EXTRA!

I've lost hope of
ever becoming one of People's Most Beautiful
People, unless of course they increase to list to 6
billion. My only hope of making such a list is if AARP
Magazine decides to make one.
A high school chum of
mine may have the future Jennie Finch on his hands. His
daughter, Deanna Minuto, is a sophomore pitcher for
the Clarkstown North High School softball team and she has
already thrown 4 no-hitters this year. I'm going to have to
watch a game as soon as I can.
I was watching the
Kimmel show the other night and they showed the
promo for the Barbara Walters Win A Baby reality
show. I was amused by the piece by the Kimmel people but
thought it was slightly in bad taste, making an innocent, sweet
little baby the object of a game show. Then I learned it was
an actual promo put out by ABC, an ACTUAL, REAL LIFE PROMO for
the Walters' special. YIKES! It wasn't a Kimmel joke at all!
5 couples are hoping to adopt this one child and ABC decides to
put a game show/reality show spin to it. ABC, Walters, and the
show received a lot of heat for the promo and now they're all
admitting the show probably shouldn't have been promoted that
way.
Something like this always brings me back to the
same thing: This wasn't an individual on LIVE TV committing a
slip of the tongue in a weak moment. No. In order for this
promo to get on the air, it had to be well thought out and have
gone through numerous channels and receive numerous
"OKs" for the go ahead. How could this happen?
My guess is someone did say something, but he or she was
too far down the ladder for anyone to take him seriously.
Wednesday's Late Show cigarette eater Tyler
Fyre ate a Lucky Strike. I Googled "Lucky
Strike" to find if they had an old slogan Dave could
possible use. I found some pretty funny slogans.
From
http://www.tvacres.com/tobacco_slogans.htm
Camel
Cigarettes: "More doctors smoke Camels than any
other cigarette."
Chesterfields:
"Blow some my way"; and "a silly millimeter
longer."
Eve Cigarettes: "The
first truly feminine cigarette - almost as pretty as
you."
L&M: "Just what the
doctor ordered."
Lucky Strikes: LSMFT
- "Lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco." -"Lucky
Strike Means Filter Tips" -"Reach for a Lucky instead
of a sweet."
Mecca Cigarettes:
"Where was Moses when the lights went out? Groping for a
pack of Meccas."
Muriel Cigars: (Edie Adams) "Hey, big
spender, spend a little dime on me."
"Why don't you pick me up and smoke me
sometime?"
Old Gold: "Not a cough
in a carload."
Pall Mall:
"Wherever particular people congregate."
Philip Morris Cigarettes: "Less irritating to
the throat."
Tareyton Cigarettes:
"I'd rather fight than switch."
I remember
most of these cigarette promos. Almost makes me want to pick up
the habit and slowly kill myself.
At the top of the
show, Dave again made the "Turn on the landing lights. I
think it's Amelia Earhart" reference.
Wednesday night, Dave said "remember that old joke?"
I didn't, so I asked for help.
From Fairfax
Station, Virginia:
"Leaving
the landing lights on for Amelia Earhart", "turning on
the runway lights for Amelia Earhart", and variations on
those phrases are metaphors for futility.
Bob House of Scottsdale, Arizona:
"leaving the landing lights on for
Amelia Earhart" is more of a sarcastic saying than an
actual joke. It's similar to "rearranging the deck chairs
on the Titanic." In other words, you're wasting your
time.
So there you have it. Now I know.