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WAHOO GAZETTE LATE SHOW staffer Mike McIntee gives you a daily show summary and the behind-the-scenes lowdown with his daily Wahoo Gazette. So much juicy inside information that you'll say "Wahoo!"
THE WAHOO GAZETTE ARCHIVE Mike McIntee's popular Wahoo Gazette is archived here in the aptly- named Wahoo Gazette Archive. You can search by date, keyword, or show number, or even Dave's tie pattern (coming June 2012).
THE WAHOO GAZETTE ARCHIVE Mike McIntee's popular Wahoo Gazette is archived here in the aptly- named Wahoo Gazette Archive. You can search by date, keyword, or show number, or even Dave's tie pattern (coming June 2012).
Ellen DeGeneres; and The Strokes. PLUS:
Audience Show and Tell; Will It Float; where's Kiva; a Top
Ten by Dr. Phil; and who is on cape?
Dave opens
with, "Gee, you people look familiar" to a big laugh.
He tells a joke then suggests to the audience, "If you'd
like to say these along with me, go right ahead."
During the monologue, Dave told a joke I
particularly enjoyed.
"Have you
heard about these cicadas? I know you have." (big laugh)
"They're dormant in the ground for 17 years, then they come
out and want to have sex. Those that don't want to reproduce
move to Massachusetts."
He
followed this a little later with "A report claims that one
third of motorists fantasize about sex while stuck in traffic.
Today I was fantasizing about sex while stuck in traffic and
from habit, gave $50 to the tollbooth guy." I must
be an odd guy. When I'm having sex I think about traffic.
Probably because my wife keeps asking, "When are we going
to get there?" Thank you. Thank you very much.
So why did the audience laugh when Dave said, "Gee,
you look familiar," and "if you'd like to say these
along with me, go right ahead," and "have you heard
about the cicadas? I know you have"? Because Dave
started the show, told a few jokes, and after a mishap, decided
to start the whole thing over. Now you know the rest of the
story.
AUDIENCE SHOW AND TELLA&S#1: Hank Fortner of Dayton, Ohio. Dave
says, "Dayton!" That's the home of the National Cash
Register, isn't it?" Hank says it is. When I hear
"Dayton," I think of two things: the Wright Brothers
and Bill Lehecka. What does Hank do for a living? Hank
is a 22-year-old preacher. Does he have a favorite sermon?
What is the topic of his favorite sermon? Hank says, "The
one about sex." Dave is stunned and staggered. He
gasps, "Are you kidding?" Hank says, "Yeah, I'm
joking." Paul loves it, laughing at Dave's being had.
"Haaaaa! He got you on that one!" cries Paul with
glee. What does he have/What can he do? Hank can
make himself look like a gorilla. Hank gets down on his hands
and knees, twists his face, and walks ape-like up and down the
aisle. Says Dave, "And you ask if God has a sense of
humor."
A&S#2: Todd Marella of Portland,
Oregon: Todd is a carpenter. Todd's father was a
carpenter. I "Played the Dave" and fully expected
Dave to tell Todd to tuck in his shirt. I lost. Dave never
mentioned it. What does he have/What can he do? Todd
fired a nail into his thumb with a nail gun and has the X-rays
with him. Ouch! Dave asks if this was done on a
dare, bet, or mistake. Todd pulls out the X-ray and we see a
sharp object clearly going through the guy's thumb.
And now my "nail-through-the-thumb"
story. While patrolling the upper east side of
Manhattan during my days in the NYPD, my partner and I got a
call to respond to a guy who put a nail through his thumb. We
wince at the scene we are about to find. We get there and we
see a guy sitting calmly against the wall reading the newspaper.
We tell him we got a call for a guy who shot a nail through his
thumb and if he knew where this guy was. He puts down the
newspaper and calmly says, "Yeah, it's me." We take
a look and see a huge nail going right through the thumbnail and
he is HAMMERED TO A BOARD! My partner and I tried to show
concern even though we found it kind of gruesomely funny.
He was building a set for a school play and nailed his finger to
a piece of scenery. He asked if we would take the claw side of
the hammer and yank the nail out "Nothing doing," we
said. We waited for the ambulance. When they arrived we
decided to lightly hammer the pointed side of the nail back out
through the board. Once we did that, the guy was free of the
board but the nail was still lodged through the thumb. There
was a half-inch of nail on each side of the thumb. It was way
cool. And that's my "nail-through-the-thumb" story.
A&S#3: Thomas Korsak of Boston,
Massachusetts. Thomas is a photographer. Thomas is
wearing a Red Sox T-shirt. Dave says, "I heard you almost
got Alex Rodriguez!" Thomas laughs a sad but angry
laugh. Dave and Thomas talk about the BoSox and of Fenway, one
of the last great remaining stadiums. What does he
have/What can he do? Thomas can play the theme to
"Bonanza" on a pen in his mouth. He adds, "It's
something I learned how to do in Geometry class." Funny
line, which Dave enjoyed. Thomas places the pen
long-ways across his mouth and taps out the theme to Bonanza.
Nicely done.
And that was Audience Show and Tell.
Back from commercial, Dave says he's not feeling too well
tonight and so he's hired a guy who kind of looks like him to
stand by backstage in case Dave can't go on. The guy who sort
of looks like Dave will rush in and take over the show at a
moment's notice, if necessary. Suddenly I felt much more
secure.
WILL IT FLOAT: Some sad
news in the "Will It Float" family. Last night while
entertaining at a club downtown, Kiva the Grinder
Girl slipped on a wet stage and suffered a gash on her
thigh which required 3 stitches. She is resting comfortably at
home. Dave has photos from her night out to assist in his
describing the incident. We hooked up a satellite to her
Brooklyn home to check in on her. Kiva says she
slipped on a wet stage and the grinder went into her flesh,
about a half-inch deep. Dave's main concern: "Will you
grind again?" She says she will. This gladdens Dave.
Tonight's item: a 32-ounce can of lighter fluid.
Filling in for Kiva on the grinder is our technical maintenance
supervisor, Gary Mintz. The girls drop the 32-ounce can
of lighter fluid into the Will It Float tank and it . . . . .
sinks!
TOP TEN: Thoughts That Go Through My Mind
During The Daytime Emmy Awards. #10. "It's
an honor to be surrounded by so many talented people I've never
heard of before." #9. "If I play my cards
right, I really think I have a shot with that Ellen
DeGeneres." #5. "Just can't get enough of Bob
Barker's hilarious neutering stories."
ELLEN
DEGENERES: her daytime "The Ellen DeGeneres
Show" has been nominated for a record-setting 12 Daytime
Emmy Awards. By the time you saw our show, you would have
known how many she won. Some of the technical awards were
already presented and our former Art Director Christopher
Goumas won an Emmy for the Ellen DeGeneres Show set
design. Kudos, Goumas. Is she up against
Oprah for Best Talk Show host? "No,"
says Ellen. "Oprah has taken herself out of the
competition since she's won it so much." Dave laughs at
this truth. Ellen is also up against Dr. Phil. Worried?
"No." Ellen says she has never won an Emmy
Award, though she's come close while starring in her night-time
show. One year everyone convinced her that this was her year.
Her main competition was Helen Hunt. Jay Leno was
the presenter and when he announced the winner, he said
"Ellen. . . . . Hunt." Jay has a knack of swallowing
his H's. When Ellen heard "Ellen" she began to get
up. When she heard "Hunt," she quickly pretended to be
looking for something. I hope she wins/won tonight.
Her first TV gig? On a small talk show in San Francisco.
She was still young and trying to make it big, still at the
stage of her career where she was still always trying to please
everyone. Also on the show was a hypnotist. It was asked of
her beforehand if she would be willing to be hypnotized on the
show. Wanting to please, she agreed. During the show, the
hypnotist was talking to the audience, then suddenly turned to
Ellen and said, "Sleep!" Wanting to please, she
quickly went to sleep. Was she hypnotized? Of course not, but
she so wanted to please. She faked sleeping through the whole
show. She felt ridiculous while they talked about her as if
she wasn't there. But at least they were pleased.
ACT 5: On cape tonight: Colin
Quinn. You can catch Colin Quinn week nights on Comedy
Central's "Tough Crowd, With Colin Quinn"
THE STROKES: From their new CD, "Room On
Fire," The Strokes performed "The End Has No
End."
And that was our show for Friday, May
21, 2004. Wahoo
EXTRA! 77 years ago today,
Charles A. Lindbergh completed the first solo
nonstop airplane flight across the Atlantic Ocean. In Monday's
New York Daily News "Voice of the People" section, a
news reader wrote in with this gripe:
Long Beach, L.I.: "Seventy-seven years ago this week,
Charles A. Lindbergh supposedly took off from Roosevelt Field on
Long Island and landed across the ocean in LeBourget Field in
Paris. Some say the plane was filled to the brim with fuel.
One trip to the Smithsonian Institution will lay that theory to
rest. The plane is too small. It could not possibly have left
the ground with that much payload. The government lied to
us!"
I laughed when I first read
this, no so much over the claim, but that the guy's been holding
onto this information for all these years.
Good
News/Bad News: First the Bad News: This may be my
last Wahoo Gazette. Now the Good News: This
may be my last Wahoo Gazette. Plus, I received
this great news in my e-mail today.
"Please, I am Mr. Martin Williams, the
only son of late chief George Williams from Sierra Leone. I am
writing you in absolute confidence primarily to seek your
assistance to transfer our cash of ten million dollars
($10,000,000) now."
I don't know
how Mr. Martin Williams got my e-mail address or how he knows
me, but for some reason he wants to transfer $10,000,000 into my
account. All I have to do is send him some of my confidential
financial records so he can make the transfer and I'LL BE RICH!
As soon as this takes place, you can all kiss my ass goodbye!
So long, suckers! Yahoo! I'm rich! Rich!
I owe
another apology. Two nights ago I mentioned how I had to
apologize to spacklers across the country for doing such a
horrendous job on a ceiling I spackled. Well, tonight I have
to apologize to. . . . MYSELF! After some sanding and damp
sponging and painting, it doesn't look half bad. So, I'm
sorry, me. Nice job.
Ellen DeGeneres; and The Strokes. PLUS:
Audience Show and Tell; Will It Float; where's Kiva; a Top
Ten by Dr. Phil; and who is on cape?
Dave opens
with, "Gee, you people look familiar" to a big laugh.
He tells a joke then suggests to the audience, "If you'd
like to say these along with me, go right ahead."
During the monologue, Dave told a joke I
particularly enjoyed.
"Have you
heard about these cicadas? I know you have." (big laugh)
"They're dormant in the ground for 17 years, then they come
out and want to have sex. Those that don't want to reproduce
move to Massachusetts."
He
followed this a little later with "A report claims that one
third of motorists fantasize about sex while stuck in traffic.
Today I was fantasizing about sex while stuck in traffic and
from habit, gave $50 to the tollbooth guy." I must
be an odd guy. When I'm having sex I think about traffic.
Probably because my wife keeps asking, "When are we going
to get there?" Thank you. Thank you very much.
So why did the audience laugh when Dave said, "Gee,
you look familiar," and "if you'd like to say these
along with me, go right ahead," and "have you heard
about the cicadas? I know you have"? Because Dave
started the show, told a few jokes, and after a mishap, decided
to start the whole thing over. Now you know the rest of the
story.
AUDIENCE SHOW AND TELLA&S#1: Hank Fortner of Dayton, Ohio. Dave
says, "Dayton!" That's the home of the National Cash
Register, isn't it?" Hank says it is. When I hear
"Dayton," I think of two things: the Wright Brothers
and Bill Lehecka. What does Hank do for a living? Hank
is a 22-year-old preacher. Does he have a favorite sermon?
What is the topic of his favorite sermon? Hank says, "The
one about sex." Dave is stunned and staggered. He
gasps, "Are you kidding?" Hank says, "Yeah, I'm
joking." Paul loves it, laughing at Dave's being had.
"Haaaaa! He got you on that one!" cries Paul with
glee. What does he have/What can he do? Hank can
make himself look like a gorilla. Hank gets down on his hands
and knees, twists his face, and walks ape-like up and down the
aisle. Says Dave, "And you ask if God has a sense of
humor."
A&S#2: Todd Marella of Portland,
Oregon: Todd is a carpenter. Todd's father was a
carpenter. I "Played the Dave" and fully expected
Dave to tell Todd to tuck in his shirt. I lost. Dave never
mentioned it. What does he have/What can he do? Todd
fired a nail into his thumb with a nail gun and has the X-rays
with him. Ouch! Dave asks if this was done on a
dare, bet, or mistake. Todd pulls out the X-ray and we see a
sharp object clearly going through the guy's thumb.
And now my "nail-through-the-thumb"
story. While patrolling the upper east side of
Manhattan during my days in the NYPD, my partner and I got a
call to respond to a guy who put a nail through his thumb. We
wince at the scene we are about to find. We get there and we
see a guy sitting calmly against the wall reading the newspaper.
We tell him we got a call for a guy who shot a nail through his
thumb and if he knew where this guy was. He puts down the
newspaper and calmly says, "Yeah, it's me." We take
a look and see a huge nail going right through the thumbnail and
he is HAMMERED TO A BOARD! My partner and I tried to show
concern even though we found it kind of gruesomely funny.
He was building a set for a school play and nailed his finger to
a piece of scenery. He asked if we would take the claw side of
the hammer and yank the nail out "Nothing doing," we
said. We waited for the ambulance. When they arrived we
decided to lightly hammer the pointed side of the nail back out
through the board. Once we did that, the guy was free of the
board but the nail was still lodged through the thumb. There
was a half-inch of nail on each side of the thumb. It was way
cool. And that's my "nail-through-the-thumb" story.
A&S#3: Thomas Korsak of Boston,
Massachusetts. Thomas is a photographer. Thomas is
wearing a Red Sox T-shirt. Dave says, "I heard you almost
got Alex Rodriguez!" Thomas laughs a sad but angry
laugh. Dave and Thomas talk about the BoSox and of Fenway, one
of the last great remaining stadiums. What does he
have/What can he do? Thomas can play the theme to
"Bonanza" on a pen in his mouth. He adds, "It's
something I learned how to do in Geometry class." Funny
line, which Dave enjoyed. Thomas places the pen
long-ways across his mouth and taps out the theme to Bonanza.
Nicely done.
And that was Audience Show and Tell.
Back from commercial, Dave says he's not feeling too well
tonight and so he's hired a guy who kind of looks like him to
stand by backstage in case Dave can't go on. The guy who sort
of looks like Dave will rush in and take over the show at a
moment's notice, if necessary. Suddenly I felt much more
secure.
WILL IT FLOAT: Some sad
news in the "Will It Float" family. Last night while
entertaining at a club downtown, Kiva the Grinder
Girl slipped on a wet stage and suffered a gash on her
thigh which required 3 stitches. She is resting comfortably at
home. Dave has photos from her night out to assist in his
describing the incident. We hooked up a satellite to her
Brooklyn home to check in on her. Kiva says she
slipped on a wet stage and the grinder went into her flesh,
about a half-inch deep. Dave's main concern: "Will you
grind again?" She says she will. This gladdens Dave.
Tonight's item: a 32-ounce can of lighter fluid.
Filling in for Kiva on the grinder is our technical maintenance
supervisor, Gary Mintz. The girls drop the 32-ounce can
of lighter fluid into the Will It Float tank and it . . . . .
sinks!
TOP TEN: Thoughts That Go Through My Mind
During The Daytime Emmy Awards. #10. "It's
an honor to be surrounded by so many talented people I've never
heard of before." #9. "If I play my cards
right, I really think I have a shot with that Ellen
DeGeneres." #5. "Just can't get enough of Bob
Barker's hilarious neutering stories."
ELLEN
DEGENERES: her daytime "The Ellen DeGeneres
Show" has been nominated for a record-setting 12 Daytime
Emmy Awards. By the time you saw our show, you would have
known how many she won. Some of the technical awards were
already presented and our former Art Director Christopher
Goumas won an Emmy for the Ellen DeGeneres Show set
design. Kudos, Goumas. Is she up against
Oprah for Best Talk Show host? "No,"
says Ellen. "Oprah has taken herself out of the
competition since she's won it so much." Dave laughs at
this truth. Ellen is also up against Dr. Phil. Worried?
"No." Ellen says she has never won an Emmy
Award, though she's come close while starring in her night-time
show. One year everyone convinced her that this was her year.
Her main competition was Helen Hunt. Jay Leno was
the presenter and when he announced the winner, he said
"Ellen. . . . . Hunt." Jay has a knack of swallowing
his H's. When Ellen heard "Ellen" she began to get
up. When she heard "Hunt," she quickly pretended to be
looking for something. I hope she wins/won tonight.
Her first TV gig? On a small talk show in San Francisco.
She was still young and trying to make it big, still at the
stage of her career where she was still always trying to please
everyone. Also on the show was a hypnotist. It was asked of
her beforehand if she would be willing to be hypnotized on the
show. Wanting to please, she agreed. During the show, the
hypnotist was talking to the audience, then suddenly turned to
Ellen and said, "Sleep!" Wanting to please, she
quickly went to sleep. Was she hypnotized? Of course not, but
she so wanted to please. She faked sleeping through the whole
show. She felt ridiculous while they talked about her as if
she wasn't there. But at least they were pleased.
ACT 5: On cape tonight: Colin
Quinn. You can catch Colin Quinn week nights on Comedy
Central's "Tough Crowd, With Colin Quinn"
THE STROKES: From their new CD, "Room On
Fire," The Strokes performed "The End Has No
End."
And that was our show for Friday, May
21, 2004. Wahoo
EXTRA! 77 years ago today,
Charles A. Lindbergh completed the first solo
nonstop airplane flight across the Atlantic Ocean. In Monday's
New York Daily News "Voice of the People" section, a
news reader wrote in with this gripe:
Long Beach, L.I.: "Seventy-seven years ago this week,
Charles A. Lindbergh supposedly took off from Roosevelt Field on
Long Island and landed across the ocean in LeBourget Field in
Paris. Some say the plane was filled to the brim with fuel.
One trip to the Smithsonian Institution will lay that theory to
rest. The plane is too small. It could not possibly have left
the ground with that much payload. The government lied to
us!"
I laughed when I first read
this, no so much over the claim, but that the guy's been holding
onto this information for all these years.
Good
News/Bad News: First the Bad News: This may be my
last Wahoo Gazette. Now the Good News: This
may be my last Wahoo Gazette. Plus, I received
this great news in my e-mail today.
"Please, I am Mr. Martin Williams, the
only son of late chief George Williams from Sierra Leone. I am
writing you in absolute confidence primarily to seek your
assistance to transfer our cash of ten million dollars
($10,000,000) now."
I don't know
how Mr. Martin Williams got my e-mail address or how he knows
me, but for some reason he wants to transfer $10,000,000 into my
account. All I have to do is send him some of my confidential
financial records so he can make the transfer and I'LL BE RICH!
As soon as this takes place, you can all kiss my ass goodbye!
So long, suckers! Yahoo! I'm rich! Rich!
I owe
another apology. Two nights ago I mentioned how I had to
apologize to spacklers across the country for doing such a
horrendous job on a ceiling I spackled. Well, tonight I have
to apologize to. . . . MYSELF! After some sanding and damp
sponging and painting, it doesn't look half bad. So, I'm
sorry, me. Nice job.